Atkinson will have four cracks at becoming the first Blue Jacket to get to 42, and it's hard to bet against him the way his reconstructed top line featuring Panarin and Matt Duchene is playing.
"It's a cool accomplishment for sure," Atkinson said. "There's still some big games left. I'm not done."
Meanwhile, Panarin had four assists, the most helpers in a game this season for a Blue Jacket, including primary assists on the three first-period goals scored by the team. With seven points in the last four straight games, Panarin now has 83 on the season, breaking the franchise record he set last season.
How's this for symmetry? Last year, Panarin had 27 goals and 55 assists for his 82 points. This year, he was at that same exact line until his fourth and final assist pushed him over the top.
"He led the charge," Atkinson said. "We're going to need him to do that. That's what he brings, and it's fun to watch and especially fun to play with when he's making those sorts of plays."
When Duchene first arrived, head coach John Tortorella put him between the two talented wingers, but the chemistry wasn't quite right. It has been since Tortorella re-inserted Duchene between Atkinson and Panarin during the game vs. Montreal on Thursday night, as the trio combined for eight points in Nashville and created one of the season's best goals vs. the Habs.
"They've found some consistency right now," Tortorella said.
2. Response goals: There were two critical stretches in the game, and Columbus came out on the right end of each in building its insurmountable lead.
First, with the Jackets up 2-1, Nashville buzzed late in the first period. The Predators forced Bobrovsky into a pair of excellent saves on a power play and hit the post, and the CBJ goalie had to make a huge save just after the power play as well as Colton Sissons got loose in the slot for a hard drive that Bobrovsky stopped with his shoulder.
It looked like Columbus was going to have to be happy just surviving the period with the one-goal lead, but the Jackets did more than that. After Bobrovsky's sensational stop on Sissons (say that five times fast), Panarin gathered the puck, made a deke at center ice, got into the offensive zone, and found Oliver Bjorkstrand in full flight for a wrist shot past goalie Juuse Saros with just 2.5 seconds left in the period.
"That was a big goal, going in on the road up two goals after one," Duchene said. "When we got the puck, I looked up and saw 12 seconds, so I knew we had time for a rush. I was kind of yelling at Bread, like, 'Let's try to get something going here,' and he did the rest. That was a great play."
Then, just after Nashville scored to make it a 3-2 game in the second period, Columbus responded again with a goal 74 seconds later to kill any momentum the Preds thought they had created. First, the Panarin-Duchene-Atkinson line spent 50 seconds in the offensive zone right after the goal, then Boone Jenner tallied on a breakaway to make it 4-2.