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A game between the Predators and Jets two seasons ago famously featured close to a dozen players in the penalty boxes at one time and 10 minors handed out after a single whistle.
The animosity hasn't dissipated. After-the-whistle scrums, big hits and face washes have become something of a staple in games between the two division rivals.
This season, the Preds were called for nine penalties (18 PIMS) in a March 13 meeting and seven more (14 PIMS) in a game on March 25. For a team that finished as the most penalized team in the NHL - and struggled with ill-timed minors in the first round - keeping their cool will be paramount in a Round Two matchup with the Jets.

"Yeah, we have to stay out of the box," Preds forward Austin Watson said after a Game 4 win in Round One. "I don't know how much more we want to talk about it - I mean, I'll say it again, we've got to be more disciplined."
If any additional motivation is needed for the Preds to stay out of the box, consider this: The Jets finished the 2017-18 regular season with the fifth-ranked power play in the League (23.4 percent).
The Jets made history by beating the Wild in Round One to give their franchise its first-ever playoff series victory. Further to the point, the franchise hadn't even won a playoff game - split between its time in Atlanta and Winnipeg - until the Jets won Game 1 against the Wild.
All that to say, the Jets' playoff experience is quite limited compared to a Predators team that was in the Stanley Cup Final less than a year ago.
Consider this quote from Preds defenseman Mattias Ekholm:
"The first couple years, you almost got too low when you lost and you almost got too high when you won," Ekholm said. "You can't have that. You have to stay even keeled with everything you do. One night, you're going to feel not so well and the next night you're going to feel great, so it's just trying to keep more nights on the great side."
Ekholm explained that mentality after the Preds were beaten in Game 3 by the Avalanche. Nashville responded 24 hours later by producing one of their best performances of the playoffs to win Game 4.
If the Jets are faced with a similar situation, can they respond in the same way?