Shea Weber, David Poile and Golden Hall
Shea Weber spent 11 seasons with the Nashville Predators. Once his contract is up in 2026, he could have a post-playing career with Nashville.
At the Nashville Predators' Golden Hall ceremony, inductee Pekka Rinne announced he and girlfriend Erika Parkko are expecting their second child.
“David [Poile] is obviously the one that drafted ... The former goaltender is the Nashville Predators’ all-time saves leader (17,627) and was the backbone of the defense during the team ...
The Predators will recognize the first three inductees into the franchise’s Golden Hall when Nashville takes on the Chicago Blackhawks on Thursday. Former general manager David Poile, former defenseman Shea Weber and former goaltender Pekka Rinne will be honored during a ceremonial puck drop before the contest at Bridgestone Arena.
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WKRN) — A trio of former Nashville Predators were inducted into the team’s inaugural Golden Hall class. The first round of inductees included former players Shea Weber and Pekka Rinne and former general manager David Poile.
This week's Golden Hall ceremonies are a great way for Nashville Predators to celebrate their past, but the good old days are getting older.
One of the few boxes the Nashville Predators had yet to check as a young NHL franchise was beginning its own Hall of Fame. The Preds can now check that box.
When David Poile, Shea Weber and Pekka Rinne are inducted into the Nashville Predators Golden Hall this week, Roman Josi’s memories will rush back.
Filip Forsberg’s 300th career goal tied the game late, and all three Predators skaters scored in the shootout to come back and defeat the Chicago Blackhawks by a 3-2 final on Thursday night at Bridgestone Arena. The result gives the Preds their 1,001st victory in franchise history on a night where they honored three of their best.
As David Poile, Shea Weber and Pekka Rinne slipped on their Gold jackets Wednesday afternoon in Nashville at the Renaissance Hotel at the Predators Golden Hall induction ceremony, they each solidified their rightful place in what will one day be a gallery full of Preds greats.
The name Shea Weber is becoming less and less present in Montreal. He still has an impact in the city (Nick Suzuki chats with him every now and then), but not as much as before. After all, not only is he no longer playing,