Hurricanes 4, Wild 3

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After a wild and crazy first period, (no pun intended), both teams settled down and the Carolina Hurricanes ended up with a 4-3 win over the visiting Minnesota Wild on Thursday night at the Lenovo Center.

The win improved their record to 9-4-0.

The first period had a little bit of everything except for outstanding goalie play.

In that period, the Hurricanes scored three times on just seven shots while the Wild scored twice on three shots.

After the Wild scored five minutes into the game, Jackson Blake tied the game off a nice move after getting a pass from new linemate, Nikolaj Ehlers.

Ehlers and Blake seemed to generate some good chemistry in this game.

Just a minute previous to this score, Tyler Pitlick lined up Jalen Chatfield and took him out of the game with a high, dangerous hit. Captain, Jordan Staal took exception and immediately jumped Pitlick and started punching him.

Pitlick was given a game misconduct among other penalties and Staal was given an instigator along with a misconduct.

Cory Lavalette reported that this was the first fight Staal had in eight years.

There was no update on Chatfield’s status after the game.

The goals came fast and furious after this.

Less than a minute after the Blake goal, the Wild took the lead again, but it was short-lived.

Andrei Svechnikov tied the score just 21 seconds later on his patented, sweet move and slick shot.

Sean Walker then closed out the period with a shot from the point to give the home team a 3-2 lead.

Walker has really stepped up his game this season as the Carolina blueline has struggled dealing with injury after injury. He played a team high 24:49 and had two points, (1G 1A). He also saved a goal at the goal line.

To start off the second period Matt Boldy scored his second of the game but that goal was immediately followed up by a goal by Ehlers, off a pass by Blake.

After a slow start, Ehlers now has six points in his last eight games.

That would do it for the scoring as both goalies settled in the rest of the way.

K’Andre Miller returned in this game after missing two weeks because of his injury and looked very good, especially showing off his long reach.

The Canes will next face the Sabres on Saturday night.

Game Summary – https://www.nhl.com/scores/htmlreports/20252026/GS020222.HTM

Event Summary – https://www.nhl.com/scores/htmlreports/20252026/ES020222.HTM

Interviews – https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fo/7ftk...nm5fn8c2lk8z0umez25lul9p&e=1&st=q3dsh5yz&dl=0

Source: https://www.canescountry.com/2010-11-carolina-hurricanes-game-recaps/52088/hurricanes-4-wild-3
 
Hurricanes 6, Sabres 3

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The Carolina Hurricanes improved their record to 10-4-0 with a 6-3 win against the Buffalo Sabres on Saturday night at the Lenovo Center.

The victory gave the team three wins in a row and pushed them to a 5-1-0 record at home.

Once again the Canes spread out the scoring as they had six different goal scorers and 11 different players with points.

The first line opened up the scoring five minutes into the game when Andrei Svechnikov made a pretty pass to Sebastian Aho, who made no mistake.

Buffalo tied the game before the end of the period but the Hurricanes came out roaring in the second.

Svechnikov rifled in a powerplay goal to make it 2-1, then Jesperi Kotkaniemi scored his second of the season off a nice pass by Joel Nystrom. It was Nystrom’s first point of his NHL career.

Nystrom has been put into service because of Carolina’s injuries on the blueline and he has improved each game.

Just 29 seconds into the third, Eric Robinson made it 4-1, but then the Hurricanes took a breath.

Alex Tuch and Tage Thompson each scored to tighten things up but the home team tightened up the defense and scored two empty-netters to end the scoring.

Seth Jarvis scored the first one, his ninth of the season.

Charles Alexis Legault scored the next, a long one from his own end for his first career NHL goal.

Legault finished with a +2 and had two hits.

Carolina outshot Buffalo 35-22, led by Aho who had six shots.

Alexander Nikishin seemed to have a quiet game but led the team with 21:39 of ice time. He also had a team high four hits. The rookie had a +2 on the night pushing his season total to +13, which ties him for the league lead.

The Canes will quickly travel to Toronto for a match against the Leafs Sunday night.

Game Summary – https://www.nhl.com/scores/htmlreports/20252026/GS020238.HTM

Event Summary – https://www.nhl.com/scores/htmlreports/20252026/ES020238.HTM

Interviews – https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fo/1n4a...x0gea23ck0a9iuist7277r0f&e=1&st=n84va5et&dl=0

Source: https://www.canescountry.com/2010-11-carolina-hurricanes-game-recaps/52103/hurricanes-6-sabres-3
 
Game Preview: Sabres versus Hurricanes

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The Canes are back at Lenovo Center tonight for the second of a two-game homestand with tonight’s matchup against Buffalo.

On Thursday, Carolina was able to notch their second straight win, coming against the Wild courtesy of three first period goals. Nikolaj Ehlers recorded his second goal of the season, and the marquee free agent signing finally looks to be finding his footing. Sophomore Jackson Blake impressed as well, adding a goal and an assist, giving him 10 points in 13 games, good for the third leading scorer on Carolina this season.

Currently, the Canes currently sit at third in the Metropolitan division with a 9-4-0 record through 13 games. The two teams ahead of them, the Devils and Penguins, have both played more games but have 20 points apiece.

As for Buffalo, their season has been quite the opposite of Carolina’s. The Sabres are, once again, one of the NHL’s bottom feeders. It looks like their 14 year playoff drought, tied for the longest active one in the big four North American leagues, will extend another year this season.

On the offensive end, Alex Tuch and Tage Thompson lead the team with five goals each. Buffalo also has Josh Doan, the son of former Arizona Coyotes captain Shane Doan, who has quietly been enjoying a breakout season with four goals and five assists through 14 games this season.

But there’s not much else to get excited about this season for the Sabres in terms of their forward group which lacks both top-level talent and the necessary depth to compete.

As for Buffalo’s defensive core, they will be without star defenseman Rasmus Dahlin, who recently took a leave absence from the team. Without Dahlin, expect Owen Power and Bowen Byram to take on increased roles tonight.

Despite the lack of team success so far, Sabres goaltender Alex Lyon has performed well relative to the situation, posting a .915 save percentage in 10 games so far.

As for tonight’s game, the Canes may be getting a couple players back from injury. Per Carolina’s Walt Ruff both William Carrier and Eric Robinson have a chance to return to the lineup. It doesn’t look like defenseman Shayne Gostisbehere will suit up against the Sabres though.

For who’s starting in net, it appears Pyotr Kochetkov will get the nod tonight. Kochetkov’s last start was a 26-save shutout against the Rangers on Tuesday.

With all that being said, this is a game the Canes should come out on top. Buffalo has lost five out of their last six games, making it a prime opportunity for Carolina to extend their winning streak to three and climb up the division standings.

Here’s how to watch:

Time: 7:00 PM ET

Location: Lenovo Center, Raleigh, NC

TV: FanDuel Sports Network with Mike Maniscalco, play-by-play; Tripp Tracy, color analyst; Shane Willis, analyst; Hannah Yates, rinkside.

Radio: 99.9 The Fan FM

Line: ML: CAR -260; PL: CAR -1.5 -104

Source: https://www.canescountry.com/2010-1...s/52098/game-preview-sabres-versus-hurricanes
 
Hurricanes storm back, defeat Toronto 5-4

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Why is it always the Leafs?

Whenever the Carolina Hurricanes and the Toronto Maple Leafs play each other, the chances that the game will be insane shoot through the roof for some reason. All you have to do is check the history of Steve Dangle Glynn with the Canes to see some of his best reactions. Sunday night was no exception as the Canes came back from a 4-2 deficit to beat the Leafs on Hockey Hall of Fame Night 5-4.

The first period was about as bonkers as was expected. After both teams witnessed the Hockey Hall of Fame Ceremony, there was a question about what sort of start you’d see. That was answered five minutes in when William Nylander converted on the rush. It started when Morgan Rielly started behind his own net and whipped a great pass off the wall in front of the team benches, Matthew Knies took the puck and fed a streaking Nylander. Nylander had beaten Mike Reilly and was able to get the puck past Brandon Bussi for the 1-0 lead.

Carolina would answer quickly with their second power play goal in a row thanks to an outstanding feed from Nikolaj Ehlers. Sebastian Aho won the faceoff to start the Power Play, and the Canes were able to quickly cycle it around for Aho to blast it past Dennis Hildeby to knot it at one.

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Six minutes later the top line for the Canes converted thanks to another outstanding pass, this one from a red hot Andrei Svechnikov, who fed a streaking Seth Jarvis for Jarvis’ tenth on the season.

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The Canes were unable to enjoy the lead for long, though, as the superstars for Toronto exerted themselves quickly. First John Tavares converted on another rush for the Leafs, as the Canes got a little too foucsed on the puck and staring goalie Brandon Bussi was unable to stop a rebound that went right to Tavares. Then near the end of the period, the Canes penalty kill gave up a rare power play goal as they were unable to clear the zone, and Tavares fed Nylander for the one-timer that was blasted past Bussi.

The first period ended with a 3-2 score, the Canes putting more shots on goal with 12-10 but the stars for the Leafs being the stars. It also ended with a scrum that resulted in Charles Alexis Legault getting a pretty serious cut on his hand, bad enough to where he was ruled out for the rest of the game. Once again, and for way too many times this early in the season, the Canes had to skate with just five defensemen.

Being short a defensemen showed for the Canes as the craziness continued into the second period, even though for the first few minutes it didn’t result in any goals. Carolina tried to make it three straight Power Play conversions but were unable to convert, and before the first TV timeout the Canes had several breakways, and hit the post or crossbar on each of them. That would prove costly for the Canes as Toronto was able to convert with the defensive miscommunications. The other star for the Leafs Austin Matthews got in on the action with yet another breakdown where Bussi couldn’t corral the puck. Matthews was all alone next to the net and was able to tap it in. Toronto led 4-2, but the Canes were able to get it back to one thanks to a goal from the Staal line.

It was fitting that this line was the one to convert, as instead of tying to do something fancy to beat Hildeby, they just grinded and put the puck on net. In this case, Will Carrier was able to get the puck in deep allowing the Canes to set up, and dished it off to Sean Walker. Walker blasted it by Hildeby to get the Canes out of the second period down just 4-3.

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With an intermission to calm down and discuss how to play the rest of the game with just five defensement, the Canes completely locked the Leafs down in the third. After giving up 18 total shots in the first two periods the Canes would just give up two in the third, and that was with the Leafs having a Power Play. In the meantime on offense the Canes got back to the style of hockey they wanted to play—putting pucks on net and it paid dividends. Three minutes into the third, the Canes stormed the net on a partial change. Joel Nystrom saved the puck from going out of the zone and got it to the net. Logan Stankoven fed it to Jackson Blake, who put on a shot, and Taylor Hall was able to cash in on the rebound.

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The Canes continued to pressure the Leafs, and the air seemed to go out of the arena once it was tied. Sure enough, with eight minutes left Ehlers made a wonderful defensive play, stealing the puck, and fed K’Andre Miller, who dropped to an open Stankoven. Stankoven burried the shot and the Canes were up 5-4.

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The Canes continued to lock down Toronto for the rest of the period, and the Leafs got very little empty net time. The one chance the Leafs had in the period may have exmplified just how bonkers the night was. On their Power Play with a chance to seize momentum, Nylander missed a wide open net. Toronto wouldn’t get close again the rest of the night.

Nylander had the hat trick pic.twitter.com/1YRj57fPaK

— Omar (@TicTacTOmar) November 10, 2025

The Canes outshot Toronto 22-2 in the third period. That is not a typo. Toronto was unable to establish the rush they had gotten in the first two periods because the Canes just kept putting the puck on the net.

Carolina now improves to 11-4-0 on the season, and play again Tuesday Night against the Capitals, where Freddie Andersen is expected to start between the pipes.

Source: https://www.canescountry.com/2010-1...120/hurricanes-storm-back-deafeat-toronto-5-4
 
Game Preview: Hurricanes at Maple Leafs

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The Canes are headed north for a quick trip to Scotiabank Arena to take on the Toronto Maple Leafs tonight at 7 p.m., hoping to extend the winning streak to four.

Last night against the Sabres, Carolina’s offense was on fire, netting six goals en route to a 6-3 win on home ice. While Buffalo wasn’t the hardest test, the Canes were still able to impress. Four players recorded multi-point games, including Sebastian Aho, who is now the leading scorer on Carolina with 15 points in 14 games this season. Eric Robinson, who returned from injury last night, added a goal in his first game back since Oct. 23.

Despite the strong offensive performance, goaltender Pyotr Kochetkov didn’t have the best showing, letting in three goals on 22 shots for an .864 save percentage.

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As for the Maple Leafs, they will be playing a back-to-back tonight also after losing 5-3 to the Bruins last night. After a slow start to the season, Toronto has been stellar as of late, winning five of their last seven games. The Leafs are 8-6-1 and rank fifth in the Atlantic division. Even after starting out the season slow, they will be a tough matchup especially playing on home ice. This season at Scotiabank, the Leafs are 7-3-1 while the Canes are 5-3 on the road.

Toronto boasts some of the best top-end talent in the league in its forward group, led this season by William Nylander, who has tallied 21 points in 12 games — tied for 7th most in the league. John Tavares has put up 19 points in 15 games and Matthew Knies has tallied 18 points in 15 games. You can’t forget about Auston Matthews, one of the most prolific goal scorers in the NHL. This year, Matthews hasn’t been on fire, but he has still notched 8 goals in 15 games.

Even after losing Mitch Marner to the Las Vegas Knights in the offseason, the Leafs have one of the most talented forwards groups in the league, which could pose problems for a banged up Carolina defensive core.

The Maple Leafs have struggled to find consistent goaltending this season though, with starter Anthony Stolarz posting a 6-5 record with a 3.35 GAA and .889 save percentage. Last night against Boston, Stolarz was replaced after allowing four goals on 19 shots by Dennis Hildeby. After replacing Stolarz, Hildeby let in only one goal on 20 shots.

Don’t be surprised if the Leafs slot in Hildeby to make his seventh career start and first this season following his performance against the Bruins last night.

Tonight will be a good test for the Canes who are still looking to climb in the Metropolitan division standings. A win could tie the Canes with the New Jersey Devils for first place in the Metro.

It’s a toss-up game tonight, especially with all the injuries on the back end for Carolina and the amount of forward talent the Leafs have. But if the Canes can get some strong goaltending, they will have a solid chance to extend the winning streak on the road tonight.

Here’s how to watch:

Time: 7:00 PM ET

Location: Scotiabank Arena, Toronto, Canada

TV: ESPN+

Streaming: Fubo

Radio: 99.9 The Fan and affiliates

Odds: ML: CAR -130; PL: -1.5 +176

Source: https://www.canescountry.com/2010-2.../52111/game-preview-hurricanes-at-maple-leafs
 
Game Preview: Capitals at Hurricanes

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The Carolina Hurricanes are set to face the Washington Capitals for the first time since last year’s second-round Stanley Cup Playoff series that saw the Hurricanes defeat the Capitals in five games to advance to the Eastern Conference Final.

The reigning Metropolitan Division champion Caps have not quite positioned themselves well to repeat the feat in the early going of the 2025-26 campaign, as they are 7-7-1. That puts them seventh place in the Metropolitan Division in a tie for the bottom spot with the Blue Jackets. Washington is not in any sort of deep hole, though, due to the massive logjam in the 14-19 point range that all but five teams in the East find themselves in.

Tom Wilson leads the Caps in both goals and points with 9 and 16, respectively, while Dylan Strome is pacing the group with 10 assists. Defensemen John Carlson and Jakob Chychrun have both been highly productive, as they each have surpassed the 10-point mark already.

Logan Thompson has done an excellent job between the pipes for Washington, as he is 6-4-0 with a .930 save percentage and 1.61 goals against average. One would certainly expect him to pick up wins at better than a 60% clip if he keeps playing at that level.

For Carolina’s part, the Canes have done excellently to manage a brutal injury situation to start the year. The ailments continue to pile up, as the team announced today that Charles-Alexis Legault will be sidelined for three to four months as he recovers from hand surgery.

On the positive side of the health ledger, it looks like Shayne Gostisbehere will return to the lineup to take Legault’s spot. He will also likely assume his role as the quarterback of the team’s top power play unit.

Key offseason acquisition Nikolaj Ehlers is starting to find his grove in the red and black, as he enters Tuesday’s game with 9 points in his last 10 games.

According to North State Journal’s Cory Lavalette, Frederik Andersen was in the starter’s crease at the team’s morning skate, which makes sense after Pyotr Kochetkov and Brandon Bussi started the last two games.

Here’s how the team lined up at morning skate according to team reporter Walt Ruff:

The #Canes will try to move their win streak to five tonight when they take on the Capitals.

Frederik Andersen is in the starter's crease.

Shayne Gostisbehere, who has missed the last five games with a lower-body injury, appears set to return.

Charles Alexis Legault… pic.twitter.com/skMM8NTgZO

— Walt Ruff (@WaltRuff) November 11, 2025

Here’s how to check out the action:

Time: 7:00 PM ET

Location: PNC Arena, Raleigh, NC

TV: FanDuel Sports Network

Streaming: FanDuel Sports App, ESPN+ out of market

Radio: 99.9 The Fan and affiliates

Odds: ML: CAR -162; PL: -1.5 +148

Source: https://www.canescountry.com/2010-2...ashington-capitals-at-carolina-hurricanes-nhl
 
Hurricanes fall to Capitals, 4-1

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The Carolina Hurricanes saw their four-game winning streak come to an end at the Lenovo Center with a 4-1 loss to the Washington Capitals on Tuesday night.

The Canes were not in control of this one at any point, as fthey were quickly forced into a shorthanded situation. They killed the penalty off, but Brandon Duhaime scored off a defensive lapse to give Washington an early 1-0 lead.

A hit on goaltender Frederik Andersen woke the team up as players jumped to his defense, with Logan Stankoven dropping the gloves with Martin Fehervary to defend Jackson Blake.

That didn’t generate any momentum early in the second period, as Alexander Ovechkin sprung Dylan Strome on a breakaway, and Strome beat Andersen high to make it 2-0.

Carolina got back into the game later in the second period when Nikolaj Ehlers scored to extend his point streak to five games, but that was all the offense the Hurricanes would muster.

Washington defended well in the third, and goaltender Logan Thompson continued his run of phenomenal form in slamming the door shut. Thompson finished the night by stopping 30 of 31 shots, while Andersen turned aside 24 of 27.

Carolina’s Danish netminder was ultimately forced out of the game after a collision with Jordan Staal, so Pyotr Kochetkov finished out the contest.

The Capitals got goals from Jakob Chychrun on a power play and Ovechkin on the empty net to expand their lead to three throughout the third.

The loss was the Hurricanes’ first defeat at the hands of a Metropolitan Division opponent to start the year, and it sent their record down to 11-5-0 through 16 games.

Carolina will look to get back into the win column on Friday night when the Vancouver Canucks make their annual visit to Raleigh.

Source: https://www.canescountry.com/general/52154/carolina-hurricanes-fall-to-washington-capitals-3-1-nhl
 
Canes Host Canucks on Hockey Fights Cancer Night

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The Carolina Hurricanes are coming off their worst game of the season and are looking to start a new winning streak tonight versus Vancouver.

Adam Foote, known for being a physical stay-at-home defenseman during his 20-year NHL career, is in his first full season as an NHL head coach after being promoted on May 14, 2025. Foote took over the head coaching duties following the departure of Rick Tocchet in April.

Foote is seen as a player’s coach. TSN reported on May 14, 2025, that “Foote is believed to be the preferred candidate of Canucks captain Quinn Hughes,” with Hughes saying that Foote “was the best coach I’ve ever had.”

However, the early results do not match expectations. The Canucks were generally picked as a Western Conference wild card team in the preseason.

Vancouver is currently 28th in the NHL, two games under .500 with an 8-9-1 record.

Each phase of the Canucks’ game is having issues.

Most notably, goaltender Thatcher Demko is out with a lower-body injury. The two-time All-Star and 2023–24 Vezina Trophy finalist has been injury-prone since a lower-body injury sustained during the 2024 Stanley Cup Playoffs.

Demko has a 5-4-0 record with a 2.80 goals against average and a .903 save percentage. He sustained his injury on Tuesday versus Winnipeg after allowing three goals on 11 shots.

Goalie Kevin Lankinen has struggled recently. In the last four games, Lankinen has posted a 1-2-1 record with a 3.59 goals against average and a .884 save percentage. In October, Lankinen had a 2.85 goals against average and a .912 save percentage.

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The Canucks rank 28th in the league with 3.50 goals allowed per game, but the blame cannot lie squarely on the shoulders of their goaltenders.

Foote is a defensive-minded coach, but his blueliners have had a tough start to the season.

Last season, the Canucks finished with the third-best penalty kill in the NHL. Vancouver currently ranks last on the penalty kill. Why the dramatic fall off?

The team’s top penalty killer from last season, Pius Suter, signed with St. Louis in the offseason. However, the rest of the personnel is largely the same.

According to The Canadian Press, the Canucks are playing a passive, collapsing box style rather than an aggressive kill that attacked at the blue line to force turnovers.

The high slot is left open, and too many high-quality shots are generated from this area.

Perhaps, once again, an opportunity for the Carolina power play to build confidence and momentum.

Vancouver ranks 23rd in the NHL in high-danger chances allowed per 60 minutes, and at five-on-five, they rank 29th in the league in expected goals against (xGA).

Carson Soucy and Tyler Myers are currently allowing 3.85 xGA per 60 minutes over the last five games, which is the worst mark on the team.

Quinn Hughes and Filip Hronek have a positive shot share, but their high-danger chances allowed per 60 minutes have spiked to 11.2 per 60.

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Hughes is the workhorse for Vancouver. With a couple of injuries on the blueline, combined with his team lead in points and power play points, Hughes has averaged the most time on ice in the league.

His aggressive offensive style, early-season injury, and time on ice may be contributing factors to the defensive performance of that pair.

One of the biggest storylines on the Vancouver offense is Elias Pettersson. The former 100-point scorer is struggling to find the back of the net. Pettersson has just three goals this season and has not lit the lamp in eight games. Despite this lack of scoring, Pettersson’s 13 points are tied with Hughes for the team lead.

On the flip side, veteran Kiefer Sherwood is on pace for a career season. Sherwood is tied for fourth in the NHL with 11 goals. In his eighth season in the league, he needs just nine more goals to set a career high.

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The Canucks are 22nd in the league with 2.83 goals scored per game and are 28th in expected goals (xGF).



Another game, another injury for the Hurricanes. Late in the third period, Frederik Andersen left the game after a collision with Jordan Staal.

After attempting to go back to the crease, the concussion spotter brought Andersen down the tunnel, and Pyotr Kochetkov took over for the remainder of the game.

Andersen practiced on Thursday, so it seems as though he is no worse for wear.

There were a few bright spots from the loss to Washington on Tuesday.

Nikolaj Ehlers scored the lone goal for Carolina, extending his point streak to five games. Since finally breaking through with his first point on October 20 against Vegas, Ehlers leads all Hurricanes with 10 points in 11 games.

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Shayne Gostisbehere returned to the lineup after six games and earned an assist on Ehlers’s goal. He and Ehlers were the only Canes with a positive plus-minus on Tuesday.

Stick taps go to Logan Stankoven, who fought Martin Fehervary in the first period to earn his first career fighting major.

According to Walt Ruff, the following lines and pairs skated in Thursday’s practice:

Svechnikov – Aho – Jarvis
Ehlers – Stankoven – Blake
Carrier – Staal – Martinook
Hall – Kotkaniemi – Robinson
Jankowski

Gostisbehere – Walker
Nikishin – Reilly
Miller – Nystrom
Bayreuther

Andersen | Bussi | Kochetkov



Tonight is the Canes’ annual Hockey Fights Cancer awareness game, which is a special evening for many, especially Canes Country’s own Al Hood. Seth Jarvis, Sean Walker, and Charles Alexis Legault visited pediatric cancer patients at the N.C. Basnight Cancer Hospital at UNC Hospital last Friday.

Here are some great new initiatives from the Hurricanes this season:

New this year, the Carolina Hurricanes Foundation and The V Foundation for Cancer Research are teaming up to make a greater impact for families affected by cancer in North Carolina, with a goal to raise $100,000 to fund pediatric cancer research at UNC. Funds will come from local donors, fan contributions during the November 14 home game, and Hockey Fights Cancer activations such as auctions and limited-edition merchandise, with The V Foundation matching donations up to $50,000. A game-day auction on Friday will feature autographed items—fans can participate at Canes.GiveSmart.com or by texting “Canes” to 76278—and 250 limited-edition mystery pucks signed by Hurricanes players will be sold for $55 each on the South Plaza before the game, with all proceeds benefiting the Carolina Hurricanes Foundation.

Additionally, 288 limited edition jerseys with a V Foundation/Carolina Hurricanes Foundation patch and optional customizations will be sold online only beginning Friday, with proceeds benefiting the special campaign. Jerseys can be purchased here starting Friday. The Carolina Pro shop will also stock additional Hockey Fights Cancer merchandise both in-store and online here.


Here’s how to check out the action:

Time: 7:00 PM ET
Location: Lenovo Center, Raleigh, NC
TV: FanDuel Sports Network with Mike Maniscalco, play-by-play; Tripp Tracy, color analyst; Shane Willis, analyst; Hannah Yates, rinkside.
Radio: 99.9 The Fan FM
Line: ML: CAR -192; PL: CAR +1.5 +130

Source: https://www.canescountry.com/caroli...on-hockey-fights-cancer-night-nhl-november-14
 
Carolina Survives, Defeats Vancouver in Overtime

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There’s an adage among old school ACC basketball coaches: You have to give the other team credit.

Vancouver deserves a lot of credit tonight because they took advantage of every mistake by Carolina.

However, the Hurricanes maintained their composure and kept to their game. This was despite holding sole possession of the lead for just four minutes of game time.

The Canucks were opportunistic in the first period, with Max Sasson and Elias Pettersson capitalizing on poor positional play and errant passes.

Andrei Svechnikov had another fantastic game, tallying two goals and one assist, including a power play marker in the first.

Svechnikov tied the game off a turnover forced by Sebastian Aho and Seth Jarvis.

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Svechnikov’s power play goal is exactly what the Canes have needed on the man advantage. A clean faceoff win leads to a beauty of a one-timer off the smooth pass from Shayne Gostisbehere. The set play worked to perfection, and Carolina made it look easy.

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The second period could have deflated the Hurricanes.

Carolina finished with an 18-8 shot advantage and controlled the play. However, the Canes took the only two penalties of the period, and Sean Walker’s slashing penalty led to a Conor Garland power play goal to give Vancouver the lead.

At the break, alternate captain Jordan Martinook said that he “liked [their] game,” and insisted that if they keep it up, the team will find a way to win.

The third period was typical for a Hurricanes team led by Rod Brind’Amour.

Vancouver had just four shots in the third period. The Canucks went eight minutes between their third and fourth shot, and the Hurricanes held them without a shot for the final five minutes of the game.

The Hurricanes controlled the play throughout the third, and you could feel that the Canes were on the cusp of tying the game. Birthday boy Taylor Hall netted the game-tying goal after some dominant passing and puck possession.

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Carolina forced overtime, but Vancouver held the advantage for nearly the entire extra period. Despite possessing the puck for over three straight minutes, the Canucks only managed one shot on Pyotr Kochetkov.

Once the Canes took control, it seemed like a goal was inevitable.

Jackson Blake got the first real opportunity for Carolina with 52 seconds left in overtime. In the next 20 seconds, Gostisbehere and Nikolaj Ehlers got their chances before Aho sniped it blocker side from above the dots to win it for the Canes.

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Who else but the Hurricanes’ all-time leading overtime goal scorer?

According to MoneyPuck.com, Carolina had a “Deserve to Win” percentage of 89.3 percent. The Hurricanes dominated shots, possession, and the number of quality scoring chances.

It could have easily gone the other way, but this team stuck to their game in the third and made it happen.

Unfortunately, the injury bug continues to bite. Jarvis was struck by an inadvertent high stick and Jesperi Kotkaniemi left the game with an ankle injury.

Stay tuned to Canes Country for tomorrow’s game preview, including injury updates.

Source: https://www.canescountry.com/2010-1...uver-canucks-in-overtime-nhl-november-14-2025
 
Canes set to face off against Edmonton Oilers and Connor McDavid

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Friday Night was so fun, why don’t we do it again?

The Carolina Hurricanes get no rest today as they have to take an electric win last night, essentially forget it, and face two of the best players in the NHL in Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl. The Edmonton Oilers are in town and have been for the last day or so. They last played Columbus to a 5-4 loss on Thursday Night and flew into Raleigh afterwards. So while the Canes and Vancouver faced off last night, the Oilers sat back and studied their opponent.

The hangover that many expected Edmonton to have last season appears to have bitten them this season. Their record isn’t bad—currently fourth in the Pacific and just four points behind Anaheim—but that’s with 19 games under their belt while Carolina has only played 17. The mediocre points total, though, doesn’t really tell the whole story as this week they found themselves on the bad end of a 9-1 loss to Colorado, followed that up by allowing four goals to the Blue Jackets in a win, barely beating Philadelphia 2-1, and the aforementioned loss to Columbus.

The Oilers are looking at some good news though as Zach Hyman is set to return to the lineup after fracturing his wrist in the Western Conference Finals against Dallas last season. Such a long layoff may not pay immediate dividends for Edmonton, but you know they’ll be inspired to have another important piece back on the ice.

The stars for Edmonton, though, have been the stars. McDavid is the draw of course, but you cannot forget Leon Draisaitl. Apparently a lot of teams have as he’s currently leading the Oilers in goals with 12. McDavid is second with seven but leads the team in points when you add in his 20 (!) assists. Ever since the embarrassment to Colorado scoring goals hasn’t really been the problem for Edmonton—they are tenth in the league in goals forced with 58—but consistency has been.

The other problem for Edmonton is—you guessed it—goalie. Neither Stuart Skinner nor Calvin Pickard have a save percentage over 90%, and the Oilers woke up Saturday fifth in goals allowed with 65, trailing only Nashville, Vancouver, St. Louis, and Toronto. Pickard was the man between the pipes on Thursday, so Skinner is likely going to be the one out there tonight.

Meanwhile the Canes have their own issues to work through. Last night’s win against Vancouver was good in so many ways—seeing Pyotr Kochetkov overcame three early goals to keep Vancouver from getting another one to the continued hot streak of Andrei Svechnikov. Not to mention Sebastian Aho bringing back the heroics of overtime to secure the win, and K’Andre Miller basically getting into Vancouver’s head with a clean hit that directly caused the game tying goal when they were more worried about getting even then defending. The problem, of course, is that the injury bug decided it was done taking out defenders and moved over to the forwards.

Early in the game, Seth Jarvis took a high stick from his own teammate and at the same time was cross-checked into the boards by Vancouver. That combo took him out of the lineup, and while he was spotted in the press box later half of his face looks like it’s going to be a shade of purple for a bit. Then, Jesperi Kotkaniemi left the game late in the second period with what Rod Brind’Amour described later as a twisted ankle. This is on top of Jalen Chatfield and Jaccob Slavin still being out.

The Canes aren’t going to hold a morning skate today—no surprise considering the back-to-back and the fact that they were basically down to three lines in an overtime game last night—so we aren’t going to know who’s in and out at least until Brind’Amour speaks to the media a little after 4 PM. There’s also the question of who’s in goal, although signs point to Frederick Andersen. He was back on the ice practicing after he was pulled by concussion spotters late in the third period on Tuesday, and chances are Brind’Amour will want to give him a chance to put that game behind him.

Even with players missing you can’t help but to pay attention when Edmonton comes to town for their only Raleigh visit of the regular season. It’s Saturday Night in Raleighwood, and the crowd will be looking for a repeat of last night’s heroics.

If you aren’t going to be there, here’s how to catch the action:

Time: 7:00 PM ET
Location: Lenovo Center, Raleigh, NC
TV: FanDuel Sports Network with Mike Maniscalco, play-by-play; Tripp Tracy, color analyst; Shane Willis, analyst; Hannah Yates, rinkside.
Radio: 99.9 The Fan FM
Line: ML: CAR -115/EDM -104, PL: CAR -1.5 +210/EDM +1.5 -265, O 6.5 (+106)/U 6.5 (-130)

Source: https://www.canescountry.com/caroli...ff-against-edmonton-oilers-and-connor-mcdavid
 
Canes Fall in Overtime for first time, lose to Edmonton 4-3

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The positive: the Canes got a total of three points off a back-to-back that had both games go into Overtime and saw two starters get injured. The negative: if they had taken better care of the puck they wouldn’t have needed overtime either night and would have all four points.

After a game where both Seth Jarvis and Jesperi Kotkaniemi left due to injury—Jarvis was back out on the ice to face the Oilers. He was bruised but otherwise didn’t show any ill effects from the injury. The Canes were once again without Jaccob Slavin and Jalen Chatfield, and had the daunting task of taking on the best duo in the NHL without their two best defensemen.

The first period got off to a very similar start to Friday Night’s game, as mistakes led to the first two Oiler goals. In what had to feel good for him in his return to Raleigh, Jack Roslovic took advantage of a badly misplayed puck by Frederik Andersen, and shot it past his former teammate for a quick 1-0 lead. He had plenty of experience going up against Andersen and he knew right where to place the shot. A few minutes later, Andrei Svechnikov took a cross-checking penalty to set up Oilers on the Power Play. Connor McDavid did McDavid things, taking the extra room to collect a loose puck that bounced off the end boards and shoot it at a ridiculous angle to get it past Andersen.

Anyone who has watched Edmonton this season knows that scoring goals hasn’t been a problem for them, the problem has been keeping pucks out of their own net. Fresh off a comeback win on Friday, the Canes didn’t get down and managed to build their own game. Late in the first Shayne Gostisbehere showed exactly why the Canes had missed him during his absence by once again whipping a pass over to Eric Robinson, who was able to snap it past Stuart Skinner to let the Canes get within a goal at 2-1 before the end of the first.

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Much like Friday, the Canes could argue they had played the better game but mistakes had them staring at a deficit at the first intermission. They remedied that in the second, seizing control and getting a tying goal early on thanks to a white-hot Nikolaj Ehlers. The goal was all hard work from the entire line, and it isn’t a coincidence that Ehlers has started to light up since being moved to play with Logan Stankoven and Jackson Blake. The line worked to keep the puck in the offensive zone, and Blake set Ehlers up in the aftermath of some chaos and Skinner wasn’t settled in the crease. He was able to whip a pass to Ehlers who scored.

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The Canes overall dominated play in the second but only had that one goal to show for it, outshooting Edmonton 16-6 and looked like the fresher team despite having played the night before. Still, the Canes were unable to capitalize any more and went into the locker room tied at two.

Edmonton came out and started as a different team in the third, taking it to the Canes and forcing Andersen to make some really strong saves. It was only when McDavid again did McDavid things, and somehow beat the Canes down the ice despite multiple players being back in front of Andersen. His second of the night put the Oilers back on top 3-2, but the Canes reignited quickly and less than a minute later the Staal line got a Staal Score. The play was started with a faceoff win and a strong pass out of the zone by Gostisbehere, then William Carrier just bullied his way to the goalie with a player on him. Carrier pushed a shot on net, Skinner was unable to corral it and it bounced to Staal who potted it, knotting the score a three.

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The teams exchanged great chances for the rest of the period, and after dominating the second in shots, the Canes barely outshot the Oilers 9-8 in the third. Both goalies made great stops, but for the second night in a row the Canes found themselves in Overtime. In a three on three setting, the Oilers can roll out McDavid and Draisaitl to start, and all it took was 19 seconds for the latter to show off why he is an insane talent. After winning the faceoff, the Oilers didn’t bother to take much time entering the zone, and Draisaitl just slapped one past Andersen to get the bonus point.

Saturday was the last game at home for the Canes until Thanksgiving. They won’t get much of a chance to recoup as they ship up to Boston on Monday to try and get some revenge for an earlier loss, then bounce over to St. Paul, Winnipeg, and Buffalo. They won’t get more than one day off until that return to Raleigh, so we’ll see if any of the two missing defensemen will rejoin the team during the trek.

Source: https://www.canescountry.com/2010-1...-overtime-for-first-time-lose-to-edmonton-4-3
 
Preview and Game Thread: Hurricanes at Bruins

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The Carolina Hurricanes are back in action for a somewhat-rare Monday night showdown on the road against the Boston Bruins.

It’s a rematch of a game that took place just over two weeks ago at the TD Garden that the Canes dropped 2-1 after falling behind by a pair and getting just the one tally on a bomb from Alexander Nikishin.

The Hurricanes come in after having their winning streak snapped in a 4-3 overtime loss to the Edmonton Oilers on Saturday. Fortunately, there will be no Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl to contend with tonight, but the Canes will still have their work cut out for them against David Pastrnak and a surprisingly strong Bruins squad.

Boston’s prior win over Carolina was part of a seven-game winning streak the Bruins had snapped by Ottawa last week, but they bounced back with a win and now sit in first place in the Atlantic Division with a record of 12-8-0.

Former Hurricane Morgan Geekie paces Boston with 12 goals on the season, while Pastrnak leads in assists (15) and points (26).

Watch the Hurricanes with FanDuel Sports Network free for 30 days

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  • First 5,000 using the code SBNFALL30 get a free month
  • Never miss a Canes game. Stream all season long with FanDuel Sports Network.

After Frederik Andersen started Saturday’s game against Edmonton, it seems likely that either Pyotr Kochetkov or Brandon Bussi will get the nod tonight, but we’ll know more closer to puck drop.

Jalen Chatfield skated in Raleigh yesterday, according to Ryan Henkel of The Hockey News, a sign that his return to the lineup could be drawing closer.

The Canes recalled Dominick Fensore on Sunday to have an extra defenseman with them on the trip in the event of another injury.

Monday’s game is the start of a four-game road trip and while there’s no such thing as a must win in November while having a record of 12-5-1, it would certainly be nice for Carolina to avenge an earlier loss and get the trip started on a positive note.

Here’s how to check out the action:

Time: 7:00 PM ET

Location: TD Garden, Boston, MA

TV: FanDuel Sports Network

Streaming: FanDuel Sports App, ESPN+ out of market

Radio: 99.9 The Fan and affiliates

Odds: ML: CAR -184; PL: -1.5 +134

Source: https://www.canescountry.com/general/52218/carolina-hurricanes-boston-bruins-nhl-game-preview52218
 
Hurricanes start road trip in style, beat Boston 3-1

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The Hurricanes showed no ill effects from a back to back with two straight overtimes and managed to get revenge for one of their few losses on the season with a 3-1 win over the Boston Bruins. The only reason the game wasn’t a shutout was a very late power play goal from the Bruins, but the final score didn’t really indicate just how dominant the Hurricanes were versus their first meeting on November 1.

The first period was a goalie battle, as starters Jeremy Swayman and Pyotr Kochetkov both faced stiff tests early on. The Canes and the Bruins would each have a Power Play, and each would go scoreless. It was clear early on both starters in net were up to the task as both Swayman and Kochetkov stopped excellent chances. The period ended scoreless and the Canes barely outshooting Boston 10-9.

The second period saw Carolina increase the puck barrage, keeping Boston hemmed in to the Canes’ side of the ice. Despite not having a Power Play during the frame, the Canes outshot Boston 13-7, and the only reason it got that high for Boston was a Power Play near the end of the period. By the time that had occurred, the Canes had established a 2-0 lead. From the jump, Carolina seemed to want to put shots on Swayman from the blue line, hoping for rebounds that would bounce the right way. The problem was for a good part of the time is that no one for Carolina was close enough to Swayman to make him pay, even though Swayman was giving up rebounds.

Then Jordan Staal got what can only be described as a tough goal. The whole Staal line worked to keep the puck in the offensive zone—much like every line did for the Canes that period—and it resulted in a situation where Will Carrier was able to zip a pass over to Joel Nystrom. Nystrom shot the puck on Swayman, and this time Staal was in front ready for the rebound. However he and Andrew Peeke were engaged, occupying Stall’s left arm. However, with his right he still had his stick and just shoved a backhanded shot one-armed past Swayman for the 1-o lead.

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Five minutes later the commitment to keep the puck in the zone helped the Canes again. This time, Shayne Gostisbehere took a bit of a risk by threading a pass over to Sean Walker just under the stick of a Bruin who could have taken it and skated it in to Kochetkov all alone. Instead, Walker whipped it to Taylor Hall, who put it on net. Instead of hitting Swayman, it hit Mark Jankowski who was able to settle the puck and score, putting the Canes on top 2-0.

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Boston came out strong in the third, and outshot the Canes 12-9, but with a 2-0 lead the Canes were able to lock down on defense and didn’t give the Bruins any sort of meaningful good shot on goal. Even when there was a four-on-four after a questionable embellishment call, Boston never was able to really establish themselves in the zone. A late Power Play when it was still 2-0 had the fans in the TD Garden booing as near the end the B’s just skated around the neutral zone. Not too long after the end of that play, with Swayman still in net, the B’s chanced it one too many times. Nystrom was able to dig the puck out of the area behind the goal, push it up the boards where Hall led a breakaway that ended with him doing his best Bobby Orr imitation to put the Canes up 3-0.

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A very late penalty as the Garden was emptying led to the B’s only score of the night, as the Canes were unable to preserve the shutout and Riley Tufte stuffed a chance by Kochetkov to wrape up the scoring 3-1.

It was easily Kochetkov’s best outing since his debut against the Rangers, showing that he can perform well against goalies that are not Russian. The Canes performed well despite still missing Jalen Chatfield and Jaccob Slavin. There’s still no word when either will be back, especially as the Hurricanes next square off against the team that injured Chatfield—Minnesota—on Wednesday night in St. Paul. The Canes will then continue on to Winnipeg and Buffalo before an extended stay back in Raleigh for the Thanksgiving Holiday.

Source: https://www.canescountry.com/2010-1...anes-start-road-trip-in-style-beat-boston-3-1
 
Preview and Game Thread: Hurricanes at Wild

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Tonight is going to be unnecessarily late for fans. Even though the Carolina Hurricanes are in the Central Time Zone, they are the second of a doubleheader featured on TNT. That means even though the listed start time is 9:30, it’s probably going to be closer to 10. Why? Because national TV demands it. You’ve already been warned.

The Canes are in the Central Time Zone and facing the Minnesota Wild, a familiar opponent as the Wild were just in Raleigh two weeks ago. The game was notable for a couple of reasons—the back and forth that the two teams had where seven goals were scored in the first 21 minutes, and the cheap shot that knocked out Jalen Chatfield. Chatfield hasn’t played since, though we’ll get to an update on that in a bit. Tyler Pitlick, who laid the hit on Chatfield, was sent down to Iowa not too long after the hit but didn’t face any supplemental discipline. Pitlick is back with the Wild now, but he was a healthy extra in their 3-2 OT win over the Golden Knights Sunday. He did skate on the fourth line in practice yesterday, so we’ll see if he stays in as the Wild deal with injuries of their own.

The Wild have righted the ship since their rought start, going 6-2-2 in their last ten, and they haven’t lost in regulation since that game in Carolina on November 6th. Their wins include the aforementioned Golden Knights, the Sharks, the Ducks, and the Flames. What many thought might be an easier game as part of the trip when the two teams first matched up is now looking like a matchup of two top teams that was worthy of the national TV attention they’ll get from TNT.

Minnesota has done this despite not being a prolific scoring team. this month they’ve only scored more than two goals four times, and two of those times required overtime to get to the third goal. They are 24th in the league in goals forced, and there’s no reason to think that the stifling play of the Hurricanes will change that up. It should give whomever is between the pipes a little bit of help. It will be interesting to see if coach Rod Brind’Amour goes against the goalie grain and rewards Pyotr Kochetkov with another start or if he continues the rotation and tries to give Frederik Andersen another shot at the Wild. Andersen has not looked the sharpest the last few games, and Kochetkov has shown that when he gets in a rhythm he can build multiple good games. He was really sharp on Monday night against a bit of a depleted Bruins team. We should have a better idea after morning skate in St. Paul.

It’s a sign of just how rough a start it was for Minnesota that in their last seven they’ve only given up more than 2 goals once—again to the Hurricanes—and they are still 22nd in the league in goals allowed. The Canes faced Filip Gustavsson two weeks ago but tonight they’ll see their other goalie in Jesper Wallstedt. He hasn’t allowed a goal since their November 7th matchup against the Islanders. That goal was given up at 18:51 of the second period, meaning he currently has a 141:09 shutout streak. It would be nice for that to change.

On the injury front for the Canes things are finally starting to inch their way back to normal. While we still don’t have word on when Jaccob Slavin will be back, we do know that the aforementioned Jalen Chatfield is with the Canes and practiced with the team yesterday. Brind’Amour said it’ll be up to Jalen whether he plays today, which—Jalen is a hockey player so we probably know how this is going to go. That means that the Canes will only be without one regular on the defense, and Brind’Amour can start rolling the pairings out back like he wanted to at the beginning of the season. It also means up front, the only real injury is Jesperi Kotkaniemi, and with Jankowski’s success on Monday night, he’s not under any pressure to be rushed back.

If you’re Minnesota, you probably would rather Chatfield play the game because of just how well the defense played on Monday. The defenseman that would be sent back would be Joel Nystrom, and he had a—pretty good night.

🚧 Updated 🚧 NHL GameScore Impact Card for Carolina Hurricanes on 2025-11-17 pic.twitter.com/DIuYX6tcho

— HockeyStatCards (@hockeystatcards) November 18, 2025

Yes, Mike Reilly had the least impact of all six defensemen, and he still was better than six forwards—including the entire Stankoven line. Thus, the Canes trying to reintegrate Chatfield and the potential there for them/him to try and get even with Pitlick might be better than this defense that just rolled mercilessly on Monday.

Again, this is a late one. If you aren’t going to be in St. Paul to catch the game, here’s how you can watch:

Time: 9:30 PM—though let’s be honest it’ll probably be closer to 10 because Edmonton/Washington will precede this game.

TV: TNT and TruTV. As of this writing it’s not clear who is calling the game, once that’s available this will be updated.

Streaming: HBOMax is—for now—the streaming home of TNT Sports

Radio: The pregame on 99.9 The Fan starts at 9 PM. At 9:30 PM the Hurricanes Radio Nework (consisting of 99.9, 730 The Game in Charlotte, ESPN New Bern 107.5/1490, and ESPN Greenville 107.5/1570) picks up the action. Adam Gold will be the host, Mike Maniscalco will handle play-by-play and Tripp Tracy will be providing color as only he can.

Odds: Hurricanes -162 Moneyline, Puckline -1.5 (+152)/Wild +134 Moneyline, Puckline +1.5 (-188), O/U 6.5 (+112/-140)

Source: https://www.canescountry.com/caroli...41/preview-and-game-thread-hurricanes-at-wild
 
Hurricanes rally late, fall in SO to Wild, 4-3

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The Carolina Hurricanes fell short in their bid to sweep the season series against the Minnesota Wild with a 4-2 loss in St. Paul on Thursday night.

After the Canes took the first showdown between the two teams in Raleigh, Minnesota was able to jump out to an early lead just like it did the first time around.

Defenseman Brock Faber, who paired with Jaccob Slavin for Team USA at February’s 4 Nations Face-Off, got the scoring started when a Mats Zuccarello shot caromed off his skate and in.

The Hurricanes had a chance to equalize with the game’s first power play, but a turnover by Sebastian Aho sprung Matt Boldy in on Frederik Andersen, and Boldy beat him through the five-hole to make it 2-0 after one.

Minnesota native Jackson Blake got the Canes on the board in a second period that Carolina dominated, but one goal was all the visitors could get in the second stanza as they went to the third period tied.

After his earlier assist, Zuccarello made the Hurricanes pay just 15 seconds into the third period on a breakaway to re-extend his team’s lead right back to two goals. Carolina’s first line responded about five minutes later when Seth Jarvis gained the zone and left the puck for Andrei Svechnikov, who promptly fed Sebastian Aho streaking down the left wing to make it a one-goal game again.

Despite getting held off the scoresheet for a a while longer by Minnesota goalie Jesper Wallstedt, the Canes kept pushing. With Andersen vacating the net for the extra skater, Blake worked a shot through Wallstedt off a perfect cross-ice feed from Nikolaj Ehlers to force overtime.

The Hurricanes started Jordan Staal in overtime again, and unlike last time around against Edmonton, he won the draw to allow the Hurricanes to start the 3-on-3 period with the puck.

The Canes trapped Kirill Kaprizov and Joel Eriksson-Ek on the ice for more than two minutes to start overtime, but they couldn’t capitalize. Blake had a bid for a hat trick on a breakaway with just under. minute left, but a strong back check allowed Wallstedt to make a save that forced a shootout.

Zuccarello started the skills competition and was stopped by Andersen before Wallstedt denied a slick move by Jarvis. Kaprizov was up next in the two-spot for Minnesota, and he too couldn’t beat Andersen with a shot. His fellow Russian Svechnikov got the next bid for the Canes, and Wallstedt flashed the glove in impressive fashion to keep it scoreless.

Boldy beat Andersen in the third round to put Carolina and Taylor Hall in a do-or-die position, and Wallstedt came up with the save to seal the win for his team.

The result put the Hurricanes alone in first place in the Metropolitan Division by points with the Devils off Wednesday.

Carolina is now halfway through a four-game road trip. The Canes will be right back at it again on Friday night against the Winnipeg Jets.

Source: https://www.canescountry.com/genera...ly-late-against-minnesota-wild-nhl-game-recap
 
Starting today, comments and Feed posts on Canes Country will have activity notifications

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So starting today, whenever a user replies to your comment or to your post on the Feed, you’ll see a notification at the top right corner of the page.

And of course, this means that when you engage with other community members, they’ll get an alert too.

Our goal is to create more and better conversations on Canes Country and elsewhere across the SB Nation network. Anytime someone engages with your comments or Feed posts on another SB Nation community, you’ll see it in your notifications.

For instance, here’s what your notifications might look like on sbnation.com if you were getting replies across Arrowhead Pride, MMA Fighting, and sbnation.com. You will see the same expandable stack of notifications on any site in the network where you were logged in.

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If you want to dig into more of how this will work across the network and what’s next, head over to this post on sbnation.com from SB Nation’s Head of Product Ed Clinton.

You can log in or sign up here. Logged in users get fewer ads along with the ability to join the conversation.

Jump into the comment section below or post on The Feed to see notifications in action.

Source: https://www.canescountry.com/genera...anes-country-will-have-activity-notifications
 
Hurricanes @ Jets – Preview and Game Thread

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Nikolaj Ehlers returns to whence he came on Friday night as the Carolina Hurricanes , (13-5-2) travel to Winnipeg the take on the Jets, (12-7-0). Game time is set for 8 P.M. Eastern and the game will be back on FanDuel Sports along with homeboys, Tripp Tracy and Mike Maniscalco.

Ehlers was originally drafted by the Jets and has only played for that franchise before being signed by Carolina this offseason. Look for a nice video tribute for him.

The big news out of Winnipeg this morning is that star goaltender, Connor Hellebuyck will be out and will undergo minor knee surgery.

Breaking: The @NHLJets are shutting down Connor Hellebuyck in order for him undergo a minor Arthroscopic knee procedure. It is anticipated Hellebuyck will be out 4 to 6 weeks.

— Darren Dreger (@DarrenDreger) November 21, 2025

Expect Eric Comrie to take his place between the pipes tonight. Comrie is no slouch and is boasting a 4-1-0 record with a SV% of .908 and a GAA of 2.60.

The Jets are led by Mark Scheifele who has 11 goals and 27 points in his 19 games played this season.

Josh Morrisey is their standout on the blueline.

The former Thrashers have won two games in a row and they are 6-4-0 in their last 10 games.

The Canes are coming off an overtime loss in Minnesota. They have posted a 6-2-2 record in their last 10 and now sit at first place in the Metropolitan Division.

I would expect Pyotr Kochetkov to be in goal for Carolina tonight. Kochetkov has been hot since returning from injury and has a 4-0-0 record with a SV% of .926 and GAA of 1.70.

But I suppose there is always a chance that coach could go with Brandon Bussi.

The Canes are led by Sebastian Aho who has 8 goals and 19 points in 20 games this season.

Aho is followed closely by Seth Jarvis who has 10 goals and 17 points.

Rookie, Alexander Nikishin continues to lead the team in plus/minus with a (plus) +14.

Look for the same lines as the Hurricanes posted on Wednesday night, although this is always subject to change.

Jarvis – Aho – Svechnikov

Blake – Stankoven – Ehlers

Martinook – Staal – Carrier

Hall – Jankowski – Robinson

There has been no official word yet from the team about the return of injured players, Jalen Chatfield and Jesperi Kotkaniemi, but Chatfield has been skating with the team and could return to action tonight.

Notes:

Score another win for Carolina’s scouting staff. One of their second round picks, Charlie Cerrato, is tearing it up in the NCAA. He is currently third in the NCAA with 20 points in 14 games.

The team recently posted an update on prospects.

Prospect report – https://www.nhl.com/hurricanes/news...to-s-still-hot-unger-sorum-s-stepping-forward

Finally, fans of former Carolina first round pick Haydn Fleury might be able to see him tonight. He is scoreless in 15 games for Winnipeg.

More news:

Will be interesting to see how the Jets fare.
Hellebuyck with 16 goals saved above expected in 14 games. Jets have not been the strong, defensive team they were last season. Comrie has been solid, getting Samberg back helps but Hellebuyck is a huge part of the Jets success. https://t.co/z2aMjRHyjp pic.twitter.com/cRY0sQsq5B

— Mike Kelly (@MikeKellyNHL) November 21, 2025

Winnipeg’s game info-

Bright lights of Friday night 🤩

🎟️ https://t.co/dmIUPf7By0 pic.twitter.com/MWcnTvqhYp

— Winnipeg Jets (@NHLJets) November 21, 2025

Source: https://www.canescountry.com/caroli...52280/huuricanes-jets-preview-and-game-thread
 
“Ride Captain Ride” – Hurricanes 4, Jets 3

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Team Captain, Jordan Staal scored twice and Brandon Bussi held the fort in goal to lead the Carolina Hurricanes to a 4-3 win over the Winnipeg Jets on Friday night.

The win improves the team’s record to 14-5-2 and keeps them at first in the Metropolitan Division and Eastern Conference.

Staal is riding a hot streak as he scored just 16 seconds into the game, the second time this season he scored on his first shift of the game.

After the Jets tied the score and then went on to take a 2-1 lead, Staal scored again three minutes into the second period on a sniped shot from the slot area.

With the score tied 2-2, Jarvis and Aho combined for another shorthanded goal to make it 3-2, Canes.

Aho sprinted ahead on a breakaway but Eric Comrie stopped the 5-hole attempt. Jarvis was there to clean it up though for his 11th goal of the season.

It was the 10th career shorthanded tally of his career.

Early in the third period, Andrei Svechnikov blasted in a one-timer off a ridiculous pass by Nikolaj Ehlers, to give the Hurricanes a much needed insurance goal and a 4-2 lead.

The powerplay goal moved the Canes to 31st in the league with the man advantage, one spot ahead of Calgary.

The Jets would score again to make it 4-3, but Bussi played very well down the stretch to earn the 5th win of his NHL career.

He improved his stats to 5-1-0 with a GAA of 2.67 and a SV% of .896.

According to the broadcast, Brind’Amour said he wanted to go with Pyotr Kochetkov in net, but the Russian said he was not feeling well.

In a surprising move to most observers, the coach scratched Alexander Nikishin for this game. Tripp Tracy said that it could just be a scratch for rest, and not for a specific negative reason.

Still, Nikishin has the best plus/minus on the team, has more points than most other blueliners, (without benefit of powerplay time), and he leads the team with 50 hits and is second in blocked shots with 28.

The coach was not asked about the benching after the game.

Next up will be an afternoon affair in Buffalo on Sunday.

Game Summary – https://www.nhl.com/scores/htmlreports/20252026/GS020333.HTM

Event Summary – https://www.nhl.com/scores/htmlreports/20252026/ES020333.HTM

Quotes and team recap – https://www.nhl.com/hurricanes/news/recap-staal-strikes-twice-as-canes-ground-jets

Interesting video captured here where Lowry ragdolls two Canes.

Adam Lowry was handling BOTH Sebastian Aho and Sean Walker all on his own 😭 pic.twitter.com/85KHzVUmOi

— Gino Hard (@GinoHard_) November 22, 2025

Source: https://www.canescountry.com/2010-1...s/52290/ride-captain-ride-hurricanes-4-jets-3
 
Canes Fall 4-1 in Buffalo

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A 1:00 PM start, no Jordan Staal, and an adjusted 11/7 lineup were not a recipe for success Sunday afternoon.

The Carolina Hurricanes fell to Buffalo 4-1 to close out their road trip.

The Canes did not start on time and seemed to be chasing their game all afternoon. Defensive breakdowns and poor positioning were the themes of the loss. Buffalo’s speed, a key factor from the game preview, was on display. The Sabres forced the Hurricanes to chase, and turnovers in the defensive and neutral zone led to chances on the rush.

Alex Tuch, one of the players to watch, scored a power play goal to give Buffalo the early lead.

It was almost a 2-0 game, but the Sabres were called for goaltender interference.

The good news from today’s game is that, for the second straight game, the Canes scored a power play goal.

The passing was excellent, and the Canes capitalized on a Sabres defenseman interfering with his own goalie. Shayne Gostisbehere’s unassisted tally would end up as the lone goal for Carolina.

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The Hurricanes had just 18 shot attempts in the first period and went 10 minutes until their first shot on goal.

Buffalo’s transition game and passing led to their second period goal. The Sabres had great puck movement, and Sean Walker was slow to cover the slot.

The Canes had a couple of great chances on their second period power play, but could not convert.

The Sabres went ahead by two with just under two to play in the second, and did so off another rush. Once he was launched into the Carolina end from a great pinch and pass in the neutral zone, Beck Malenstyn made a great individual move, sidestepping Sebastian Aho to end up one-on-one with Frederik Andersen.

Carolina had better pressure in the third but was unable to capitalize on their chances.

With just under three minutes to go, Carolina pulled Andersen. The Canes had four good chances in the minute after pulling their goalie, but the bounces did not go Carolina’s way.

Head coach Rod Brind’Amour called a timeout with 35 seconds left, but just 14 seconds later, Buffalo sealed it with an empty netter.

Buffalo goaltender Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen was the best player in the third, turning away all 13 shots and 29 of 30 on the day.

The team flies home to Raleigh today and will host the New York Rangers on Wednesday.



First Period

Alex Tuch (8), PPG; R. McLeod (7), J. Doan (8)

Shayne Gostisbehere (2), PPG; Unassisted

Second Period

Jack Quinn (5); R. McLeod (8), J. Zucker (6)

Beck Malenstyn (2); T. Kozak (2), P. Krebs (6)

Third Period

Tage Thompson (12), EN; Z. Benson (9)

Source: https://www.canescountry.com/2010-1...rricanes-fall-4-1-in-buffalo-sabres-nhl-recap
 
Carolina takes on Buffalo in a Sunday Matinee

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The Carolina Hurricanes wrap up their four-game road trip this afternoon in Buffalo. The Canes have earned points in five straight games and are looking to extend their lead atop the Eastern Conference.

The Sabres are last in the East and have struggled to find consistent play this season.

Buffalo put themselves in a hole to start the season with a three-game losing streak. The Sabres put together a seven-game points streak to get above the .500 mark by the beginning of November.

A four-game losing streak followed that, and once again, Buffalo is behind all the teams in the East. One of those losses during that skid was a 6-3 Carolina win in Raleigh.

The Sabres have won three of the last four and had an offensive explosion Friday night against Chicago. Buffalo won 9-3, matching the highest goal total in the NHL this season.

Today’s matinee features a clash of styles between Carolina’s structured system and Buffalo’s rush offense.

According to NHL Edge tracking data for the 2025-26 season, the Sabres rank in the top 15 league-wide for “Speed Bursts over 20 mph” and “22+ mph bursts.” This team speed is important to keep in mind when the Carolina defenders pinch at the blue line. The Canes must ensure they have the coverage to limit odd-man rushes.

All eyes are on Alex Tuch and Tage Thompson. These players lead the Sabres with 20 points each. Tuch fuels the rush offense while Thompson is the finisher.

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If Tuch cheats high in the defensive zone and creates a gap, trailers like Thompson, Josh Doan, or JJ Peterka can fill the high slot. If a turnover is created, the Sabres are off to the races.

Thompson, Buffalo’s leading goal scorer, has to be the focus of Carolina’s defense. Thompson is on a five-game goal streak, and does it a few ways. He is fast, physical, and creates a lot of chances for himself and others. Thompson transitions the puck like a winger despite playing center. According to NHL Edge data, Thompson ranks in the 90th percentile for speed bursts over 20 mph this season.

Thompson ranks seventh in the NHL in shots, and a lot of those have come off the rush. Because he enters the zone with so much speed, Thompson often stops up or curls just inside the blue line at the top of the circles. He can also stretch the defense due to his success around the circles.

A massive contradiction defines the Sabres’ defense: they have the league’s best penalty kill, yet they are one of the worst teams at preventing goals at five-on-five.
Buffalo’s goaltenders have been their best penalty killers. Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen, Alex Lyon, and Colten Ellis have combined for a .952 save percentage on the kill.

However, Buffalo has allowed 52 five-on-five goals this season, fourth worst in the league.

Buffalo ranks 21st in suppressing High-Danger Chances Against (HDCA), and the defensive heatmap shows that vulnerability in the mid-range slot.

Despite his offensive capabilities, captain Rasmus Dahlin has struggled on the defensive end. His Expected Goals For Percentage (xGF%) at five-on-five is at 44.7 percent, which is not what a team needs for a top-pair defenseman.

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Dahlin, Owen Power, and Bowen Byram are elite skaters that aggressively close gaps. However, when they miss or get caught chasing, they leave the high slot wide open.

Look for the Hurricanes to work the puck low to high, and hopefully the forwards can slip behind the defense into that soft middle.

Carolina wins by turning the game into a half-court grind, pinning Buffalo deep, and pummeling the slot until the Sabres’ defense breaks down.



Sabres projected lineup
Josh Doan — Tage Thompson — Alex Tuch
Jason Zucker — Ryan McLeod — Jack Quinn
Isak Rosen — Tyson Kozak — Noah Ostlund
Jordan Greenway — Peyton Krebs — Beck Malenstyn

Mattias Samuelsson — Rasmus Dahlin
Bowen Byram — Conor Timmins
Jacob Bryson — Owen Power

Colten Ellis
Alex Lyon

Scratched: Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen, Josh Dunne, Zach Metsa
Injured: Michael Kesselring (lower body), Jiri Kulich (blood clot), Zach Benson (lower body), Justin Danforth (lower body), Josh Norris (upper body)



Andrei Svechnikov was a major story last night on the NHL wire. Hockey Night in Canada reported that he was open to trade during his early-season struggles. Those rumors may have been overblown or just seen as posturing by his camp. Svech seems to be over the hump and will skate in his 500th NHL game today.

Pyotr Kochetkov was slated to start on Friday but did not feel well enough. Expect him between the pipes this afternoon.

Sebastian Aho had a goal and an assist in the first game between these teams this season. He has 31 points in 23 career games against Buffalo.



Hurricanes projected lineup
Andrei Svechnikov — Sebastian Aho — Seth Jarvis
Nikolaj Ehlers — Logan Stankoven — Jackson Blake
William Carrier — Jordan Staal — Jordan Martinook
Taylor Hall — Mark Jankowski — Eric Robinson

Shayne Gostisbehere — Sean Walker
K’Andre Miller — Jalen Chatfield
Mike Reilly — Joel Nystrom

Pyotr Kochetkov
Frederik Andersen

Scratched: Alexander Nikishin, Brandon Bussi
Injured: Jaccob Slavin (lower body), Charles Alexis Legault (hand), Jesperi Kotkaniemi (lower body)



Here’s how to check out the action:

Time: 1:00 PM ET
Location: KeyBank Center, Buffalo, NY
TV: FanDuel Sports Network with Mike Maniscalco, play-by-play; Tripp Tracy, color analyst; Shane Willis, analyst; Hannah Yates, rinkside.
Radio: 99.9 The Fan FM
Line: ML: CAR -192; PL: CAR -1.5 +130

Source: https://www.canescountry.com/caroli...kes-on-buffalo-sabres-in-a-sunday-matinee-nhl
 
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