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  • Backs against the wall, Hurricanes can’t talk their way around how they got there

    Backs against the wall, Hurricanes can’t talk their way around how they got there

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    The Carolina Hurricanes, including center Martin Necas (88) and defenseman Jalen Chatfield (5) watch the video replay of the game winning goal in overtime by New York Rangers left wing Artemi Panarin (10), securing their 3-2 victory in Game 3 of the second round of the 2024 Stanley Cup playoffs on Thursday, May 9, 2024 at PNC Arena, in Raleigh N.C.

    The Carolina Hurricanes, including center Martin Necas (88) and defenseman Jalen Chatfield (5) watch the video replay of the game winning goal in overtime by New York Rangers left wing Artemi Panarin (10), securing their 3-2 victory in Game 3 of the second round of the 2024 Stanley Cup playoffs on Thursday, May 9, 2024 at PNC Arena, in Raleigh N.C.

    rwillett@newsobserver.com

    Polish it up, put a pretty face on it, cook the stats, cherry-pick the highlights. It’s what you do after you lose a playoff game by one goal for the eighth straight time, after losing a fifth straight in overtime, after your season is pushed to the brink of extinction.

    Because somehow you have to find an excuse to get up in the morning, get to the rink, rally some emotion and try again.

    The reality is, it almost certainly doesn’t matter. Thursday night was the Carolina Hurricanes’ best and perhaps last chance to get back in this series, and it ended the same way all of their playoff losses seem to end.

    Even if they can postpone the handshakes by winning on Saturday, the Hurricanes are fighting against the same long odds as all but the four teams that somehow navigated their way out of this predicament.

    By the time Artemi Panarin tipped the puck past Pyotr Kochetkov 102 seconds into overtime Thursday to give the New York Rangers a 3-2 win and put them up 3-0 in the series, the bell was already tolling for the Hurricanes.

    They can thank their power play for that, 0-for-5 again, now 0-15 in the series, with the added bonus of giving up a backbreaking short-handed goal Thursday. The Hurricanes are minus-5 in special teams in the series after losing three one-goal games. That’s it. That’s all.

    Slice it as thin as you want, it all comes back to that. The NHL’s second-best power play in the regular season is cutting the Hurricanes’ postseason abruptly short.

    “Obviously, three games in a row, same story,” Hurricanes coach Rod Brind’Amour said. “I hate it for the guys, because I think we’re playing really well. You take that part of it out of it, they’ve done everything we’ve asked the guys to do.”

    Kotchetkov saved the Hurricanes’ season in December and he nearly did it again Thursday, stopping or steering wide multiple breakaways and even showing the composure he lacked earlier in his career when two different melees erupted during a surly first period and he turned and skated to the corner instead of engaging.

    Andrei Svechnikov was a force again, throwing his body around and dominating play, but he didn’t get the goal he deserved until it was almost too late, the score-tying goal with 96 seconds to go and Kochetkov on the bench.

    The guy who didn’t play in the playoffs last year and the guy they got at the deadline both scored — Jake Guentzel and not Evgeny Kuznetsov, who mustered no response to his Game 2 benching — exactly what we were told was going to prevent a repeat of the Florida series last spring, and so far the results are the same.

    Brind’Amour tried to say then that sweep wasn’t really a sweep and he seemed on the verge Thursday of saying the Rangers’ 3-0 lead wasn’t really a 3-0 lead, but playoff games aren’t determined by shot totals or scoring chances. The Rangers didn’t have as many of either, but they had more goals. Only one thing matters. It’s a make or miss game.

    “They win games a different way than we do, and we still have to find a way to keep the puck out of our net and score more than they do,” Hurricanes captain Jordan Staal said. “They did a good job of scoring on their opportunities and they’ve got some special players we’ve got to stop and a goaltender we’ve got to find a way to beat. So that’s their game plan. It’s working for them obviously. And our game plan has to change a bit.”

    Put a pin in that thought until the season’s over, whenever that may be. That conversation — about style, philosophy, personnel, all of it — is coming, even if the Hurricanes find a way out of this blind alley they shouldn’t even be in.

    The conversation now is what it always is. Focus on the next game. Focus on the next shift. It’s true that the Hurricanes have been the better team at five-on-five. If their power play ever shows up, they might have better odds at flipping the script than the average team in a 3-0 hole.

    But that’s what they said before Game 3, and the story was the same. And now even closer to its conclusion.

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    This story was originally published May 9, 2024, 11:30 PM.

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    Sports columnist Luke DeCock joined The News & Observer in 2000 and has covered seven Final Fours, the Summer Olympics, the Super Bowl and the Carolina Hurricanes’ Stanley Cup. He is a past president of the U.S. Basketball Writers Association, was the 2020 winner of the National Headliner Award as the country’s top sports columnist and has twice been named North Carolina Sportswriter of the Year.

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  • Hurricanes return home with questions instead of wins after letting Rangers off the hook

    Hurricanes return home with questions instead of wins after letting Rangers off the hook

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    May 7, 2024; New York, New York, USA; New York Rangers left wing Chris Kreider (20) celebrates his goal against the Carolina Hurricanes with left wing Artemi Panarin (10) and center Vincent Trocheck (16) during the third period of game two of the second round of the 2024 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports

    May 7, 2024; New York, New York, USA; New York Rangers left wing Chris Kreider (20) celebrates his goal against the Carolina Hurricanes with left wing Artemi Panarin (10) and center Vincent Trocheck (16) during the third period of game two of the second round of the 2024 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports

    Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports

    Instead of a road win, or a power-play goal, or much of anything to show for their commendable effort in the first two games of this series, the Carolina Hurricanes now have questions. Lots of questions. They’ll bring a planeload of them home with them, and very few answers.

    That is the way of the postseason, sometimes, as the twists and turns of a series loop back on each other and the pitter-patter of little issues becomes a drumbeat of failure. This is where the Hurricanes find themselves after Tuesday’s 4-3 double-overtime loss to the New York Rangers, and even with the additional period and a half, the verses were different from Game 1 but the chorus was the same.

    The goaltending wasn’t good enough to win it. Their five-on-five dominance hasn’t been rewarded. And their special teams have been an unmitigated catastrophe.

    The Hurricanes had a one-goal lead in the third period Tuesday before the Rangers tied it with a power-play goal and won it with a power-play goal. Between those two back-breaking goals, the Hurricanes had two power plays of their own, either of which would have won the game and brought home-ice advantage back to Raleigh instead of just simmering frustration.

    “We’re right there,” said Jake Guentzel, who scored twice in his best game of the playoffs so far. “It’s a small margin for error in the playoffs. We’ve got to buckle down on the power play and find a way to get one there.”

    Two one-goal losses. Minus-4 on special teams. A recipe for disaster. Seven of the Hurricanes’ last 11 playoff games have been one-goal losses. If the playoffs are a contest of fine margins, the Hurricanes are ending up on the wrong side too often.

    So now, questions.

    Lots of questions.

    Is it time to give Pyotr Kochetkov a look in goal? Frederik Andersen gave up a ton of rebounds and the game-tying and game-winning goals both came after shots he initially saved. Andersen hasn’t been terrible, but he hasn’t outplayed Igor Shesterkin, either.

    What about the penalty-kill, which has allowed four power-play goals in two games? The Rangers were 2-for-7 on the power play Tuesday, which suggests that it may be a problem of volume as much as execution.

    May 7, 2024; New York, New York, USA; New York Rangers defenseman K’Andre Miller (79) and center Vincent Trocheck (16) separate Carolina Hurricanes right wing Andrei Svechnikov (37) from Rangers goaltender Igor Shesterkin (31) during the second overtime of game two of the second round of the 2024 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports
    May 7, 2024; New York, New York, USA; New York Rangers defenseman K’Andre Miller (79) and center Vincent Trocheck (16) separate Carolina Hurricanes right wing Andrei Svechnikov (37) from Rangers goaltender Igor Shesterkin (31) during the second overtime of game two of the second round of the 2024 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports Brad Penner Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports

    The Hurricanes are too often playing into the Rangers’ hands that way. It contributed to Evgeny Kuznetsov’s benching for Game 2, after Adam Fox goaded him into a retaliatory cross-check, and Fox did it again Tuesday. Fox snuck in a punch to Guentzel’s face in a scrum, then buckled like his lights went out when Guentzel returned fire, drawing a penalty. (To that point, it was Guentzel’s best shot of the playoffs, a distinction it did not hold for long.)

    At a certain point, that’s not on the Rangers. Leopard, spots, etc. It’s on the Hurricanes for giving them the opportunities. Which they did over and over again. (Andrei Svechnikov, master of the offensive-zone penalty, took two of them.)

    And then there’s the power play, officially 0-for-10 in the series but really 0-for-8, given that two opportunities were cut short immediately by Hurricanes penalties. The Hurricanes have retreated to their worst instincts, passing the puck passively around the perimeter, waiting for perfection instead of putting the puck on net.

    May 7, 2024; New York, New York, USA; New York Rangers left wing Chris Kreider (20) skates with the puck against Carolina Hurricanes defenseman Tony DeAngelo (77) during the third period of game two of the second round of the 2024 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports
    May 7, 2024; New York, New York, USA; New York Rangers left wing Chris Kreider (20) skates with the puck against Carolina Hurricanes defenseman Tony DeAngelo (77) during the third period of game two of the second round of the 2024 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports Brad Penner Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports

    Can the power play even be fixed at this point, before it’s too late? Has it become too predicable, an open book to playoff opponents who have figured out how to stop it? Given how close the Hurricanes came to winning one or both of these games, is it too late already?

    “We have to be sharper,” Hurricanes coach Rod Brind’Amour said. “We have to get inside. We’re on the outside and it’s just not how we do it, anyway. We’ve got to get back to doing it how we know how.”

    The series isn’t over yet. Far from it. The Hurricanes are headed home with a chance to come back here next week on even terms, asking all the questions for a change. It’s what the Rangers did to them after falling behind 2-0 on the road in 2022.

    But unlike their power play through two games, the Hurricanes will actually have to take advantage.

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    Sports columnist Luke DeCock joined The News & Observer in 2000 and has covered seven Final Fours, the Summer Olympics, the Super Bowl and the Carolina Hurricanes’ Stanley Cup. He is a past president of the U.S. Basketball Writers Association, was the 2020 winner of the National Headliner Award as the country’s top sports columnist and has twice been named North Carolina Sportswriter of the Year.

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  • For Hurricanes, so much has changed since 2022, but not disadvantage on special teams

    For Hurricanes, so much has changed since 2022, but not disadvantage on special teams

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    May 5, 2024; New York, New York, USA; Carolina Hurricanes goaltender Frederik Andersen (31) makes a save on a shot on goal attempt by New York Rangers center Matt Rempe (73) in the second period in game one of the second round of the 2024 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-USA TODAY Sports

    May 5, 2024; New York, New York, USA; Carolina Hurricanes goaltender Frederik Andersen (31) makes a save on a shot on goal attempt by New York Rangers center Matt Rempe (73) in the second period in game one of the second round of the 2024 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-USA TODAY Sports

    Wendell Cruz-USA TODAY Sports

    If all you heard was the booing every time Tony DeAngelo touched the puck, or the “Tony sucks” chant in the third period, how would you know DeAngelo had left and come back since the Carolina Hurricanes’ last playoff game at Madison Square Garden?

    And if you didn’t notice Vincent Trocheck was on the other team, or Frederik Andersen was on the ice instead of in the press box, it was hard to tell, even with all the different names and faces, that this was 2024 and not 2022.

    That’s how it felt for the Hurricanes, too.

    The New York Rangers’ power play was the game-breaking difference?

    The Hurricanes lost a playoff game on 33rd Street?

    What year is this, anyway?

    The Hurricanes picked up where they left off two years ago at the Garden in the postseason with a 4-3 loss to open the second round, and it was less the fact of the loss that was so jarring than how familiar the story was despite all the time that had elapsed since the last one.

    Special teams. Boom.

    Or “boom, boom,” as DeAngelo put it, because the Rangers needed only 23 seconds of their two power plays to score twice.

    New York Rangers center Mika Zibanejad (93) celebrates after scoring his second goal of the game in the first period against the Carolina Hurricanes in game one of the second round of the 2024 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Madison Square Garden.
    New York Rangers center Mika Zibanejad (93) celebrates after scoring his second goal of the game in the first period against the Carolina Hurricanes in game one of the second round of the 2024 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Madison Square Garden. Wendell Cruz USA TODAY Sports

    The Hurricanes actually played as well or better in this one than they did in any of the three losses in 2022, rebounding from a helter-skelter first period that included both Rangers power-play goals. Five-on-five, they’ll take it, especially the second and third periods. If the hyped-up crowd goaded them into a couple early penalties, they kept their discipline after that. Frederik Andersen might like a couple goals back, but so would Igor Shesterkin. That battle, at least, was a draw.

    But if the Rangers are going to finish both of their power-play chances in mere seconds and the Hurricanes are going to go 0-for-5 — the fifth lasting only six seconds thanks to a soft and late penalty on Andrei Svechnikov that felt like a make-up call for the puck-over-glass call that put the Hurricanes on the power play in the first place — it doesn’t really matter what else happens.

    Both goals happened so quickly that it was abundantly clear how thin the margin of error is for the Hurricanes short-handed. One faceoff loss. One slightly lost coverage. The Rangers have made a habit of making the Hurricanes pay for any slippage, and they did it again Sunday.

    “They have some great players,” Hurricanes captain Jordan Staal said. “Our kill is predicated on pressure and they have to make three or four great passes to get a Grade A and they did. It was pretty evident. They made some good plays. We’ll adjust. We’ll find ways to pressure at the right times and the right opportunities and make sure we do a better job.”

    Hockey can be a complex game full of mystery and wonder, hard to pin down statistically or analytically because of the whirling bodies and crazy bounces and the difference an inch or two can make one way or another. The Grand Unifying Theory of hockey has so far eluded definition.

    But it can also be a simple game, because in the end, it’s binary: the puck either goes in or it doesn’t.

    The Rangers, in 23 seconds with an extra man on the ice, scored twice. The Hurricanes, in more than eight minutes of power-play time, never did, although Seth Jarvis’ late goal came with Andersen on the bench for an extra attacker.

    In Game 1, it was that simple. And in that respect, just like 2022.

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    Sports columnist Luke DeCock joined The News & Observer in 2000 and has covered seven Final Fours, the Summer Olympics, the Super Bowl and the Carolina Hurricanes’ Stanley Cup. He is a past president of the U.S. Basketball Writers Association, was the 2020 winner of the National Headliner Award as the country’s top sports columnist and has twice been named North Carolina Sportswriter of the Year.

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  • With five unanswered goals, Carolina Hurricanes add to their history of playoff shocks

    With five unanswered goals, Carolina Hurricanes add to their history of playoff shocks

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    To one pair of eyes, watching from the owner’s box, this looked all too familiar. In his time with the Carolina Hurricanes, Eric Staal was part of any number of improbable playoff comebacks, usually but not always against the New Jersey Devils, the kind of games people still talk about five, 10, 20 years later.

    He watched his younger brother this time, a civilian, alongside three sons too young to have witnessed what their father did in a Hurricanes uniform. But if they wanted to know, if they wanted to get a sense of the magic the Hurricanes have so often conjured in the spring, this was it.

    “The momentum of the building. The sound. The energy,” Eric Staal said as he greeted former teammates in the locker room afterward. “Knowing that there was going to be a couple more chances, and if the vibes were right, they were going to go in. And they were today.”

    The stuff of legend. The stuff of history. The stuff of nicknames.

    Category 5.

    Five unanswered goals. From three down to two up. Not only did the Hurricanes score with their goalie pulled, they scored after the New York Islanders pulled theirs.

    Carolina’s Jack Drury (18), Jordan Staal (11) and Brent Burns (8) celebrate with Jordan Martinook (48) after Martinook scored to put the Canes up 4-3 during the third period of the Hurricanes’ 5-3 victory over the Islanders in the first round of the Stanley Cup playoffs at PNC Arena in Raleigh, N.C., Monday, April 22, 2024.
    Carolina’s Jack Drury (18), Jordan Staal (11) and Brent Burns (8) celebrate with Jordan Martinook (48) after Martinook scored to put the Canes up 4-3 during the third period of the Hurricanes’ 5-3 victory over the Islanders in the first round of the Stanley Cup playoffs at PNC Arena in Raleigh, N.C., Monday, April 22, 2024. Ethan Hyman ehyman@newsobserver.com

    There’s something deep in this franchise’s DNA, passed down from Jeff O’Neill to Rod Brind’Amour to Eric Staal to Brock McGinn to everyone on the roster now, that makes nights like this possible. That makes the impossible possible.

    Down 3-2 with less than three minutes to go, Sebastian Aho scored with the Carolina net empty to tie the score. Then Jordan Martinook scored nine seconds later. Then Jake Guentzel scored into an empty net at the other end to ice a 5-3 win that left the Islanders picking fights and Patrick Roy shell-shocked on an increasingly empty bench. The Islanders had more misconducts (six) as the officials sorted through their shenanigans than they did shots on goal (one) in the third period.

    This wasn’t a team sending a message at the end of a playoff game it lost. It was a shattered team lashing out in frustration after surrendering a three-goal lead, wilting in the face of a relentless attack that for so long failed to break through and then broke the Islanders entirely.

    “It was a special night for sure,” Brind’Amour said. “It’s one of those games we’ll probably look back on for a long time.”

    Carolina head coach Rod Brind’Amour talks to his team during a timeout late in the third period of the Hurricanes’ 5-3 victory over the Islanders in the first round of the Stanley Cup playoffs at PNC Arena in Raleigh, N.C., Monday, April 22, 2024.
    Carolina head coach Rod Brind’Amour talks to his team during a timeout late in the third period of the Hurricanes’ 5-3 victory over the Islanders in the first round of the Stanley Cup playoffs at PNC Arena in Raleigh, N.C., Monday, April 22, 2024. Ethan Hyman ehyman@newsobserver.com

    For the players who were a part of it, it’s too soon to appreciate just how stunning this was, just how memorable it will be. Time will take care of that. They know they were a part of something that will resonate far longer than the usual playoff game. Only later, when the adrenaline and euphoria fade, will they realize for just how long.

    “I still have to kind of come down from it,” Martinook said. “I think you have to go home and take a deep breath and then maybe watch the highlights. Because when you’re in it, you’re in it. Your sole focus is on the game. There’s some crazy things happening.”

    For 30 minutes, after falling behind, the Hurricanes pounded away at the Islanders’ net. They hit the posts on either side of Semyon Varlamov in the second period as Teuvo Teravainen got the Hurricanes on the board with a power-play goal. And they kept at it, shot after shot after shot, until Seth Jarvis beat Varlamov with a nasty wrister to pull the Hurricanes within a goal.

    And immediately after Aho tipped in an Andrei Svechnikov shot, Martinook caught Varlamov sleeping and tucked the puck behind him from behind the net. Game, set, match. Series?

    Carolina center Sebastian Aho (20) celebrates after scoring to tie the game 3-3 during the third period of the Hurricanes’ 5-3 victory over the Islanders in the first round of the Stanley Cup playoffs at PNC Arena in Raleigh, N.C., Monday, April 22, 2024.
    Carolina center Sebastian Aho (20) celebrates after scoring to tie the game 3-3 during the third period of the Hurricanes’ 5-3 victory over the Islanders in the first round of the Stanley Cup playoffs at PNC Arena in Raleigh, N.C., Monday, April 22, 2024. Ethan Hyman ehyman@newsobserver.com

    The Hurricanes weren’t thrilled with the way they played in Game 1, but were rewarded. They did everything right in Game 2 and weren’t rewarded for so long, until they were over and over again. The final tally of all shot attempts, on goal, blocked, missed? 110 to 28.

    So this one goes into the history books, alongside the Miracle at Molson and the Shock at the Rock and all the other games that need no other description.

    The Hurricanes have done this before, come back from three goals down: Game 4 in Montreal in 2002, Game 1 against the Edmonton Oilers in the 2006 Stanley Cup finals. Only seven teams have ever scored the game-tying and game-winning goals in the final three minutes of a playoff game. The Hurricanes have done it twice.

    Lou Lamoriello watched Eric Staal eliminate his Devils in 2009 when he scored the second of two Hurricanes goals in the final 80 seconds of Game 7 to flip a series-ending loss into a series-ending win. He watched Monday as the Hurricanes all but eliminated his Islanders with three goals in the final 165 seconds of Game 2.

    “We were even talking about that the other night, Eric’s goal against Jersey,” Jordan Staal said. “I watched it all. It’s fun to go do it tonight.”

    In 2006, a year before he entered the NHL, Jordan Staal was then merely an interested spectator. Monday night, it was his brother’s turn to watch in return as a very different group of Hurricanes made a very similar kind of history.

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    This story was originally published April 23, 2024, 12:04 AM.

    Related stories from Raleigh News & Observer

    Sports columnist Luke DeCock joined The News & Observer in 2000 and has covered seven Final Fours, the Summer Olympics, the Super Bowl and the Carolina Hurricanes’ Stanley Cup. He is a past president of the U.S. Basketball Writers Association, was the 2020 winner of the National Headliner Award as the country’s top sports columnist and has twice been named North Carolina Sportswriter of the Year.

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  • Hurricanes’ Michael Bunting in his element in surly battle of Stanley Cup contenders

    Hurricanes’ Michael Bunting in his element in surly battle of Stanley Cup contenders

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    Carolina Hurricanes left wing Michael Bunting (58) and left wing Teuvo Teravainen (86) battle Colorado Avalanche right wing Logan O’Connor (25) during the third period at PNC Arena.

    Carolina Hurricanes left wing Michael Bunting (58) and left wing Teuvo Teravainen (86) battle Colorado Avalanche right wing Logan O’Connor (25) during the third period at PNC Arena.

    Michael Bunting spun around after getting cross-checked in the back to see Logan O’Connor taking a swing at him, before unseen hands belonging to Miles Wood grabbed him around the neck and threw him to the ice. He got up furious, screaming, ushered to the penalty box most unwillingly.

    He scored a power-play goal. He drew a penalty of questionable provenance. He was at the center of every flare-up. It was like Bunting answered an unexpected bat signal, rising to the occasion for the exact reasons the Carolina Hurricanes pursued him as a free agent.

    It felt like the playoffs, in terms of bad blood and pace and weird stuff happening. And it felt like Bunting’s kind of moment.

    “Yeah, it’s fun,” Bunting said. “It’s fun, obviously, when there’s emotion in the game and both teams are being really competitive and it kind of gets chippy. It’s kind of like a playoff atmosphere when games are like that. I always love games like that.”

    Carolina Hurricanes left wing Michael Bunting (58) and Colorado Avalanche defenseman Josh Manson (42) reacts during the second period at PNC Arena.
    Carolina Hurricanes left wing Michael Bunting (58) and Colorado Avalanche defenseman Josh Manson (42) reacts during the second period at PNC Arena. James Guillory James Guillory-USA TODAY Sports

    For two teams that see each other twice a year, and typically without incident, the Hurricanes and Colorado Avalanche played Thursday night like they still had grudges to settle from fighting a seven-game war the previous spring, perhaps previous springs, and they played like the stakes were still that high, even as the Hurricanes pulled away to an early three-goal lead thanks to a Martin Necas hat trick on their way to a 5-2 win.

    The elevated temperatures among two Stanley Cup contenders appeared to put Bunting into his element, unexpected given the timing and opponent, coming a few months early against unfamiliar foes. Joel Kiviranti felt victimized by the high-stick Bunting drew on him. By the time O’Connor made his run at him halfway through the third period, it felt like it had been coming for a while.

    “That was spur of the moment,” Bunting said. “I don’t even know really what happened. I turned around and saw him swinging at me and he missed and then I got in a headlock and pulled down in a scrum. I don’t really know what happened, but that’s hockey.”

    With the Toronto Maple Leafs, he excelled not only at scoring goals and meshing with elite talent, but getting under the skin of the opposition. Which he did to extremes Thursday, combining finishing skill with elite-level snidery.

    There hasn’t really been a ton of that from Bunting this year, who certainly was under some pressure to dial back the edge after becoming a focus of officiating attention a year ago. And his goal, the essential fifth, was only his 11th of the season. The Hurricanes haven’t exactly gotten full value for their $4.5 million.

    So far. Or, based on Thursday night, yet.

    “That’s his game,” Hurricanes coach Rod Brind’Amour said. “Whatever you have to do. A huge goal that we needed at that time. He drew some penalties. Really should have drawn another one (O’Connor) not sure how it ended up like that.”

    Carolina Hurricanes left wing Michael Bunting (58) shot attempt is stopped by Colorado Avalanche goaltender Alexandar Georgiev (40) during the third period at PNC Arena.
    Carolina Hurricanes left wing Michael Bunting (58) shot attempt is stopped by Colorado Avalanche goaltender Alexandar Georgiev (40) during the third period at PNC Arena. James Guillory James Guillory-USA TODAY Sports

    Because Bunting wasn’t signed to beat Columbus on a Tuesday night. He was brought in to score big goals in big moments, the kind of goals the Hurricanes couldn’t score in the conference final last year. He was brought in to draw penalties, the kind the Hurricanes too often take instead in the postseason. He was brought in to instigate, when the Hurricanes in years past have too often been caught retaliating.

    There’s a role to be filled there, but it’s a hard one to fill in the regular season. Except on a night like Thursday, when two elite teams brought not only skill and speed but surliness to the ice. It may not be a coincidence Bunting rose above and scored a Bunting-style goal, ghosting to an open space in the slot to convert one of Teuvo Teravainen’s career-high four assists.

    “That’s my game on the power play,” Bunting said. “Just find that soft spot and try to get open and support the guys on the flanks and he was able to find me.”

    It stood out, even on a night when so much else was going on, from Necas’ 17-minute hat trick to more goaltending shenanigans — Pyotr Kochetkov was pulled after his Scott Darling tribute act, giving up two goals in five seconds late in the first, only to re-enter 20 minutes later after Antti Raanta was injured, and the two goalies combined to stop all 19 shots over the final two periods.

    Carolina Hurricanes goaltender Antti Raanta (32) stops the shot attempt by Colorado Avalanche center Nathan MacKinnon (29) during the second period at PNC Arena.
    Carolina Hurricanes goaltender Antti Raanta (32) stops the shot attempt by Colorado Avalanche center Nathan MacKinnon (29) during the second period at PNC Arena. James Guillory James Guillory-USA TODAY Sports

    There was Seth Jarvis leaving the game after blocking a shot with his unprotected right hand, only to be awarded a goal after he was hacked trying to score into an empty net. And there was a virtuoso lock-down performance from Brent Burns and Jaccob Slavin, with Brett Pesce out sick, at even strength and especially on the penalty kill.

    It was a lot to pack into a February nonconference game, but just about the right amount of nonsense for the Hurricanes in the playoffs, lacking only an Erik Haula heel turn or Charlie McAvoy’s miraculous, record-setting recovery from COVID. If those are truly the circumstances that bring out Bunting’s best, his best may yet be a few months away. But Thursday may have been a sneak preview of what the Hurricanes want, and need, from him.

    “You get into it pretty quick, especially when things get rough out there,” Bunting said. “You take a hit sometimes, it gets you right into the game. That gets me going too.”

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    Sports columnist Luke DeCock joined The News & Observer in 2000 and has covered seven Final Fours, the Summer Olympics, the Super Bowl and the Carolina Hurricanes’ Stanley Cup. He is a past president of the U.S. Basketball Writers Association, was the 2020 winner of the National Headliner Award as the country’s top sports columnist and has twice been named North Carolina Sportswriter of the Year.

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