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Tag: Frederik Andersen

  • Carolina Hurricanes goalie to have surgery, miss rest of season while rehabbing

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    Pyotr Kochetkov of the Carolina Hurricanes drinks water during the second period against the New York Rangers at Madison Square Garden on Nov. 4, 2025 in New York City. Kochetkov stopped 19 of 22 shots Saturday in a 6-3 win over Buffalo.

    Pyotr Kochetkov of the Carolina Hurricanes drinks water during the second period against the New York Rangers at Madison Square Garden on Nov. 4, 2025 in New York City. Kochetkov stopped 19 of 22 shots Saturday in a 6-3 win over Buffalo.

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    Carolina Hurricanes goalie Pyotr Kochetkov will have surgery and likely will miss the remainder of the 2025-26 season, coach Rod Brind’Amour said Monday.

    Kochetkov took part in Sunday’s practice session at the Lenovo Center and was believed to be the probable starter for Monday’s game against the New York Rangers. But on Monday, the Hurricanes placed the young goalie on injured reserve, and Brind’Amour made the announcement a few hours before game time.

    Brind’Amour said Kochetkov, 26, has been dealing with a lower-body issue all season and made the decision to undergo surgery and then rehab the rest of this season. In an interview on the Canes pregame show, he added Kochetkov had a hip ailment.

    Kochetkov’s surgery is another blow to the injury-riddled Hurricanes. The Canes’ top forward, Seth Jarvis, and best defenseman, Jaccob Slavin, remain sidelined, and their status is listed as “week to week.” Defenseman Shayne Gostisbehere missed Monday’s game with a lower-body concern.

    Despite the injuries, the Canes went into Monday’s game with a 23-11-3 record, leading both the Metropolitan Division and the Eastern Conference.

    Without Kochetkov, Brind’Amour said the Canes must rely on Brandon Bussi and veteran Frederik Andersen, who has had his own injury issues. Bussi, slated as Monday’s starter, has been one of most remarkable stories of the NHL season, coming to the Canes off waivers from the Florida Panthers before the season and putting together a 12-1-1 record that included a nine-game win streak that tied Cam Ward’s franchise record.

    Kochetkov had played in nine games this season, with a 6-2-0 record, 2.22 goals-against average and .899 save percentage. His overall record is 71-38-12 with 11 career shutouts.

    “He didn’t feel right all year,” Brind’Amour said. “He’s been playing great. That’s the hard part. You can kind of fight through it, but he didn’t want to take it that way, so we’ll get it fixed and go from there.”

    Kochetkov did not play in the first 11 games of the season, making his first start Nov. 4 against the Rangers and notching a 26-save shutout.

    The Canes were in the position of likely carrying three goalies this season. That’s not the case anymore.

    “The luxury we had is no longer a luxury,” Brind’Amour said.

    Brind’Amour called the season “unprecedented” in terms of the injuries. Only one defenseman, Sean Walker, has been available every game.

    “We went a couple of years when we didn’t have our D get any injuries,” he said. “We were pretty lucky then, but now it’s been all year. Every team has a certain degree of it … We’ve just got to figure it out.”

    This story was originally published December 29, 2025 at 5:39 PM.

    Chip Alexander

    The News & Observer

    In more than 40 years at The N&O, Chip Alexander has covered the N.C. State, UNC, Duke and East Carolina beats, and now is in his 15th season on the Carolina Hurricanes beat. Alexander, who has won numerous writing awards at the state and national level, covered the Hurricanes’ move to North Carolina in 1997 and was a part of The N&O’s coverage of the Canes’ 2006 Stanley Cup run.

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  • Nearing the NHL quarter pole, what is the Hurricanes’ greatest position of need?

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    Frederik Andersen of the Carolina Hurricanes is introduced prior to the game against the New Jersey Devils at Lenovo Center on October 09, 2025 in Raleigh, North Carolina.

    Frederik Andersen of the Carolina Hurricanes is introduced prior to the game against the New Jersey Devils at Lenovo Center on October 09, 2025 in Raleigh, North Carolina.

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    With the NHL season approaching the end of its first gradable quarter, it’s fair for onlookers to start pulling out the No. 2 pencils to fill in the test ovals — and perhaps fill out a holiday wish list while they’re at it.

    A torrent of injured defenders has made it nearly impossible to truly tell what the Carolina Hurricanes are in 2025-26, while simultaneously cranking the wheel of the in-season trade target rumor mill.

    After Saturday night’s 4-3 overtime loss to the Edmonton Oilers at Lenovo Center — the second of back-to-back games at home before a four-game road swing — the team’s needs remain much the same as they did in Week 1.

    If the Hurricanes’ early-season trials and tribulations have done nothing else, they’ve perhaps prematurely outed Carolina as an organization with a glut of young defensive depth. If the Canes were hoping to mask that depth as a bargaining position for future trade talks or contract negotiations, the team’s three dozen man games lost to injury on the blue line alone — and the team’s subsequent success — have eradicated that line of thinking.

    Saturday, the Canes started a third consecutive game with the same six defenders, their second-longest stretch of consecutive games with the same grouping this season. Shayne Gostisbehere again found the scoresheet, earning his 11th assist of the season, and the group acquitted itself well overall.

    Ditto up front, where Eric Robinson and William Carrier each missed significant time with simultaneous, unrelated injuries. No problem: In stepped Bradley Nadeau. Veteran Mark Jankowski came out of the press box, and a stable of young forwards — like Felix Unger Sorem — awaits in Chicago, hoping to follow similar paths to those of Charles Alexis Legault, Joel Nystrom and Dominic Fensore.

    Jankowski was back in the lineup Saturday after an injury to Jesperi Kotkaniemi on Friday, and Nadeau was back in the building, in case Seth Jarvis was unable to go after his injury scare against Vancouver.

    On the scoring front, Robinson found the net, Carrier added an assist on a Jordan Staal goal, and Nik Ehlers continued his strong rebound to a slower start to the season with his fourth goal.

    None of the above had an answer for the Oilers’ big guns. Connor McDavid had a pair of goals and an assist on the OT winner. Leon Draisaitl had that game-winner and two assists.

    Pyotr Kochetkov of the Carolina Hurricanes drinks water during the second period against the New York Rangers at Madison Square Garden on Nov. 4, 2025 in New York City.
    Pyotr Kochetkov of the Carolina Hurricanes drinks water during the second period against the New York Rangers at Madison Square Garden on Nov. 4, 2025 in New York City. Sarah Stier Getty Images

    Hurricanes goalies, by the numbers

    But what do we make of the Hurricanes’ goaltending to date?

    Here are the raw numbers:

    Frederik Andersen, prior to Saturday’s game, had started nine times. He had a 3.00 goals-against average and an .892 save percentage. Among 31 NHL goalies with nine or more starts, Andersen was 19th in GAA, and 24th in save percentage.

    Brandon Bussi has been a breath of fresh air in the early going, a surprising waiver wire success with four wins in five starts, a 2.60 GAA and an .898 save percentage.

    Brandon Bussi of the Carolina Hurricanes makes a save on a shot by Alexander Wennberg of the San Jose Sharks during the second period at SAP Center on Oct. 14, 2025 in San Jose, California.
    Brandon Bussi of the Carolina Hurricanes makes a save on a shot by Alexander Wennberg of the San Jose Sharks during the second period at SAP Center on Oct. 14, 2025 in San Jose, California. Ezra Shaw Getty Images

    And Pyotr Kochetkov, injured to begin the season, has been solid since his return. In four appearances — three starts — Kochetkov is 3-0 with a 1.92 GAA and a .908 save percentage.

    The numbers are fine, for sure. A cumulative 2.88 team GAA is ninth best in the 32-team NHL, which is in line with a team also sitting ninth best in shots allowed per game.

    But ninth best of 32 looks a lot better than ninth best of 16, and 16 is the number that matters more — it’s how many playoff teams there will be, and a middle-of-the-road GAA isn’t typically part of a recipe for playoff success.

    In the NHL playoffs, the game gets tighter. Games with final scores like 6-3, 7-4 or even 4-3 are replaced by multiple 2-1 and 3-2 games. The teams with better cumulative defense and, yes, goaltending, advance. Those who struggle in tight, low-scoring games do not.

    Through 18 games this season, the Hurricanes are scoring 3.71 goals per game, third best in the NHL, and that number is propped up by the team’s opening six-game stretch — all wins — during which it scored four or more goals in each contest.

    In the Hurricanes’ 12 wins this season, they’ve scored four or more goals 11 times. The Canes’ record in games in which they score fewer than four goals? 1-6.

    A win is a win is a win, until the numbers turn on you.

    It also doesn’t help when the Hurricanes create their own problems. Friday, two glaring defensive lapses created untenable situations for Kochetkov. Saturday, Andersen gift-wrapped the Oilers’ first goal with a direct pass to Jack Roslovic. (Nothing Andersen could do on McDavid’s power- play goal, though, nor his second of the night in the third period.)

    Frederik Andersen of the Carolina Hurricanes is examined by a trainer in a game against the Colorado Avalanche at Ball Arena on April 16, 2022 in Denver, Colorado.
    Frederik Andersen of the Carolina Hurricanes is examined by a trainer in a game against the Colorado Avalanche at Ball Arena on April 16, 2022 in Denver, Colorado. Dustin Bradford Getty Images

    What could the Canes do?

    The luxuries the Hurricanes have in this situation, though, are twofold: They have money, and they have time.

    No one worth a shred of credibility can say for certain before (American) Thanksgiving which players on which teams will for certain be available in any trade or sign-and-trade scenario, nor which teams will play ball at all. Even those teams currently sitting at the bottom of the league can point to the worst-to-Cup 2019 St. Louis Blues as a harbinger of what’s possible.

    But given the Canes’ solid start to the season — they are, after all, sitting among the top five in the NHL standings — there is no urgency to make sudden moves. (And if someone in the front office did have a hair trigger, Carolina would likely already have a new defenseman in the rotation.)

    The other factor to consider — eventually — is whether any possible moves actually make the team better. Acquiring the “top goalie from a team that isn’t doing well” works well in fantasy sports dynasty leagues, but not so much when term, cap space and player proclivity are factors.

    Of those extraneous factors, though, cap space is the least of the Canes’ concerns. They are currently sitting on about $10 million, give or take, with only about $5 million currently tied up in the goaltending position among the three who have played games this season to date.

    Cayden Primeau of the Toronto Maple Leafs skates against the Montreal Canadiens at Scotiabank Arena on Oct. 8, 2025 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
    Cayden Primeau of the Toronto Maple Leafs skates against the Montreal Canadiens at Scotiabank Arena on Oct. 8, 2025 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Chris Tanouye Getty Images

    The Hurricanes did go back to the waiver wire and reacquire Cayden Primeau from the Maple Leafs, an ultimate boomerang move, and that addresses one kind of depth.

    There is nothing in the empirical data to directly suggest that Andersen, Kochetkov, Bussi or Primeau can’t become the playoff goalie the Hurricanes need this season — Andersen and Kochetkov last season posted the second-best GAA in the NHL playoffs, for what that’s worth, and some guy named Cam Ward caught lightning in a bottle at the right time in 2006.

    But there’s also nothing lost by exploring all of the team’s best options, given its positive fiscal situation and now-apparent strength and depth elsewhere in the lineup.

    Justin Pelletier

    The News & Observer

    Justin is a 25-year veteran sports journalist with stops in Lewiston, Maine (Sun Journal), and Boston (Boston Herald). A proud husband, and father of twin girls, Pelletier is a Boston University graduate and member of the esteemed Jack Falla sportswriting mafia. He has earned dozens of state and national sportswriting and editing awards covering preps, colleges and professional leagues.

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    Justin Pelletier

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  • Flyers thoughts: About that overturned goal, Sanheim’s minutes, and no Michkov in OT

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    The Flyers are 0-1-1 to start the year after Saturday night’s 4-3 loss to Carolina in overtime, but not without some early controversy. 

    See, the Flyers won initially, or at least they thought. 

    Just within the final minute of OT, Trevor Zegras carried the puck into the offensive zone, made a move, then slipped a pass to Travis Sanheim crashing in. 

    Sanheim, with speed, took the puck and cut around the Carolina defenders across the top of the crease. Goaltender Frederik Andersen pushed up to disrupt Sanheim, but as he did, the puck rolled straight to the stick of Bobby Brink, who took an extra glide across and fired home the winner. 

    Andersen took issue with the sequence, though, and after review, the officials sided with him. They waved off the goal for goaltender interference on Sanheim. The Hurricanes took it the other way and scored for the win soon after. 

    It’s what it is. 

    “It’s in the situation room. At that point, you usually don’t get an explanation,” Flyers head coach Rick Tocchet said postgame. “It’s a tough call. Yeah, been on the right side of those and the wrong side of them, so I really don’t have a comment on it.”

    But here’s the other way it looks: There is contact between Sanheim, as the puck carrier, and Andersen at the top of the crease, which starts the goaltender interference conversation. However, Andersen appears to initiate the contact by punching his glove out to disrupt Sanheim, and commits to playing him while not registering where the puck actually is until it’s too late, as this replay captured by Nasty Knuckles producer Travis Ballinghoff shows:

    The NHL Situation Room explanation on the play and its ruling to disallow the goal, per NHL.com’s Adam Kimelman:

    That seems like a lot of onus on Sanheim when it’s pretty plain to see that Andersen made a decision on a move that pulled him out of his crease. 

    Even if he wasn’t touched, his slide carried him to the left post as Brink was striding across to the right. Andersen never would’ve had a chance at stopping that shot in any scenario. 

    But hey, it’s the call the league made, and it’s two games into the season. It’s what it is. 

    “Just trying to make a play to net,” Sanheim said. “I guess incidental contact. Felt like he kind of pushed his arms out, too. It was kind of ‘I have to make a play’ as well, and when I see it, I don’t think he was ever getting back, even if I don’t touch him. So tough call.

    “Obviously, it’s not the refs, it’s the league that decided that, so it’s unfortunate and we have to live with it.”

    It’s what it is. 

    A few other quick thoughts on the Flyers…

    Here’s a Tipp

    The Flyers opened the scoring Saturday night in the first period’s final seconds, and while on the power play.

    Travis Konecny fired a shot that ricocheted off the glass behind the Carolina net that took a perfect bounce right back to the front for Owen Tippett to pot home.

    The Flyers took a 1-0 lead into the intermission, Tippett had his first goal of the year, and the Flyers had their first power play goal of the year. 

    And those latter two facts might be key. 

    The power play has been abysmal the past few years, but in the sequence shown in the clip above, it moved pretty fluidly with Trevor Zegras handling the puck in the middle of the Flyers’ setup and drawing attention. It left Konecny alone at the wall with plenty of space to move in and pick his spot. 

    The bounce to Tippett is a bit of luck, but you do need to be in the right place, right time to score more often than not, and he was right where he needed to be. 

    The Flyers need to be better this year on the man advantage, no ifs, ands, or buts about it, and they could really use Tippett getting back to scraping up against or even breaking the 30-goal mark after struggling through long droughts of inconsistency last season. 

    Saturday night was only one case, but a promising one for both.

    A lot of skating for Sanheim

    The Flyers had to submit their opening night roster with Cam York and Rasmus Ristolainen both sidelined, and right away, their defense looked concerningly thin without them. 

    So far, it’s easy to see the strain. You just have to look at Travis Sanheim’s minutes. 

    Thursday night against Florida, he skated 27:15, and then Saturday night with the overtime period, he totaled 29:34 with 38 shifts taken.

    The Flyers have been leaning heavily on their top defenseman in the early going. He’s handled it, and scored the tying goal to push Saturday night into overtime, but they still have 80 more games. 

    They need some defensive depth to balance themselves out.

    Never miss a beat

    It’s early, and the Flyers have the benefit of a grace period to fully get acclimated with new head coach Rick Tocchet.

    The rough patches have been there through the first two games, but the line of Noah Cates, Tyson Foerster, and Bobby Brink? That trio hasn’t seemed to miss a beat. 

    They put together the sequence that led to the Flyers’ lone goal in the loss to Florida on Thursday night, and Saturday night, they were all over the ice. 

    Brink scored in the second period off some strong play along the wall from him, Cates, and Nikita Grebenkin before the latter winger hopped off for a change:

    Then in overtime, Brink had the puck, the space, and the extra step inside for the OT winner before it was overturned, while throughout the night, it felt like if a Hurricane had the puck, Cates was instantly bearing down on them. 

    There’s no quit in that line, and out of the gate, they’ve been chaos for the opposition. Pretty safe to say they’re staying together.

    Where was Matvei?

    When the Flyers went into OT, Matvei Michkov didn’t see the ice. 

    Last season, through all the ups and downs for the rookie, it was clear immediately that he can fly with the extra ice available to him at 3-on-3, and rise to the occasion, too, with three overtime winners. 

    But Tocchet didn’t send him out. Why?

    “Just wanted the guys I thought were skating,” Tocchet said.

    Michkov has been mostly quiet through the first two games, which maybe lends to Tocchet’s point – though the winger did get scrappy with the Hurricanes after a hit on Konecny with his back turned.

    Even so, the counterargument is that you want your best offensive skaters out there in OT, so Michkov’s usage under Tocchet might be an early point to monitor. 

    Granted, we’re still only two games in. 

    For now, it’s what it is.


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    Nick Tricome

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  • Svechnikov, Hurricanes hand Canucks 7th straight loss

    Svechnikov, Hurricanes hand Canucks 7th straight loss

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    VANCOUVER, British Columbia — Andrei Svechnikov scored his seventh goal of the season and the Carolina Hurricanes handed the winless Vancouver Canucks their seventh straight loss, 3-2 Monday night.

    Sebastian Aho and Jesper Fast also scored for the Hurricanes, and Brent Burns had two assists. Frederik Andersen had 14 saves.

    “You’ve got to have your top guys contributing nightly or it’s gonna be hard,” Hurricanes coach Rod Brind’Amour said. “They come to play every game this year. I’m real proud of the group, honestly.

    “I know it’s early in the year, but we really come out hard in every game and tonight was tough sledding, I felt like we were in control but it was a tight game and the guys just keep working and we got the two points.”

    J.T. Miller scored two goals for the Canucks (0-5-2), who are the only NHL team without a win. Thatcher Demko stopped 36 shots.

    “Night in and night out, losing, it takes a toll on you mentally, physically, trying to come from behind the last couple games,” Canucks captain Bo Horvat said. “It’s frustrating right now, obviously, and you’ve got to stay optimistic. You can’t just keep beating yourself up or keep feeling sorry for yourself because it’s just gonna get worse if you do that. So we’ve just got to get ready for the next game.”

    Tied 1-1 since midway through the first period, Carolina scored twice early in the third to take control.

    In the opening minute of the period, Seth Jarvis got a partial breakaway and fired a shot at Demko. The goalie made the stop but couldn’t corral the puck, leaving it unattended in the blue paint. Aho sprinted in and popped it into the yawning net to give the Hurricanes a 2-1 lead at 50 seconds.

    The goal extended Aho’s point streak to five games, with four goals and five assists in the stretch.

    “He’s elite. He’s an elite player,” Jarvis said of Aho. “You expect nothing less from them and it’s nice to see to see him getting production and scoring a lot and that only helps our team win. So any time he’s having a good night it usually results in wins.”

    Just 37 seconds later, Fast registered his first of the season when a pass from Jordan Staal caromed off his skate into Vancouver’s net to make it 3-1.

    The Canucks pulled to 3-2 midway through the period after the puck hit Hurricanes forward Jesperi Kotkaniemi and Miller picked it up, firing a quick one-timer past Andersen for his second goal of the game.

    Vancouver called a 30-second timeout with 2:20 left, then pulled Demko in favor of an extra skater but couldn’t get the tying score.

    The Canucks were 1 for 2 on the power play while the Hurricanes went 1 for 3.

    Carolina opened the scoring early in the first after Vancouver’s Dakota Joshua was called for interference on Paul Stastny. It took the Hurricanes just 11 seconds to score on the man advantage as Necas sent a cross-ice pass to Svechnikov and the Russian unleashed a one-timer that beat Demko for a power-play goal at 6:06.

    Svechnikov’s goal tied him with Tampa Bay’s Steven Stamkos for the NHL lead at seven apiece.

    Carolina briefly appeared to double its lead midway through the period when Derek Stepan batted a puck in over Demko’s pad. Officials quickly disallowed the goal, citing goalie interference by Stastny, whose skate was in the blue paint. The Hurricanes challenged the call but a video review upheld the ruling and Carolina was handed a delay-of-game penalty.

    Vancouver capitalized with Elias Pettersson moving the puck behind the net and whipping it up to Horvat. The captain tapped it across the crease to Miller and he tapped it in to tie the score at 1-1 with 7 1/2 minutes left.

    THE FINAL MELTDOWN

    Vancouver has been outscored 15-2 in the third period over their first seven games of the season.

    “I’m not a psychiatrist,” Canucks coach Bruce Boudreau said. “I mean, sometimes coaches have to be. But I think maybe … they don’t want to make the mistake, to be the one that loses the game. But in effect when you’re doing that, that’s what you do. You become the player that makes the mistake because you don’t play forward, you’re playing waiting.”

    Hurricanes: Host the New York Islanders on Friday night.

    Canucks: At Seattle on Thursday night before returning for a four-game homestand.

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  • Necas helps Hurricanes beat Blue Jackets in opener

    Necas helps Hurricanes beat Blue Jackets in opener

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    RALEIGH, N.C. — Martin Necas had a goal and two assists and the Carolina Hurricanes beat the Columbus Blue Jackets 4-1 in the season opener for both teams Wednesday night.

    Seth Jarvis, Brady Skjei and Andrei Svechnikov also scored for the Hurricanes, who’ve won four consecutive opening games.

    Patrick Laine had the Columbus goal, giving the Blue Jackets a brief second-period lead.

    Frederik Andersen made 31 saves for the Hurricanes.

    Columbus turned to Daniil Tarasov as the surprise opening-night starter because top netminder Elvis Merzilikins was ill. Tarasov, who appeared in his fifth NHL game, made 39 saves.

    The Hurricanes would like to churn out another stellar opening stretch. They won their first nine games last season.

    Necas began his points-producing spree by assisting on Skjei’s go-ahead goal with 1:30 to play in the second period. The Hurricanes were in transition, but Skjei spotted up inside the blueline and Necas delivered a pass back to him to set up the shot.

    Necas then scored 6:29 into the third period off a rebound. Less than three minutes later, he recorded the primary assist on Svechnikov’s goal.

    Laine scored the first goal 11 seconds into the second period following a Carolina turnover. He has 10 goals in 20 career games against Carolina.

    WELCOME THEM ALL

    A few players made debuts with their respective teams.

    Six-time All-Star Johnny Gaudreau was in the Columbus lineup, while defenseman Brent Burns played in his 680th consecutive game – but first for Carolina – to move into sole possession for the 10th longest streak in NHL history.

    Paul Stastny, another veteran in his first game for the Hurricanes, assisted on the team’s fourth goal. He’s beginning his 17th NHL season.

    UP NEXT

    Blue Jackets: Friday night vs. visiting Tampa Bay.

    Hurricanes: Friday night at San Jose to begin a five-game road trip.

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