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Tag: rod brind'amour

  • Carolina Hurricanes edge Flyers, even as some players ‘did not have their best’

    Taylor Hall (71) of the Carolina Hurricanes celebrates after scoring a goal during the second period of the game against the Philadelphia Flyers at Lenovo Center on October 11, 2025 in Raleigh, North Carolina.

    Taylor Hall (71) of the Carolina Hurricanes celebrates after scoring a goal during the second period of the game against the Philadelphia Flyers at Lenovo Center on October 11, 2025 in Raleigh, North Carolina.

    Getty Images

    The Philadelphia Flyers were gathered near the door leading off the ice to their locker room Saturday, ready to head home the winners.

    The Carolina Hurricanes gathered en masse, more to the center of the ice, ready to keep on playing at the Lenovo Center.

    The Canes got their wish, not the Flyers, after winger Seth Jarvis scored with 16.7 seconds left in overtime for a sudden victory for the home team.

    But first, the suspense.

    Bobby Brink scored for the Flyers with 53.1 seconds remaining. But Travis Sanheim had bumped into Canes goalie Frederik Andersen before Brink’s tap-in with Andersen well out of position.

    The play was reviewed in Toronto as both teams and those in the sellout crowd all had their eyes on referee Kelly Sutherland to make the call. Seconds passed.

    Finally, the decision: No goal. Sanheim, who scored late in regulation to force the OT, was called for goaltender interference. They played on.

    Jarvis and his line had been on the ice when Sanheim found the net on an open shot from the top of the slot with four minutes left in the third. But he took a pass from Sebastian Aho and ripped a shot from the left circle past goalie Samuel Ersson.

    Make it two games, two game-winning goals for Jarvis. It also was his third career OT winner.

    “I got a chance to redeem myself,” Jarvis said.

    The Canes have lost their share of goalie interference challenges the past few years, almost to the point of it being comedically tragic for Carolina. But not this time, on a review.

    “I didn’t know which way it was going to end up going. Clearly (Sanheim) runs into him and does interfere,” Canes coach Rod Brind’Amour said. “I guess the letter of the law, that’s the rule. Glad they upheld it on that one.”

    The Canes will leave for their six-game road trip during the N.C. State Fair with a 2-0 record, but the second victory was not nearly as complete as the first. Carolina won its season opener Thursday with a 6-3 decision over the New Jersey Devils that left Brind’Amour pleased with nearly every aspect of his team’s play.

    But the second game was more of a struggle and more of a grinding win. The Canes dominated much of the first period, yet trailed, 1-0. They then took a 3-2 lead into the third period after goals by Logan Stankoven, Taylor Hall and Jordan Staal in the second, but could not keep the lead.

    Andersen made several sparking stops among his 20 saves, staying calm in net and using his glove effectively. But Sanheim took advantage of some quick puck movement in the Cane zone to find open space for the equalizer.

    Stankoven’s first of the season and Hall’s second both came off the rush. Stankoven followed up a nice move and shot by Jackson Blake, and Hall converted after an Eric Robinson theft and then pass – Hall’s second in as many games.

    “I’ve got to find more ice time for those guys,” Brind’Amour said of his fourth line centered by Jesperi Kotkaniemi with Hall and Robinson on the wings.

    Brind’Amour said Staal’s line was consistently the best for the Canes. Staal picked up his first of the season after a pass to Jordan Martinook behind the net, Martinook then backhanding a pass through the crease to Staal backdoor for the score and the 3-2 lead.

    “We had a few guys who did not have their best tonight,” Brind’Amour said. “That Staal line was great. They did it every shift, They were all over it.”

    One downside for the Canes: defenseman Jaccob Slavin played seven shifts for 4:20 in ice time in the third. He had late shifts of 13 and 10 seconds and was not on the ice in the final 3:26 of regulation or in overtime — he did return for the postgame Storm Surge celebration.

    “He’s getting looked at and we’ll know more about his status Monday,” Brind’Amour said. “He came up a little gimpy. Hopefully it’s nothing.”

    Slavin did not get in any of the six preseason games and was held out of some practices in training camp.

    Owen Tippett had a power-play goal for the Flyers (0-1-1) late in the first period — Philadelphia needed nine seconds to score on it – and Brink picked up a goal in the second with a top-shelf shot past Andersen off the rush.

    But the Canes got a reprieve. On a goaltender interference call.

    “A little shock there,” Staal said with a slight smile. “He definitely gave him a little bump. So we’ll take that bounce.”

    This story was originally published October 11, 2025 at 10:14 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.

    Chip Alexander

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  • Here to stay: Canes sign Brind’Amour to multi-year extension :: WRALSportsFan.com

    Here to stay: Canes sign Brind’Amour to multi-year extension :: WRALSportsFan.com

    — Carolina Hurricanes head coach Rod Brind’Amour is staying in Raleigh.

    The Canes legend agreed to a multi-year contract extension with the team. Assistant coaches Jeff Daniels and Tim Gleason, video coach Chris Huffine and goaltending coach Paul Schonfelder have also agreed to multi-year extensions.

    ESPN insider and former Carolina Hurricane Kevin Weekes first reported the contract extension. The Carolina Hurricanes confirmed the news Sunday afternoon.

    “Rod has been instrumental to the success we’ve had over the last six seasons,” said Hurricanes President and General Manger Don Waddell. “Ever since he joined the organization 24 years ago, Rod has embodied what it means to be a Hurricane. We hope to keep him a Hurricane for life.”

    Brind’Amour will speak with the media about the extension on Monday at 10 a.m with Waddell.

    The Hurricanes hired Brind’Amour as head coach in 2018. Since taking over, Brind’Amour has led the Canes to six straight playoff appearances and two appearances in the conference finals.

    The Canes were eliminated from the Stanley Cup Playoffs on Thursday after losing to the New York Rangers in six games in the second round.

    Brind’Amour is 278-130-44 as head coach. Brind’Amour previously led the Hurricanes to the Stanely Cup as a player, defeating the Edmonton Oilers in seven games in 2006.

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  • How the Hurricanes’ Stanley Cup-winning coach, captain became winner-take-all rivals

    How the Hurricanes’ Stanley Cup-winning coach, captain became winner-take-all rivals

    A 2006 photo shows Canes captain Rod Brind’Amour, right, looking on as head coach Peter Laviolette diagrams a play during practice.

    A 2006 photo shows Canes captain Rod Brind’Amour, right, looking on as head coach Peter Laviolette diagrams a play during practice.

    File photo

    The quintessential mind-meld moment between Peter Laviolette and Rod Brind’Amour came at one of their lowest points. The Game 6 loss in Edmonton in 2006 was one of the Carolina Hurricanes’ worst performances of the season, never mind the playoffs, a complete and utter disaster that pushed the team to the brink of blowing a 3-1 lead with the Stanley Cup within reach.

    Laviolette had his talking points in mind when he prepared to speak to the team immediately afterward, and when he walked into the dressing room, he saw Brind’Amour standing up to speak. Laviolette turned around and left the room.

    The rest is history. Brind’Amour’s speech catalyzed the Hurricanes, who won Game 7 two days later in Raleigh to clinch the Stanley Cup, and that moment of mutual understanding was perhaps the apogee of an unusually close relationship between captain and coach that helped capture a championship.

    “I remember standing up and as I got up I saw Peter start coming in and then I saw him turn around and head back to the coaches’ office,” Brind’Amour said in 2016, recalling the scene. “That made it right, that it was my time to stay something.”

    “I can tell you if Roddy stood up and said something, it would have more impact than anything anyone else could say, including myself, because of the person he is,” Laviolette said then.

    Chris Seward File photo

    Eighteen years later, both are behind the benches of Stanley Cup contenders and only one will be moving on. Laviolette, in his first year with the New York Rangers, has done what he has done almost everywhere he has been: Get the most out of the talent at his disposal at first asking. Brind’Amour, meanwhile, has the Hurricanes in the playoffs for the sixth straight year, building a legacy of consistent competitiveness that even Laviolette couldn’t match in Carolina.

    “You take from everybody, the good and the bad,” Brind’Amour said. “Definitely with ‘Lavy,’ my memories are good. I think he did a great job of letting the players be themselves and giving them confidence in their abilities. You see that every time he goes somewhere new, it seems like there’s a big push there. And he obviously knows his stuff, that kind of goes forgotten, but to me it’s all the other stuff, empowering his players.”

    The similarities outnumber the differences: Brind’Amour adopted and even enhanced Laviolette’s straight-ahead, high-pressure style; he has leaned on captains Justin Williams and Jordan Staal the same way Laviolette leaned on him; and he has found ways to motivate different players differently, tapping into their personalities and strengths and weaknesses the same way Laviolette did so adeptly in 2006.

    Both in strategy and tactics, in the big picture and the small, there are so many dots to connect.

    “They really both empower players very, very well,” Williams said. “That’s why players tend to love playing for them. They feel good about themselves even when they’re being corrected. I’d like to look at how many guys have had career years under these two guys.”

    Matt Kartozian Matt Kartozian-USA TODAY Sports

    They have built their staffs the same way, surrounding themselves with people they know well. Jeff Daniels was a teammate of Brind’Amour’s with the Hurricanes before he became a Laviolette assistant in Carolina; Tim Gleason was a teammate as well. Laviolette’s staff in New York all worked with him or played for him previously.

    Kevin McCarthy was once one of them. He was the other assistant coach alongside Daniels in Carolina in 2006, making a seamless transition from Paul Maurice’s staff when Laviolette arrived in 2003, then spending the next 20 years alongside Laviolette in Philadelphia and Nashville and Washington. He could have joined Laviolette with the Rangers, but retired to High Rock Lake instead.

    “I love both those guys,’ McCarthy said. “it’s going to be a tough one to watch. I’ll be like a parent watching two of his kids in the same game.”

    McCarthy can see the similarities in their styles, and their approaches, and their philosophies, how they relate to players and how they interact with their staffs. But if there’s one key element Brind’Amour took from Laviolette, it’s the culture they believe leads to success and how they try to build it.

    “That’s one thing both Lavy and Roddy value,” McCarthy said. “They try to create that family atmosphere. At the end of day, to win a championship, you have to have players willing to do it for the guy next to him. Both coaches bring their teams together on and off the ice. It goes a long way. It really does. Sometimes that can be the difference-maker in the playoffs when there’s not a lot of difference between teams.”

    Robert Willett rwillett@newsobserver.com

    Which isn’t to say Brind’Amour is purely a Laviolette disciple. His style is a melange of several coaches he played for or worked for, not just Laviolette but Bill Dineen and Paul Holmgren and Maurice. The Hurricanes are one of a handful of NHL teams that play exclusively man-to-man in their own end, as opposed to zone or a man-zone hybrid like the Rangers, an example of Brind’Amour crafting his philosophy based on whatever he found hardest to play against.

    “Roddy is his own person and he developed his own style,” Williams said. “At the end of the day, he’s looking at the other side of that bench and he’s not thinking he’s an understudy. He’s built his own and created his own and he believes in his players and that we have the better team and we’re going to win.”

    This is not the first meeting of coach and former captain, of mentor and careful observer, on such a big stage. Last year’s Stadium Series between Laviolette’s Washington Capitals and Brind’Amour’s Hurricanes was under a similar spotlight, if not for the same stakes.

    But for two people whose only taste of ultimate success was so closely tied to each other, and whose coaching styles are built on many of the same basic precepts, it will be fascinating to see what happens when their futures are diametrically opposed, winner-take-all.

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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.

    Luke DeCock

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