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Tag: Sebastian Aho

  • Hurricanes fight past Tampa Bay in return game after Olympics

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    The sprint for the finish line in the regular season started Thursday for the Carolina Hurricanes.

    The Winter Olympics are over, the Canes had three players return from Italy with Olympic medals, and it was finally back to NHL business at the Lenovo Center.

    “Getting back to game speed, that’s a little concern for me, no matter who you’re playing,” Canes coach Rod Brind’Amour said Thursday morning.

    The Canes were playing the Tampa Bay Lightning and got back to game speed quickly, scoring three times in the first seven minutes of the first period. But it would be a fight to the finish between the two best teams in the Eastern Conference as the Canes finally emerged with a 5-4 victory.

    The Lightning (38-15-4), playing a second game without head coach Jon Cooper, clawed back from an early 3-0 deficit and had the score tied 4-4 going into the third period.

    Sebastian Aho’s power-play goal at 7:17 of the third would stand up as the winner, although the final three minutes had the Lightning pulling goalie Jonas Johansson for a sixth attacker and the Canes somehow missing the empty net four or five times.

    Aho said he felt “pretty gassed” after the Olympics — the center did not skate Thursday morning — but got his power-play shot from the right side through traffic with Jordan Staal in front of the net.

    “Good win. Obviously, we wanted to start the right way, and we were able to win against a good hockey team,” Aho said. “We wanted the two points, and we got it.”

    Before the game, the Olympians were recognized, including Jake Guentzel (Team USA) and Brandon Hagel (Canada) of the Lightning.

    Nikolaj Ehlers and goalie Frederik Andersen, who played for Team Denmark in Milan, received nice ovations. Aho, who helped Finland to a bronze medal, got a big hand. It was a bit louder for the Canes’ Seth Jarvis, who was named to Team Canada when the Lightning’s Brayden Point was injured and unable to make the trip.

    But the loudest reception, as expected, was for Canes defenseman Jaccob Slavin, who brought back a gold medal after the United States’ thrilling 2-1 overtime win over Canada on Sunday.

    That brought about loud “USA! USA!” chants. Soon, the puck dropped for the Canes’ first game since Feb. 5, when Carolina took a 2-0 road win over the New York Rangers before the pause for the Olympics.

    Among the Olympians, Aho, Ehlers and Jarvis would score for the Canes (37-15-6), and Hagel for the Lightning. Slavin did his part as well in the defensive zone and slammed Nikita Kucherov into the boards with a thunderous hit with about a minute to play in regulation.

    The Canes’ first three goals came in rapid succession. Ehlers ripped a shot from the left wing 1:43 into the game and Logan Stankoven, on his 23rd birthday, scored off the rush 73 seconds later for his first goal in 13 games.

    Taylor Hall, whose give-and-go pass led to Stankoven’s score, then converted a nifty Jackson Blake pass for a tap-in goal. That made it 3-0 Canes just 6:41 into the opening period – the fastest Carolina had scored three goals to start a game in more than eight years.

    But the Lightning, 20-1-1 in their last 22 games before Thursday, can also score quickly, and did. Before the first period ended, Hagel and Kucherov scored 35 seconds apart — Hagel on a shot from the left circle and Kucherov from the right — as the Canes lost coverage in their zone.

    The Lightning were in the second game of a back-to-back, having beaten Toronto 4-2 on Wednesday in their first game after the Olympic break. In that game, Point had two goals and assists; Kucherov had a goal and two assists.

    Tampa’s Cooper missed a second game after the death of his father, Robert. Cooper, who coached Team Canada in Milan, was replaced by assistant coach Rob Zettler and should return for the next game.

    Canes goalie Brandon Bussi won an eighth straight game but had an adventurous night in net. He left the net and badly mishandled a puck in the first period. He came out of the net again in the second period, only to have the puck take a wicked carom off the boards and come inches from crossing the goal line.

    But Bussi also had some quality stops, denying a Kucherov one-timer in the first and then stoning Yanni Gourde on a breakaway in the second. The Canes helped him out by allowing just six shots in the third as Bussi improved his record to 24-3-1.

    “I liked our game in the third, not giving up much,” Brind’Amour said. “That was the key. We were giving up too many good looks for them, but in the third I thought we settled down a little bit and got to our game.”

    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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  • After going for gold, Canes come back from Olympic break striving for silver

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    A 20-day break for the Carolina Hurricanes ends on Thursday as the closing push of the NHL regular season begins and the focus returns to a familiar goal.

    Three Hurricanes players participated in the Milan Cortina Olympics and all three were medalists for their respective countries. Defenseman Jaccob Slavin (U.S.), forward Seth Jarvis (Canada) and alternate captain Sebastian Aho (Finland) all got recognition on the final day of Olympic play. Now, they’re back in the states and face a stretch of 25 games in 48 days before the postseason grind in search of more hardware. 

    Slavin has been part of a Canes core group that’s routinely reached the playoffs and been in conversations for Stanley Cups but has yet to break through. The two-time winner of the Lady Byng Memorial Trophy was still grateful from winning the Gold Medal with Team USA, a first for the program since 1980s famous “Miracle on Ice” in Lake Placid, New York.

    “It was such an amazing group of guys that we won that with,” Slavin said to the media on Wednesday. 

    Now that he’s won gold, it’s a silver cup he’s eyeing. 

    “There’s a lot of happiness to be had in that, but at the same time, it makes you taste victory,” Slavin said. “Now it’s like, I want to come back here and do it with these guys, the Canes, and be able to win a Cup with them – the guys you battle with all year long.”

    Jarvis was part of Canada’s Silver Medal effort, a disappointing outcome for the favorites, but spoke of another opportunity in the future. Jarvis is 24 and would be 28 for the 2030 Olympics. 

    “It’s a reminder that we didn’t finish the job,” Jarvis said. “We didn’t win… I’m gonna keep (my medal) and be proud of it, but it’s motivation for hopefully, if I get another chance, to do right by it, and then come home with gold.”

    It was the first Olympic playing experience for Aho. Finland stayed with Canada in the semifinal until a goal with 35 seconds left sent Canada to the Gold Medal game. Aho scored in Finland’s 6-1 win against Slovakia for the Bronze Medal.

    “We enjoyed every second of it,” Aho said. “That’s what you have to do. You have to make the most of it when you’re there. I’m really proud of how we played, but also, while playing our tails off, we had some fun. It was a great experience.”

    Aho did not practice on Thursday, but coach Rod Brind’Amour said he “should be” good to go this week.

    The Canes are at the top of the Metropolitan Division and two points behind Tampa Bay, who they face tonight at Lenovo Center. They won five of six games entering the break. Next week brings a west coast trip with games against Seattle, Vancouver, Edmonton and Calgary. Another playoff spot is basically on ice and would put Carolina the in the postseason for the eighth straight year.

    Goaltender Brandon Bussi’s emergence has been a key component of the Canes’ 36-15-6 record. The 27-year-old, who signed off waivers, has arguably been the Canes’ most impressive player for the first four months of the season. Bussi was not an Olympic participant, but had an equally important break by signing a three-year extension with the team. He’s got a 23-3-1 record with a 2.16 goals against average and a .908 save percentage.

    Bussi was in the starter’s crease for practice Thursday morning.

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  • After Canes’ win over Senators, why Carolina’s next home game could have new feel

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    Carolina Hurricanes center Sebastian Aho (20) celebrates a goal with the bench during the first period against the Ottawa Senators at the Lenovo Center on Feb. 3, 2026 in Raleigh, North Carolina.

    Carolina Hurricanes center Sebastian Aho (20) celebrates a goal with the bench during the first period against the Ottawa Senators at the Lenovo Center on Feb. 3, 2026 in Raleigh, North Carolina.

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    Seconds after the puck drifted across the goal line behind Ottawa goalie James Reimer — after Seth Jarvis removed himself from the dog pile at the top of the crease in which Reimer was also entangled — Carolina Hurricanes center Sebastian Aho and his teammates gathered briefly to celebrate Aho’s 20th goal of the season, before skating single file toward the Canes’ bench.

    Each player on the ice tapped hands with each player on the bench, customary for many teams following a goal.

    Aho’s goal tied the Hurricanes’ game against the Senators at Lenovo Center on Tuesday at a goal apiece. Two Seth Jarvis goals, a snipe from captain Jordan Staal and 27 saves from Brandon Bussi helped the Canes defeat the Senators, 4-3.

    Seth Jarvis (24) of the Carolina Hurricanes celebrates after scoring a goal during the second period against the Ottawa Senators at Lenovo Center on Feb. 3, 2026 in Raleigh, North Carolina.
    Seth Jarvis (24) of the Carolina Hurricanes celebrates after scoring a goal during the second period against the Ottawa Senators at Lenovo Center on Feb. 3, 2026 in Raleigh, North Carolina. Jaylynn Nash Getty Images

    The Hurricanes play again on the road Thursday at the New York Rangers, but Tuesday’s matchup was the last at Lenovo Center until Feb. 26, on the back side of 2026 Olympic Games.

    And it’s fair to wonder how many of those players with whom Aho tapped hands Tuesday will be on that same bench the next time the Finnish forward scores a goal in Raleigh.

    Aho, of course, isn’t going anywhere, except to Italy to represent Finland in the Olympics. And Jarvis, snubbed for a spot on Team Canada, will most certainly be back after whatever sojourn he decides to take over the next couple of weeks.

    But others on the bench and on the Canes’ full roster? It depends what general manager Eric Tulsky, owner Tom Dundon and head coach Rod Brind’Amour decide the team needs to make an all-in run at the Stanley Cup — again.

    NHL trade deadline looms after Olympic break

    The NHL’s trade deadline this season — March 6 — feels like it’s a bit later than normal due to the two-week Olympic break. By then, the Hurricanes will have played 61 games, with just 21 remaining in the regular season. There is also a roster freeze during the Olympic break, meaning teams cannot make player transactions during that time.

    But with those constraints in mind, some teams have already started tweaking their rosters.

    The first big moves came simultaneously in December, with Minnesota acquiring star defender Quinn Hughes from Vancouver, and Edmonton swapping starting goalies with Pittsburgh. Since then, Vegas added defender Rasmus Andersson from the Calgary Flames, the Islanders added forward Ondrej Palat form the New Jersey Devils, and the San Jose Sharks acquire forward Kiefer Sherwood from the Vancouver Canucks

    The Hurricanes have made a series of minor moves, shifting players most likely to play the remainder of this season in the American Hockey League or in the ECHL. But in almost every corner of the Internet, rumblings about the Hurricanes being “in on” other players — high-impact players — continue to surface.

    Elias Pettersson of Vancouver. Artemi Panarin of the New York Rangers. Old friend Vincent Trochek, also of the Rangers. Robert Thomas of the St. Louis Blues. Jordan Binnington, also of the Blues.

    Search any of those names — and a few others — with “Hurricanes,” and a treasure trove of possibilities pops up. There is most definitely smoke. But is there fire?

    Probably. Tulsky has said many times the Canes are always kicking the tires on possibilities, that it never hurts to answer the phone, or make a call. But the cost has often not matched the return, and in most cases, Carolina (or another team) has taken a pass on the possible deal.

    The Canes did swing big and succeed a year ago, landing star forward Mikko Rantanen (and Taylor Hall, by the way) for an outgoing package that included Martin Necas and Jack Drury.

    We know how that turned out — Hall is still here, Rantanen is not, and Logan Stankoven and K’Andre Miller have since arrived as fruits of that trade tree.

    But the Canes took that swing. They’ve proven unafraid to do so in recent years.

    What big trade could the Canes cook up?

    Signs point to the Hurricanes again making a good-sized move before March 6. They have cap space. They have specific roster needs — a high-end center, stability in goal — and they have a stable of young, talented players and some good draft picks to deal. The Canes also have a glut of NHL-ready players on their roster and a few with Chicago in the AHL, should they need a roster player or two to complete a deal.

    But deals of that nature don’t come cheap. Fervent fans who expect to acquire a star player while shedding struggling assets are continually disappointed during deadline dealings like this. In 2025, it took a top-line forward and a solid grinder and special teams ace, along with draft picks, to take a chance on Rantanen. Dealing from a position of weakness on the negotiating front — when teams already know what you want and need — can drive prices higher.

    But the Hurricanes will almost assuredly need to do something, whether external or internal, to keep pace with other teams who will almost assuredly also do something.

    Seth Jarvis of the Carolina Hurricanes is mobbed by teammates after scoring a goal during the second period against the Ottawa Senators at Lenovo Center on Feb. 3, 2026 in Raleigh, North Carolina.
    Seth Jarvis of the Carolina Hurricanes is mobbed by teammates after scoring a goal during the second period against the Ottawa Senators at Lenovo Center on Feb. 3, 2026 in Raleigh, North Carolina. Jaylynn Nash Getty Images

    The Hurricanes have played well in 2026. After Tuesday night’s win over the Senators, the Canes are 11-3-3 since the acorn dropped in Raleigh.

    Through 56 games, the Canes are 35-15-6 (76 points). They are in first place by a healthy margin in the Metropolitan Division. They are at least tied for first place in the Eastern Conference with Tampa Bay, and trail only the Western Conference-leading Colorado Avalanche (81 points) for the NHL lead.

    Jarvis, who had a pair of goals Tuesday, is on a heater. Andrei Svechnikov and Sebastian Aho are, too. The “Kids and (the) Hall” line are constantly buzzing around and making things happen. Staal, Jordan Martinook and (insert player here) continue to make life difficult for opposing players, and of late, Nikolaj Ehlers alongside the Jordans has added more offense to that group’s repertoire.

    Bussi, with his win Tuesday, is 22-3-1 on the season, and Frederik Andersen has a chance to recharge and find his game as he and Ehlers represent Denmark at the Olympics.

    The biggest pieces are there. Who all is along for the ride 30 days from now remains to be seen.

    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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  • Hurricanes can’t hold lead but beat Kings on Sebastian Aho goal in OT

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    RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA - MAY 28: Sebastian Aho #20 of the Carolina Hurricanes celebrates after scoring a goal against the Florida Panthers during the first period in Game Five of the Eastern Conference Final of the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Lenovo Center on May 28, 2025 in Raleigh, North Carolina.  (Photo by Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images)

    RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA – MAY 28: Sebastian Aho #20 of the Carolina Hurricanes celebrates after scoring a goal against the Florida Panthers during the first period in Game Five of the Eastern Conference Final of the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Lenovo Center on May 28, 2025 in Raleigh, North Carolina. (Photo by Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images)

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    On a snowy day in the Triangle, another sheet of ice provided some heated action.

    The Carolina Hurricanes and Los Angeles Kings went at it Sunday at the Lenovo Center in a game decided more on hustle, grit, defense and goaltending than speedy transition plays or dazzling individual moves.

    It took overtime to decide it.

    Sebastian Aho’s goal at 1:25 of the OT lifted the Canes to a 3-2 victory. The Canes never gave up possession of the puck in overtime, Seth Jarvis nearly ended it and Aho then did with his 18th career OT goal.

    A day after a dismal overtime road loss to the Washington Capitals, when the Canes couldn’t hold a three-goal lead, they had a two-goal lead slip away against the Kings in the final seven minutes of regulation. But they extended their point streak to eight games with two games remaining before the Olympic break.

    “Obviously yesterday’s game was not good enough and we lost the game, as well, so it was a good bounceback, and it feels good to win this one at home,” Aho said.

    Goaltender Brandon Bussi again was the winner in net, as he has been in 21 of his 25 games, facing just 13 shots as the Canes (34-15-6) were active in their defensive zone. Kings goalie Anton Forsberg saw a lot more action, facing 34 shots and seeing 17 more attempts that zipped past the cage.

    “That was a great 60-minute plus effort by us,” Bussi said. “We did a great job of kind of slowing down what they’re good at and taking away a lot of their chances. They were a little opportunistic at the end of the third but overall it was a great game of us.”

    Jordan Staal’s power-play goal in the first period staked the Canes to a 1-0 lead that would carry into the third period.

    Staal won the faceoff to start the power play, then went to the net to redirect a shot by Andrei Svechnikov for his 13th goal of the season at 6:25 of the period. That took four seconds.

    With Bussi and Forsberg both dialed in, there was no further scoring until Alexander Niksihin’s goal made it a 2-0 game with 7:03 left in regulation. Nikshin ripped one past Forsberg after Jackson Blake’s nifty stickhandling, the puck popping free and the defenseman unloading.

    Twenty-four seconds later, it was a one-goal game again as center Samuel Helenius finally beat Bussi, the Kings’ fourth line scoring on the bump-up shift. The Kings then tied it with 3:11 left in regulation on a Quinton Byfield goal.

    “I thought we were playing a perfect game, exactly how we wanted to do it,” Canes coach Rod Brind’Amour said. “I thought we had the better looks. Obviously, we were in a good spot and they got a couple.

    “But I loved the way we just kept playing. I thought it was a great game by us.”

    The game began with Canes winger Jordan Martinook crunching defenseman Mikey Anderson into the boards – Anderson soon leaving the game and not returning. The second period began with Martinook dropping the gloves for a go with Corey Perry in more of a wrestling match of two veterans than a fist-throwing fight.

    There would be near fights. Blake took umbrage with Joel Edmundson sending him sprawling into and over Forsberg, then putting a cross-check in his back after he fell. Blake quickly hopped up, going face to face with the big D-man.

    Nor was Martinook through. He tangled with defenseman Brandt Clarke late in the second period, both drawing roughing penalties.

    This was a game of little open ice and two teams trying to make plays in tight spaces. The Kings had four shots in each of the first two periods, although Bussi did make a timely stop on Adrian Kempe in the second.

    In the first period, Kings captain Anze Kopitar got behind the defense and had a partial breakaway. But Jarvis hustled back to knock the puck away on the back check to deny him.

    “I was ready for it. Maybe next time ‘Jarv’ will let me have the save,” Bussi said, smiling, “I mean, that’s what we were doing all night. Even if we did get caught out of position the extra effort was there. Our ability to get stick on pucks in crucial areas, from our D corps to our forwards, the effort was there.”

    Forsberg, who once played a few games for the Canes, did all he could. He made a key stop on Tayor Hall in the second period, then survived a wild sequence later in the second that had Aho, Svechnikov and Jarvis looking at a lot of net but unable to find it while Kings defenseman Drew Doughty gave his goalie support in the crease.

    The Canes had 15 scoring chances in the second period, including eight high-danger chances, but could not add to the 1-0 lead as Forsberg stayed calm in net.

    The Kings (23-17-14), in a wild-card playoff position in the Western Conference, played Saturday in Philadelphia. With a 3-2 win over the Flyers, they had a 3-1 record on their five-game road trip heading to Raleigh.

    Despite the snowy conditions, a large crowd gathered at Lenovo to see it.

    “Hopefully we can put on an entertaining game for them,” Brind’Amour said before the game.

    The Canes did that. It just took a while and some overtime.

    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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  • Sebastian Aho scores in overtime as Hurricanes rally past Islanders 4-3

    Sebastian Aho scores in overtime as Hurricanes rally past Islanders 4-3

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    By ALLAN KREDA

    Sebastian Aho scored 1:14 into overtime as the Carolina Hurricanes rallied from three goals down to beat the New York Islanders 4-3 on Saturday night.

    Jesperi Kotkaniemi had a goal and an assist, Jalen Chatfield and Dmitry Orlov also scored and Andrei Svechnikov had two assists for Carolina, which has won four of five. Antti Raanta had 22 saves.

    Mathew Barzal had a goal and an assist, and Noah Dobson and Simon Holmstrom also scored for the Islanders, who were 3-0-1 in their last four. Bo Horvat had two assists, and Ilya Sorokin finished with 44 saves.

    Aho scored in the extra period just after Raanta denied Ryan Pulock’s point-blank shot.

    Dobson opened the scoring with 2:20 left in the first period with the teams skating 4-on-4. The defenseman skated in close on Raanta before flipping a backhand past the goalie for his third goal of the season. Dobson leads the Islanders with 10 points (three goals, seven assists).

    Holmstrom made it 2-0 with a short-handed goal at 4:11 of the second, completing a give-and-go with Jean-Gabriel Pageau for his third.

    Barzal extended the lead to 3-0 with his second goal of the season at 7:46 as his high shot from the right wing eluded Raanta.

    It was all Hurricanes after that.

    Chatfield broke through just 32 seconds later with his first of the season.

    Orlov narrowed the gap to 3-2 with 7:41 remaining in the third when his shot eluded Sorokin for his first with Carolina after signing as a free agent in the offseason.

    Kotkaniemi tied the score on the power play with 4:36 left, scoring his fifth from in front as time was about to expire on Scott Mayfield’s hooking penalty.

    UP NEXT

    Hurricanes: Host Buffalo on Tuesday night.

    Islanders: Host Minnesota on Tuesday night.

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    The Associated Press

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  • Toffoli scores in OT, Flames rally to beat Hurricanes 3-2

    Toffoli scores in OT, Flames rally to beat Hurricanes 3-2

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    CALGARY, Alberta — Tyler Toffoli scored at 4:30 of overtime and the Calgary Flames rallied to beat the Carolina Hurricanes 3-2 on Saturday night.

    Rasmus Andersson carried the puck up the side boards and deep into the Hurricanes’ end before zipping a pass into the slot that Toffoli one-timed inside the post for his third of the season.

    “Ras did a really good job taking it wide and using his speed and I was just trying to find a little space and he made a great play right in the middle,” Toffoli said.

    Andersson had two assists and led both teams in ice time at 27:47.

    “Our penalty kill had a really good night,” Andersson said. “Still need to get a little bit better five on five, but it was a tough game to play and it was nice to see that overtime goal go in.”

    Nazem Kadri and Brett Ritchie also scored as the Flames came back from a 2-0 deficit midway through the first period. Toffoli had an assist and Jacob Markstrom stopped 25 shots to help Calgary improve to 4-1-0.

    Kadri is the fourth player to begin his Calgary career with a five-game points streak.

    Sebastian Aho and Calvin de Haan scored for Carolina. Antti Raanta finished with 29 saves. The Hurricanes fell to 3-1-1.

    “We had a pretty good first period, except we gave up a PK goal and didn’t cash in on our power play,” Aho said. “At the end of the day, that was the game tonight. We get a huge opportunity at the end, four minutes on the power play, and we’ve got to make them pay there. Special teams got us. That’s on us.”

    UP NEXT

    Hurricanes: Wrap up their five-game trip in Vancouver against the Canucks on Monday night.

    Flames: Continue their season-high, eight-game homestand against the Pittsburgh Penguins on Tuesday night.

    ———

    More AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/NHL and https://twitter.com/AP—Sports

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  • Aho’s late goal leads Hurricanes past Sharks 2-1

    Aho’s late goal leads Hurricanes past Sharks 2-1

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    SAN JOSE, Calif. — Sebastian Aho scored the tiebreaking goal with 1:58 remaining in the third period and the Carolina Hurricanes handed the San Jose Sharks their third straight loss to open the season, 2-1 on Friday night.

    Martin Necas scored his second goal in two games for Carolina to tie it late in the second period before Aho won it in the third when he deflected a point shot from Brett Pesce past James Reimer.

    “Just a great play by Pesce taking a little second to look,” coach Rod Brind’Amour said. “Aho beats his guy to the net and on the tape and puts it in. … I think we got what we deserved tonight for sure.”

    Antti Raanta made 18 saves, including one in close to stop Tomas Hertl in the closing seconds as the Hurricanes improved to 2-0 on the season.

    “Obviously a little chaos there and the puck was rolling in the crease there,” Raanta said. “I was just trying to keep my pads on the ice and not letting anything go in. Maybe a little bit of luck also there. Got my body in there and was able to make the save and you hear the buzzer so obviously a good feeling to make that a save and obviously get that win.”

    San Jose had lost the first two games of the season to Nashville in the Czech Republic but were unable to get on the winning side in the home opener for new coach David Quinn.

    Evgeny Svechnikov also scored his first goal for San Jose. James Reimer made 33 saves.

    “You got to find a way to get it done,” Quinn said. “If you’re tired, you have got to find a way to play tired. A lot of times teams are tired in this league, and the teams that manage it and understand how to play when they’re tired, they have a chance to have success in games like tonight.”

    The Sharks opened the scoring late in the first period when Jaycob Megna set up Svechnikov in the high slot for a quick shot that appeared to surprise Raanta.

    Svechnikov’s younger brother, Andrei, was on the ice for Carolina on the goal — marking the first time in eight games they have played against each other that one brother was on the ice when the other scored. Andrei scored for Carolina against Evgeny’s Detroit team on March 4, 2021, but Evgeni wasn’t on the ice.

    “I mean, it’s huge to get it,” Svechnikov said. “You get momentum, just trying to shoot the puck there, and doesn’t matter if it’s any team really. I just try to shoot the puck for a goal.”

    The Hurricanes dominated the second period, holding San Jose without a shot on goal for the first 13:22 and outshooting the Sharks 16-4. But they couldn’t get anything past Reimer until Andrei Svechnikov took the puck away from Kevin Labanc in the neutral zone and set up Necas for the tying goal with 22.9 seconds remaining in the period.

    Necas’ four points in the first two games are one shy of the franchise record set by Mark Howe and Mike Rogers in the 1980-81 season when the team played in Hartford.

    BURNS RETURNS

    The Sharks played a pregame video tribute to defenseman Brent Burns, who was traded to Carolina over the summer. Burns was one of the most popular players during his 11 seasons in San Jose. He won the Norris Trophy in 2017 as the league’s top defenseman. He has 172 goals and 422 assists in 798 games with the Sharks.

    “It was special. It was great,” Burns said. “It was awesome to see the video and see some of the guys and some of those moments that we had. It’s just a special place. It’s great people.”

    INJURY UPDATES

    The Hurricanes sent F Ondrej Kase back home to be evaluated for a possible concussion. … Sharks F Alexander Barabanov remains sidelined with a lower-body injury. … San Jose F Timo Meier and D Mario Ferraro were in the lineup after being slowed earlier this week with upper-body injuries.

    UP NEXT

    Hurricanes: Visit Seattle on Monday night.

    Sharks: Host Chicago on Saturday night. San Jose will honor former GM Doug Wilson in a ceremony before the game. Wilson stepped down last season for medical reasons.

    ———

    AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl and https://twitter.com/AP—Sports

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