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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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