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Fourteen games in 28 days can make a great team look ordinary fast, and that’s the tension hanging over the Carolina Hurricanes right now. We’re sitting in first place, but the wins and losses have turned into a pattern and the “Canes hockey” identity is showing cracks at the worst possible time.
Erin, Katie & I talk through what we’re actually seeing on the ice: stretches where the forecheck is not arriving with the usual bite, more rush chances against, and a defensive game that feels a step less connected. At the same time, we dig into the evolution Carolina has been chasing all season, adding more transition offense and controlled entries so the scoring isn’t dependent on a perfect cycle. That balance matters in the NHL playoffs, where elite teams break forechecks and punish mistakes.
Special teams get a full checkup. We break down the power play with Alex Nikishin quarterbacking versus what Shane Gostisbehere brings when healthy, plus why teams are starting to cheat toward the shot threat. We also get into the penalty kill slide after the Olympic break, how a condensed schedule limits practice time, and how lineup availability can scramble the usual PK pairs. Then we tackle the hard topic: goaltending. The numbers are under .900, the chances are too dangerous, and the team still needs that one extra save that swings a game.
On the bright side, we spotlight the forwards fueling real confidence: Andrei Svechnikov’s surge as a true power forward, Nikolaj Ehlers creating offense out of nothing, and the Stankoven line bringing electricity and depth scoring. We also look ahead to playoff matchups and what Carolina can do right now to finish strong and stay healthy. If you enjoyed the conversation, subscribe, share the show with a fellow Canes fan, and leave a review with your take on the biggest fix before the postseason.
Highlights:
condensed schedule pressure and the importance of building momentum
• why Carolina’s forecheck and shot volume are slipping some nights
• balancing transition offense with five man team defense
• unforced penalties and the need for discipline
• defense pairings, heavy minutes, and what Gostisbehere’s return changes
• power play adjustments with Nikishin versus Gostisbehere
• penalty kill drop after the break and the impact of limited practice time
• goaltending concerns under .900 and the need for timely saves
• Svechnikov’s surge as a true power forward on the top line
• Ehlers as a game changer and a driver of power play creation
• Stankoven line growth and playoff matchup questions on the road
• fourth line options including heavier looks for physical opponents
#canes #hockey #erictulsky #raiseup #stormtracker23 #rodbrindamour #lockedonhurricanes #Canescast #thestormsurge #AlexanderNikishin #carolinahurricanes #JaccobSlavin #causechaos #sebastianaho #andreisvechnikov #nikolajehlers
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By stormTRackerFourteen games in 28 days can make a great team look ordinary fast, and that’s the tension hanging over the Carolina Hurricanes right now. We’re sitting in first place, but the wins and losses have turned into a pattern and the “Canes hockey” identity is showing cracks at the worst possible time.
Erin, Katie & I talk through what we’re actually seeing on the ice: stretches where the forecheck is not arriving with the usual bite, more rush chances against, and a defensive game that feels a step less connected. At the same time, we dig into the evolution Carolina has been chasing all season, adding more transition offense and controlled entries so the scoring isn’t dependent on a perfect cycle. That balance matters in the NHL playoffs, where elite teams break forechecks and punish mistakes.
Special teams get a full checkup. We break down the power play with Alex Nikishin quarterbacking versus what Shane Gostisbehere brings when healthy, plus why teams are starting to cheat toward the shot threat. We also get into the penalty kill slide after the Olympic break, how a condensed schedule limits practice time, and how lineup availability can scramble the usual PK pairs. Then we tackle the hard topic: goaltending. The numbers are under .900, the chances are too dangerous, and the team still needs that one extra save that swings a game.
On the bright side, we spotlight the forwards fueling real confidence: Andrei Svechnikov’s surge as a true power forward, Nikolaj Ehlers creating offense out of nothing, and the Stankoven line bringing electricity and depth scoring. We also look ahead to playoff matchups and what Carolina can do right now to finish strong and stay healthy. If you enjoyed the conversation, subscribe, share the show with a fellow Canes fan, and leave a review with your take on the biggest fix before the postseason.
Highlights:
condensed schedule pressure and the importance of building momentum
• why Carolina’s forecheck and shot volume are slipping some nights
• balancing transition offense with five man team defense
• unforced penalties and the need for discipline
• defense pairings, heavy minutes, and what Gostisbehere’s return changes
• power play adjustments with Nikishin versus Gostisbehere
• penalty kill drop after the break and the impact of limited practice time
• goaltending concerns under .900 and the need for timely saves
• Svechnikov’s surge as a true power forward on the top line
• Ehlers as a game changer and a driver of power play creation
• Stankoven line growth and playoff matchup questions on the road
• fourth line options including heavier looks for physical opponents
#canes #hockey #erictulsky #raiseup #stormtracker23 #rodbrindamour #lockedonhurricanes #Canescast #thestormsurge #AlexanderNikishin #carolinahurricanes #JaccobSlavin #causechaos #sebastianaho #andreisvechnikov #nikolajehlers
Send us Fan Mail