fbpx
Wikipedia

Carolina Hurricanes

The Carolina Hurricanes (colloquially known as the Canes) are a professional ice hockey team based in Raleigh, North Carolina. They compete in the National Hockey League (NHL) as a member of the Metropolitan Division in the Eastern Conference, and play their home games at PNC Arena.

Carolina Hurricanes
2022–23 Carolina Hurricanes season
ConferenceEastern
DivisionMetropolitan
Founded1972
HistoryNew England Whalers
19721979 (WHA)
Hartford Whalers
19791997 (NHL)
Carolina Hurricanes
1997–present
Home arenaPNC Arena
CityRaleigh, North Carolina
ColorsRed, white, gray, black[1][2]
       
MediaTelevision Radio
Owner(s)Thomas Dundon
General managerDon Waddell[3]
Head coachRod Brind'Amour[3]
CaptainJordan Staal[4]
Minor league affiliatesChicago Wolves (AHL)
Norfolk Admirals (ECHL)
Stanley Cups1 (2005–06)
Conference championships2 (2001–02, 2005–06)
Presidents' Trophy0
Division championships5 (1998–99, 2001–02, 2005–06, 2020–21, 2021–22)
Official websitewww.nhl.com/hurricanes

The franchise was formed in 1971 as the New England Whalers of the World Hockey Association (WHA). The Whalers saw success immediately, winning the Eastern Division in the WHA's first three seasons and becoming the inaugural Avco World Trophy Champions to cap off the 1972–73 season. The Whalers again competed for the World Trophy in 1978, this time falling short to the Winnipeg Jets in a rematch of the 1973 Finals. The franchise joined the NHL in 1979 as part of the NHL–WHA merger, renaming themselves the Hartford Whalers. The team relocated to North Carolina in 1997, rebranding themselves as the Hurricanes. Carolina advanced to the Stanley Cup Finals for the first time in 2002, where they were defeated by the Detroit Red Wings. The Hurricanes won the 2006 Stanley Cup over the Edmonton Oilers, giving the state of North Carolina its first major professional sports championship and its only major championship as of 2023.

Franchise history

New England/Hartford Whalers (1971–1997)

The New England Whalers were established in November 1971 when the World Hockey Association (WHA) awarded a franchise to begin play in Boston, Massachusetts. For the first two years of their existence, the club played their home games at the Boston Arena and Boston Garden. With the increasing difficulty of scheduling games at Boston Garden (owned by the NHL rival Boston Bruins), the owners decided to move the team to Hartford, Connecticut, beginning with the 1974–75 season. While waiting for the completion of a new arena in Hartford, the Whalers played the first part of the season at The Big E Coliseum in West Springfield, Massachusetts. On January 11, 1975, the team played its first game in front of a sellout crowd at the Hartford Civic Center Coliseum, and would maintain its home there through 1997.

 
Hartford Whalers logo.

As one of the most stable WHA teams, the Whalers, along with the Edmonton Oilers, Quebec Nordiques and Winnipeg Jets, were admitted to the NHL when the rival leagues merged in 1979. However, under pressure from the extant NHL team in the New England area, the Boston Bruins, the Whalers were compelled to rename the team the Hartford Whalers. The Whalers were never as successful in the NHL as they had been in the WHA, recording only three winning seasons. They peaked in the mid-to-late 1980s, winning their only playoff series in 1986 over the Nordiques before bowing out in the second round to the Montreal Canadiens, taking the Habs to overtime of Game 7 in the process. The next year, the club secured the regular season Adams Division title, only to fall to the Nordiques in six games in the first round of the playoffs. In 1992, the Whalers made the playoffs for the final time, but were bounced in the first round in seven games by the Canadiens. Two years later, the team hired Jim Rutherford as general manager, a position that he would hold within the franchise for twenty years.

For years, the organization maintained many Whalers connections among its off-ice personnel; in addition to many members of executive management and the coaching staff, broadcasters Chuck Kaiton, John Forslund and Tripp Tracy (at the time a minor-league player), and equipment managers Wally Tatomir, Skip Cunningham and Bob Gorman all made the move to North Carolina with the team. Finally, the old goal horn from the Hartford Civic Center remains in use at PNC Arena. Kaiton and Forslund would both eventually leave the franchise; Kaiton in 2018 and Forslund in 2021.[5][6]

Move to North Carolina (1997–2001)

The Whalers were plagued for most of their existence by limited marketability. Hartford was the smallest American market in the league and was located on the traditional dividing line between the home territories for New York City and Boston teams. It did not help matters that the Hartford Civic Center was one of the smallest arenas in the league, seating under 16,000 spectators for hockey. The Whalers' off-ice problems were magnified when the start of the 1990s triggered a spike in player salaries.

Despite assurances made when he purchased the team in 1994 that the Whalers would remain in Hartford at least through 1998, in March 1997, owner Peter Karmanos announced that the team would move elsewhere after the 1996–97 season because of the team's inability to negotiate a satisfactory construction and lease package for a new arena in Hartford. On May 6, 1997, Karmanos announced that the Whalers would move to the Research Triangle area of North Carolina and the new Entertainment and Sports Arena (ESA) in Raleigh. Due to the relatively short time frame for the move, Karmanos himself thought of and decided upon the new name for the club, the Carolina Hurricanes, rather than holding a contest as is sometimes done. Later that summer, the team dropped the Whalers' colors of blue, green and silver for a new black-and-red scheme, matching the colors of the North Carolina State University Wolfpack, with whose men's basketball team they would share the arena in Raleigh. The Hurricanes inherited the Whalers' place in the Northeast Division.

Unfortunately for the team, the ESA would not be complete for two more years. The only arena in the Triangle area with an ice plant was 45-year-old Dorton Arena; at 5,100 seats, it was too small. The Hurricanes chose to play home games in Greensboro, 90 minutes west of Raleigh, for their first two seasons after the move. However, the team would be based in Raleigh and practice in nearby Hillsborough—effectively saddling the Hurricanes with 82 road games for the next two years. This choice was disastrous for the franchise's attendance and reputation. With a capacity of over 21,000 people for hockey, the Greensboro Coliseum was the highest-capacity arena in the NHL. However, Triangle-area fans balked at making the 80-mile drive up I-40 to Greensboro. Likewise, fans from the Piedmont Triad mostly refused to support a lame-duck team that had displaced the popular Greensboro/Carolina Monarchs minor-league franchise. As a result, even with the first game hosting more than 18,000 fans, most games in Greensboro attracted crowds of 5,000 or fewer. The crowds looked even smaller than that in the cavernous environment. Furthermore, only 29 out of 82 games were televised (over-the-air and cable combined), and radio play-by-play coverage on WPTF was often pre-empted by Wolfpack basketball (for whose broadcasts WPTF was the flagship station), leaving these games totally unavailable to those who did not have a ticket. With by far the smallest season-ticket base in the NHL and attendance figures routinely well below the league average, Sports Illustrated ran a story titled "Natural Disaster",[7] and ESPN anchors mocked the "Green Acres" of empty seats; in a 2006 interview, Karmanos admitted that "as it turns out, [Greensboro] was probably a mistake."[8] Under the circumstances, the Hurricanes managed to stay competitive, but still finished last in the Northeast Division with 74 points, nine points out of the playoffs.

For 1998–99, the Hurricanes curtained off most of the upper deck lowering the Coliseum's listed capacity to about 12,000. Attendance continued to lag. Most games attracted crowds of well under 5,000. Conversely, on the ice the Hurricanes' performance improved led by the return of longtime Whalers' captain Ron Francis, Keith Primeau's 30 goals, and Gary Roberts' 178 penalty minutes. They tallied their first winning season and playoff appearance since 1992. They also won the newly formed Southeast Division by eight points, only their second division title as an NHL team (following the 1987 Adams Division title as the Whalers). Tragedy struck hours after the team's first-round loss to the Bruins, when defenseman Steve Chiasson was thrown from his pickup truck and killed in a single-vehicle drunk-driving accident.

Despite a move to the newly completed arena in Raleigh, the Hurricanes played lackluster hockey in 1999–2000 failing to make the playoffs. This season was marked by an ultimately franchise-altering mid-season trade which saw Primeau dealt to the Philadelphia Flyers in exchange that included future captain Rod Brind'Amour. With the move to the new arena, the Hurricanes introduced the Storm Squad who were the very first cheerleaders for professional hockey in North America. In 2000–01, the Hurricanes managed to claim the eighth seed, nosing out the Boston Bruins, and landed a first-round match-up with the defending champions, the New Jersey Devils. The Devils eliminated the Hurricanes in six games. Down 3–0 in the series, the Hurricanes extended it to a sixth game, thereby becoming only the tenth team in NHL history to do so. Game 6 in Raleigh featured their best playoff crowd that year, as well as their loudest.[9] Despite the 5–1 loss, Carolina was given a standing ovation by their home crowd as the game ended, erasing some of the doubts that the city would not warm up to the team.[10]

Stanley Cup Finals and slow starts (2001–2006)

The Hurricanes made national waves for the first time in the 2002 playoffs. They survived a late charge from the Washington Capitals to win the division, but expectations were low entering the first round against the defending Eastern Conference champion New Jersey Devils. However, Arturs Irbe and Kevin Weekes were solid in goal and the Hurricanes won two games in overtime as they defeated the Devils in six games. Their second-round matchup was against the Montreal Canadiens, who were riding a wave of emotion after their captain Saku Koivu's return from cancer treatment. In the third period of game four in Montreal, down 2–1 in the series and 3–0 in the game, Carolina would tie the game and later win on Niclas Wallin's overtime goal. The game became known to Hurricanes fans as the "Miracle at Molson"; Carolina won the next two games by a combined 13–3 margin over a dejected Habs club to take the series.

In the Eastern Conference Finals, Carolina met the heavily favored Toronto Maple Leafs. In Game 6 in Toronto, the Leafs' Mats Sundin tied the game with 22 seconds remaining to send it to overtime, where Carolina's Martin Gelinas would score to send the franchise to their first Stanley Cup Finals appearance. During this series, several Hurricanes fan traditions drew hockey-wide media attention for the first time: fans met the team at the airport on the return from every road trip and echoed football-season habits honed for games across the parking lot by hosting massive tailgate parties before each home game, a relative novelty in the cold-weather-centric NHL. Inside the building, the CBC's Don Cherry lauded the RBC Center as "the loudest building in the NHL", praise that would be echoed in 2006.[11]

In the Stanley Cup Finals, Carolina would face the Detroit Red Wings, thought to be the prohibitive favorite all year. Though the Hurricanes stunned the Wings in game one when Ron Francis scored in the first minute of overtime, Detroit stormed back to win the next four games. Game three in Raleigh featured a triple-overtime thriller eventually won by Detroit's Igor Larionov, the oldest player to score a last-round goal.

 
Eric Staal was drafted by the Hurricanes in the 2003 NHL Entry Draft. He was named team captain in 2010. He was later traded to the New York Rangers.

The Hurricanes looked poised to pick up where they left off in the 2002–03, but never recovered from a 10-loss January and finished dead last in the league with 61 points. After a similarly slow start to the 2003–04 season, Paul Maurice, who had been the team's coach since midway through their next-to-last season in Hartford, was fired and replaced with former New York Islanders bench boss Peter Laviolette. Under Laviolette, Weekes remained tough, but the offense was suspect; center Josef Vasicek led the team with a mere 19 goals and 26 assists for 45 points. Many of the new fans attracted to the team (and to hockey itself) during the 2002 playoff run lost interest and attendance declined. One of the few positive results of these losing years was the team's drafting of Eric Staal in 2003.

Stanley Cup champions

The outcome of the 2004–05 NHL lockout led to the shrinking of the payroll to $26 million. The Hurricanes turned out to be one of the NHL's biggest surprises, turning in the best season in the franchise's 34-year history (including the years as the Whalers). They finished the regular season with a 52–22–8 record and 112 points, shattering the previous franchise records of 94 points (in the WHA) set by the 1972–73 Whalers and 93 points (in the NHL) set in 1986–87. It was the first time ever that the franchise had passed the 50-win and 100-point plateaus. The 112-point figure was good for fourth overall in the league, easily their highest overall finish as an NHL team (tied with the third-overall Dallas Stars in points, but with one fewer win than the Stars) and second in the East (one point behind the Ottawa Senators). The Hurricanes also ran away with their third Southeast Division title, finishing 20 points ahead of the Tampa Bay Lightning. Attendance increased from the 2003–04 season, averaging just under 15,600 per game, and the team made a profit for the first time since the move from Hartford.[12]

In the playoffs, after losing the first two games of the Conference Quarterfinal series against the Montreal Canadiens, Laviolette lifted goalkeeper Martin Gerber, who had been struggling to regain his form after playing through a bout of intestinal flu, in favor of rookie Cam Ward. This proved to be a consequential decision, as the Hurricanes went on to win both games in Montreal, tying up the playoff series and turning the momentum around, winning the series on a game six overtime goal by Cory Stillman. Carolina then faced the New Jersey Devils in the Conference Semifinals, which proved surprisingly one-sided, as the Hurricanes beat the Devils in five games. Stillman struck again, once again scoring the series-winning goal.

In the Eastern Conference Finals, the Hurricanes faced the Buffalo Sabres, who had finished just one spot behind the Hurricanes in the overall standings. The contentious series saw both coaches – Lindy Ruff and Laviolette – taking public verbal shots at each other's team, but in the deciding game seven, the Hurricanes rallied with three goals in the third to win by a score of 4–2. Rod Brind'Amour scored the game-winner as the Hurricanes reached the Stanley Cup finals for the second time in team history.

 
The Hurricanes celebrate following their game seven victory in the 2006 Stanley Cup Finals.

The Stanley Cup Finals saw the Hurricanes facing the Edmonton Oilers. The Hurricanes rallied from a 3–0 deficit in game one to win 5–4 after Rod Brind'Amour scored with 30 seconds left. In Game 2, the Hurricanes shelled the Oilers 5–0 to take a two-game lead. The Oilers won game three in Edmonton, 2–1, as Ryan Smyth scored the game-winning goal with 2:47 left to play. Carolina rebounded in game four with a 2–1 victory, and came home with a chance to win the Cup on home ice. However, game five saw the Oilers come back with a stunning 4–3 overtime win on a shorthanded breakaway by Fernando Pisani. In Game 6 in Edmonton, Carolina was soundly defeated 4–0; the only bright point for the Hurricanes was the return of forward Erik Cole from a broken neck that had sidelined him since March. In Game 7, before the then second-, now tenth-largest home crowd in franchise history (18,978), the Hurricanes won 3–1, sealing the Hurricanes' first Stanley Cup championship in franchise history. Cam Ward was honored with the Conn Smythe Trophy for being the playoffs' most valuable player, becoming just the fourth rookie to be honored with the award. Several Hurricanes raised the Cup for the first time in their long NHL careers; Rod Brind'Amour and Bret Hedican had both played over 15 years without winning the Cup, while Glen Wesley, the last remaining member of the Hartford Whalers on the Hurricanes' roster, had waited 18 seasons. On the managerial side, general manager Jim Rutherford finally won the Cup in his twelfth year with the franchise since joining the Whalers in 1994.

The Hurricanes Stanley Cup championship marked the first professional major league sports title for a team from North Carolina. As well, they were the first NHL team to win the Stanley Cup despite losing at least nine playoff games in that year; the 2011 Boston Bruins, the 2014 Los Angeles Kings, the 2017 Pittsburgh Penguins, and the 2019 St Louis Blues are the only other teams to have achieved this feat.

Post-championship slump (2006–2013)

The Hurricanes were unable to follow up their recent success. Losing four players to free agency in the off-season and 222-man games to injury during the 2006–07, the team struggled throughout the regular season,[13] and once eliminated in the last game, the Hurricanes finished third in the Southeast and 11th overall in the Eastern Conference.[14] This finish made them the first champions since the 1938–39 Chicago Black Hawks to have failed to qualify for the playoffs both the seasons before and after their championship season, and the third champion overall to not defend its title after both the Blackhawks and the 1995-96 New Jersey Devils. In the 2007–08, Carolina again missed out as Washington Capitals stormed back to take the division title on the last day of the season, leaving the Hurricanes second in the division and ninth overall in the conference, and making the Hurricanes only the second club in NHL history to miss the playoffs for two seasons running after a Stanley Cup triumph.

 
In 2009, the Hurricanes acquired Jussi Jokinen through a trade with the Tampa Bay Lightning. He has played with nine different NHL teams before leaving for the Finnish Liiga.

After a slow start to the 2008–09 season, Cup-winning coach Peter Laviolette was fired in early December and replaced by his own predecessor, Paul Maurice. Teetering on the edge of the playoff picture again, the club, on February 7, acquired utility forward Jussi Jokinen from the Tampa Bay Lightning in exchange for Wade Brookbank, Josef Melichar and Carolina's fourth-round draft pick in 2009, then reacquired winger Erik Cole from the Edmonton Oilers at the March trade deadline and proceeded on a 12–3–2 run to close out the season. The stretch run included nine straight wins, matching a franchise record from the 2005–06 season, and capped off a streak of 12 straight home wins, which set a new franchise mark. The team finished sixth in the Eastern Conference with 97 points, the second-most points in franchise history.

The Hurricanes' 2009 playoff run featured two tight series with dramatic finishes. Game 4 of the first-round matchup with the New Jersey Devils saw Stanley Cup playoff history when Jussi Jokinen scored with .2 seconds left in regulation to win the game, the latest regulation game-winning goal in NHL history. Then, in Game 7, the Devils took a 3–2 lead into the final two minutes of the game at the Prudential Center in Newark before the Hurricanes struck. With 1:20 to play, Tim Gleason saved a puck on his knees at the right point, passed it to Joni Pitkanen on the left boards, who then hit Game 4 hero Jussi Jokinen at the far post for the tying goal. Just 48 seconds later, Chad LaRose sprang Eric Staal for a solo down-ice rush to give the Hurricanes 4–3 game and series win; Staal's goal was the latest regulation Game 7 winning goal in playoff history. The Game 7 comeback would become known as the "Shock at the Rock".[15] In the second-round matchup with the top-seeded Boston Bruins, the Hurricanes ran out to a 3–1 lead before the Bruins battled back for two wins. In Game 7 in Boston, Scott Walker scored the game and series winner 18:46 into overtime to send Carolina to the Eastern Conference finals against the Pittsburgh Penguins. The Penguins, though, put a decisive end to the Hurricanes' string, sweeping the series 4–0 on the way to their own Stanley Cup championship.

As a result of their surprise run, very few changes were made in the off-season. Veterans such as Aaron Ward, Andrew Alberts, and Stephane Yelle were brought in to help drive the team further, but things did not go according to plan. The Hurricanes experienced a 14-game losing streak spanning October and November, and midway through the year, the Hurricanes replaced their only post-lockout captain Rod Brind'Amour with Eric Staal. Despite improved play during the second half of the season, they could not overcome the deficit from early on in the season. The Hurricanes would end up with the seventh overall pick in the 2010 NHL Entry Draft, eventually selecting Jeff Skinner from the Kitchener Rangers of the Ontario Hockey League (OHL). Brind'Amour retired over the 2010 off-season to take a coaching job with the club.

 
Jeff Skinner was awarded the Calder Memorial Trophy for his rookie season performance in the 2010–11 season.

The 2010–11 season was widely expected to be a transitional year from the veteran-heavy, high-salary club that opened 2009–10 to a younger, cheaper base. The Hurricanes contended for a playoff slot for the entire season aided by Skinner's emergence as an offensive phenomenon who, as the youngest player in the league, would lead all rookies in points. Raleigh hosted the 2011 NHL All-Star Game in January, and Eric Staal captained a team he selected (opposite a team selected by the Detroit Red Wings' Nicklas Lidstrom) that featured Skinner (the youngest All-Star in NHL history), Cam Ward, and (for the SuperSkills competition) defenseman Jamie McBain. The Hurricanes went into the final day of the season able to determine their own fate, but lost 6–2 to the Tampa Bay Lightning to finish ninth in the East.[16] Skinner was awarded the Calder Memorial Trophy as rookie of the year, the first player in franchise history to receive that honor.

In December 2011, the Carolina Hurricanes fired coach Paul Maurice and hired Kirk Muller. On February 20, 2012, the Carolina Hurricanes signed Tim Gleason to a four-year, $16 million extension and two days later, on February 22, they also signed Tuomo Ruutu to a four-year, $19 million extension. Two months later the Carolina Hurricanes announced that they had signed Jiri Tlusty to a two-year deal that would pay him $1.5 million for 2012–13 and $1.7 million for 2013–14 (Gleason and Tlusty would eventually be traded to the Washington Capitals and the Winnipeg Jets over the next few seasons). Despite the signings of Gleason, Ruutu, and Tlusty, the Hurricanes would finish fifth in the Southeast Division and twelfth in the Eastern Conference during the 2011–12 season, which forced them to miss the playoffs for a third consecutive season.

On May 9, 2012, the 2006 Stanley Cup champions Carolina Hurricanes' Game 7 victory was recognized as one of the NC Hall of Fame's "Great Moments" series.[17] During the 2012 NHL Entry Draft, the Carolina Hurricanes traded Brandon Sutter, Brian Dumoulin and their 2012 first round draft pick (Derrick Pouliot) to the Penguins in exchange for Jordan Staal, uniting the player with his older brother, Eric Staal. On March 25, 2013, the Hurricanes signed Alexander Semin to a five-year deal, worth $35 million.[18] However, in the lockout-shortened 2012–13 season, the team would finish third in the Southeast Division and 13th in the Eastern Conference, which would make the team miss the playoffs for the fourth consecutive season after a strong start was cut short by an injury to starting goaltender Cam Ward.

 
Bill Peters coached the Hurricanes from June 2014 to April 2018.

Continued decline and relocation rumors (2013–2017)

Before the 2013–14 season, the Hurricanes were realigned into the new Metropolitan Division. They would finish seventh in the division during the 2013–14 season (ahead of only the New York Islanders) and would miss the playoffs for the fifth consecutive season, which prompted management to fire head coach Kirk Muller.[19] In addition, longtime general manager Jim Rutherford was moved to an advisory role after the season with longtime Whalers/Hurricanes star Ron Francis announced as his replacement on April 28, 2014.[20]

On June 19, 2014, Bill Peters was named head coach, becoming the fifth head coach in franchise history. Peters' teams would not break the Hurricanes' playoff drought. During the 2014–15 season, the team finished last in the Metropolitan Division and would miss the playoffs for the sixth consecutive season.[21] After team captain Eric Staal was traded to the New York Rangers at the trade deadline, the team finished sixth in the division during the 2015–16 season. Things did not improve in the 2016–17 season. The Hurricanes finished seventh in the division, missing the playoffs for the eighth consecutive season.

The Hurricanes also experienced uncertainty about their future in Raleigh during this time. Karmanos was looking to sell the team, something he'd been trying to do for years. Attendance at PNC Arena had declined at a consistent rate since 2009. It became so bad the team finished second-to-last in average league attendance in 2014 and 2015.[22] Rumors started circulating in 2015 that the Hurricanes were possible contenders to move to either Las Vegas or Quebec City.[23] The Quebec rumors in particular were widely reported, with the Hurricanes and the NHL both refuting the claims.[24][25] Las Vegas would eventually gain an expansion team in the Vegas Golden Knights.

Tom Dundon and the "Bunch of Jerks" (2018–present)

Before the 2017–18 season, the Hurricanes unveiled new uniforms. On July 13, 2017, it was reported that Chuck Greenberg had sent Karmanos a letter of intent to buy the team for $500 million.[26][27] Greenberg would ultimately back out of a deal. On December 7, 2017, it was announced that Thomas Dundon signed an agreement to purchase the Hurricanes,[28] which ensured that the team would not be relocated.[29] The deal was finalized on January 11, 2018, with Dundon becoming majority owner and having a 61 percent stake in the team, while Karmanos retained a minority interest.[30]

Dundon wasted little time in overhauling the Hurricanes' front office. On March 8, 2018, the team announced that general manager Ron Francis had been moved to the role of president of hockey operations.[31] However, Sportsnet reporter Elliotte Friedman reported that the "promotion" was likely in name only, noting that there were rumblings Francis and Dundon did not see "eye-to-eye".[32][non-primary source needed] Subsequently, coach Bill Peters resigned from his position on April 20, 2018,[33] to pursue a similar opportunity with the Calgary Flames (he ultimately replaced Glen Gulutzan as the Flames' head coach three days later),[34] and the Hurricanes officially fired Francis from the organization altogether on April 30, 2018,[35] leaving vacancies in both the head coach and general manager positions.

Early in the Hurricanes' search for a replacement general manager, it was reported that Dundon's salary offerings for the position could be prohibitive in attracting quality candidates.[36] Sportsnet's Nick Kypreos reported that the Hurricanes were offering "in the ballpark of $400,000 a year",[37] a fraction of the salary figures of many other teams' coaches,[38] let alone those of their general managers, who serve in a higher-ranking position. Leading up to Kypreos' report, candidates such as Nashville Predators assistant general manager Paul Fenton, New Jersey Devils assistant general manager Tom Fitzgerald, and Los Angeles Kings assistant general manager Mike Futa had all reportedly passed on the position.[36]

 
Rod Brind'Amour was hired as head coach in 2018. He won the Jack Adams Award as the NHL's best coach in 2021.

Ultimately, on May 8, 2018, the Hurricanes announced the hiring of former Atlanta Thrashers general manager Don Waddell as team president and general manager. Waddell had previously been serving as the team's interim general manager since the promotion of Francis. At the same time, it was announced that former team captain Rod Brind'Amour had been named head coach, after serving with the team as an assistant coach since 2011.[39]

On April 4, 2019, the Hurricanes won 3–1 over the New Jersey Devils, clinching a playoff spot for the first time since 2009 and only the second time since their Cup win. During their stretch run, the Hurricanes gained notice for their on-ice victory celebrations, which they called "Storm Surges." This led Don Cherry of Hockey Night in Canada to call the Hurricanes a "bunch of jerks." The Hurricanes adopted "Bunch of Jerks" as a battle cry,[40] even going as far as projecting it on the ice at PNC Arena before and after games.[41]

During the 2019 Stanley Cup playoffs, on April 24, the Hurricanes defeated the defending 2018 Stanley Cup champions, the Washington Capitals, 4–3 in double overtime in game seven, winning their first playoff series since 2009. The team would then go on to defeat the New York Islanders in four straight games in the second round, recording the first best-of-seven playoff series sweep in franchise history, and advancing to the Eastern Conference Finals for the first time since 2009.[42] It was also the first time since 1993 that an opposing team (the Islanders), that swept their opponent in the first round, the Pittsburgh Penguins, would then go on to lose four straight and drop the series.[42] This trend continued into the third round against the Hurricanes favor as they themselves were swept by the Boston Bruins, thus losing the 2019 Eastern Conference Finals.[43]

On February 22, 2020, on the 40th anniversary of the Miracle on Ice, Hurricanes emergency goaltender David Ayres became the first emergency goaltender in NHL history to win a game, a 6–3 win against the Toronto Maple Leafs, the team whose minor league affiliate he works for as a Zamboni driver and maintenance man. The season would come to an abrupt end on March 11 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. On August 3, 2020, Andrei Svechnikov became the first Hurricanes/Whalers player to score a hat trick in the postseason in a 4–1 win over the New York Rangers. By beating the Rangers, the Hurricanes made the playoffs for a second straight season. However, they lost to the Bruins in five games.[44][45] The loss also marked the first time since the 2001 playoffs that the Hurricanes lost in the first round.

The 2020–21 season concluded with the Hurricanes winning the Central Division, their first division championship since winning the Southeast Division in 2006. It was also the first time since moving to Raleigh that they had qualified for the postseason three years in a row and the first time in the history of the franchise that a head coach had taken the team to the playoffs in three consecutive years. They defeated the Nashville Predators in the first round in six games, but lost to the Tampa Bay Lightning in the second round in five games. Defenseman Jaccob Slavin won the Lady Byng Memorial Trophy, notably only having two penalty minutes (PIM) for the entire season. Defenseman Dougie Hamilton was named to NHL's All-Star second team, and goaltender Alex Nedeljkovic was named to NHL's All-Rookie team and placed third in the Calder Memorial Trophy voting, while head coach Brind'Amour was awarded the Jack Adams Award, being the first in Hartford/Carolina history to receive it. On June 30, 2021, it was announced that Tom Dundon had purchased all remaining minority shares in the team.[46]

The 2021 off-season saw the Hurricanes overhaul the roster, resulting in many players departing. Warren Foegele was traded to Edmonton for Ethan Bear, Ian Cole and Brendan Smith were signed to complement the depth on defense. The team also overhauled their goaltending, trading away Alex Nedeljkovic for a pick and signing Frederik Andersen and Antti Raanta as the new goalie tandem. In perhaps their most talked-about moves, the Hurricanes signed Tony DeAngelo and signed Jesperi Kotkaniemi to an offer sheet.

The 2021–22 NHL season concluded with the Hurricanes winning the Metropolitan Division for the first time in franchise history. This was the first time the Hurricanes had ever won division titles in back-to-back years since relocation. The Hurricanes finished the regular season with 54 wins, the most in franchise history. Andersen and Sebastian Aho each represented the team at the 2022 NHL All-Star Game. In the playoffs, the top-seeded Hurricanes defeated the Boston Bruins in the first round, before falling to the New York Rangers in seven games.

Logos and uniforms

The Hurricanes' primary logo has always been a stylized hurricane with a storm warning flag on a hockey stick as the secondary logo. A stylized black triangle sat behind the flag, referencing the Triangle region. After the team's first season in 1997, the team altered the color scheme to a slightly darker shade of red and kept the other colors.

The Carolina Hurricanes currently wear black uniforms at home and white uniforms on the road. While black is one of the team's core colors, until 2022, the Hurricanes kept its usage at a minimum, opting for red helmets and red pants while using black exclusively as a trim color along with silver. Nevertheless, the Hurricanes have worn black alternate uniforms for select games since 2007.

Original uniforms

The initial Hurricanes uniforms featured the primary logo in front with the secondary logo on the shoulders. One enduring feature of this uniform was the red and black storm warning flags that dot the tail along with silver, red, black and white stripes. In 2000, black trim was added on the player's name, and upon moving to Reebok's Edge template in 2007, piping was added on the shoulder yoke.

In 2008, the Hurricanes unveiled their first black alternate uniform, featuring the flag logo in front and the primary logo (recolored to dark grey) on the shoulders. As with the primary uniforms, warning flag patterns dot the tail, albeit recolored to silver and black. "V" stripes of red and silver accent the sleeves and socks.

New looks

In 2013, the Hurricanes replaced their primary uniforms with a new set. The biggest changes for these uniforms included the omission of black and silver. On the red uniform, black was relegated exclusively to the neck piping, letter trim and logo, while on the white uniform, it was featured more prominently on the numbers and striping. Silver was almost completely removed from both the red and white uniforms except for the logo outline. In addition, a red nameplate with white letters and black trim was placed near the red shoulder yoke of the white uniforms. Both sets removed the flag logo and warning flag patterns while letters were updated to Univers Condensed font. The front logo also reduced in size compared to the prior set. Despite these changes, the Hurricanes continued to wear the prior black alternate uniform with this new set.

Upon moving to Adidas' AdiZero template in 2017, the Hurricanes made little changes to their white uniform. However, their new red uniform brought back a few elements from the original set, including black striping and the warning flag pattern (now recolored with a dark red shade) on the tail.

In 2018, the Hurricanes unveiled a new black alternate uniform, featuring an updated flag logo corrected to a hurricane warning flag. This flag logo also became the new additional logo. On the dark grey shoulder yoke, the primary logo was placed on the right while the Flag of North Carolina was added to the left. Both logos were recolored in black and grey. The logo also features the state of North Carolina in the negative space between the flags. This alternate has since become the Hurricanes' primary home uniform during the playoffs.

Also in 2018, the Hurricanes began wearing green "Heritage" uniforms from the team's Hartford years. In its first season, the throwbacks were used twice, both against the Boston Bruins; for the 2019–20 season, the Hurricanes wore them once at home against the Los Angeles Kings, and in the 2021–22 season, they wore them once against the New Jersey Devils. During home games with the Whalers uniforms, the Brass Bonanza theme would be played after the horn.

In 2019, a new white uniform was released, replacing the one worn since 2013. This new uniform featured the "CANES" nickname written diagonally in front with the flag logo returning on the shoulders. The warning flag patterns and red letters with black trim also returned from the original set. The new uniform came at the behest of owner Tom Dundon, who was not a fan of the previous white uniform.

For the 2020–21 season, the Hurricanes would wear a "Reverse Retro" uniform, using the template of the 1980s Whalers uniforms but with a grey base - grey being the only color used by both teams - as a nod to the 1992–1997 uniforms.[47]

The Hurricanes have not worn variants of their uniforms often. On April 5, 2022, the Hurricanes wore their alternate black pants with the white road uniforms for the first time in a game against the Buffalo Sabres. Two nights later, also against the Sabres, the Hurricanes paired their alternate black helmets and pants with the primary red home uniform. On December 23, 2022, against the Pittsburgh Penguins], the Hurricanes began wearing red helmets with the white road uniforms.

In August 2022, the Hurricanes officially promoted their black uniform to their full time home uniform.[48] They also brought back the original 1997–2007 red uniform as an alternate in commemoration of the 25th anniversary of the franchise in Carolina.[49] Later that year, the Hurricanes unveiled their second "Reverse Retro" uniform, this time using a red version of the "CANES" diagonal wordmark uniform.[50]

For the Hurricanes' appearances at the 2023 NHL Stadium Series, they wore black uniforms with red accents, but without any white elements. The uniform features the primary logo in front and enlarged numbers.[51]

Minor league affiliates

AHL/IHL

ECHL

Season-by-season record

This is a list of the last five seasons completed by the Hurricanes. For the full season-by-season history, see List of Carolina Hurricanes seasons

Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, OTL = Overtime Losses, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against

Season GP W L OTL Pts GF GA Finish Playoffs
2017–18 82 36 35 11 83 228 256 6th, Metropolitan Did not qualify
2018–19 82 46 29 7 99 245 223 4th, Metropolitan Lost in Conference Finals, 0–4 (Bruins)
2019–20 68 38 25 5 81 222 193 4th, Metropolitan Lost in First Round, 1–4 (Bruins)
2020–21 56 36 12 8 80 179 136 1st, Central Lost in Second Round, 1–4 (Lightning)
2021–22 82 54 20 8 116 278 202 1st, Metropolitan Lost in Second Round, 3–4 (Rangers)

Players and personnel

Current roster

Updated March 13, 2023[52][53]

No. Nat Player Pos S/G Age Acquired Birthplace
20   Sebastian Aho (A) C L 25 2015 Rauma, Finland
31   Frederik Andersen G L 33 2021 Herning, Denmark
8   Brent Burns D R 38 2022 Barrie, Ontario
5   Jalen Chatfield D R 26 2021 Ypsilanti, Michigan
15   Dylan Coghlan D R 25 2022 Duncan, British Columbia
44   Calvin de Haan D L 31 2022 Carp, Ontario
18   Jack Drury C L 23 2018 New York, New York
71   Jesper Fast RW R 31 2020 Nässjö, Sweden
51   Jake Gardiner   D L 32 2019 Minneapolis, Minnesota
41   Shayne Gostisbehere D L 29 2023 Pembroke Pines, Florida
24   Seth Jarvis C R 21 2020 Winnipeg, Manitoba
73   Ondrej Kase   RW R 27 2022 Kadan, Czech Republic
52   Pyotr Kochetkov G L 23 2019 Penza, Russia
82   Jesperi Kotkaniemi C L 22 2021 Pori, Finland
48   Jordan Martinook (A) LW L 30 2018 Brandon, Manitoba
88   Martin Necas C R 24 2017 Nové Město na Moravě, Czech Republic
23   Stefan Noesen RW R 30 2021 Plano, Texas
67   Max Pacioretty   LW L 34 2022 New Canaan, Connecticut
22   Brett Pesce D R 28 2013 Tarrytown, New York
13   Jesse Puljujarvi RW R 24 2023 Alvkarleby, Sweden
32   Antti Raanta G L 33 2021 Rauma, Finland
76   Brady Skjei D L 28 2020 Lakeville, Minnesota
74   Jaccob Slavin (A) D L 28 2012 Erie, Colorado
11   Jordan Staal (C) C L 34 2012 Thunder Bay, Ontario
26   Paul Stastny C L 37 2022 Quebec City, Quebec
21   Derek Stepan C R 32 2021 Hastings, Minnesota
37   Andrei Svechnikov   RW L 22 2018 Barnaul, Russia
86   Teuvo Teravainen LW L 28 2016 Helsinki, Finland

Retired numbers

Carolina Hurricanes retired numbers
No. Player Position Career No. retirement
2 1 Glen Wesley D 1994–2003
2003–2008
February 17, 2009[54]
10 Ron Francis C 1981–1991
1998–2004
January 28, 2006
17 Rod Brind'Amour C 2000–2010 February 18, 2011[55]

The Hurricanes also honor three numbers within the organization, but do not display their banners publicly:

Besides the above numbers, Wayne Gretzky's No. 99 was retired for all the NHL's member teams at the 2000 NHL All-Star Game.[59]

Notes:

  • 1 When the Whalers moved to North Carolina to begin the 1997–98 NHL season, they returned the previously retired #2 for Rick Ley (D, 1972–1981) and #19 for John McKenzie (RW, 1977–1979) to circulation, while retaining Howe's #9 without public display. Wesley (who wore No. 20 in Hartford) was the only Hurricane to wear #2 prior to its re-retirement; #19 has been issued to several players since the move.

Team captains

 
Rod Brind'Amour was the Hurricanes' team captain from 2005 to 2010.

Note: This list of team captains does not include captains from the Hartford Whalers (NHL) and New England Whalers (WHA).

Hall of Famers

  • Paul Coffey spent one and a half seasons in Carolina near the end of his career (as well as, two seasons prior, 20 games in Hartford). He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2004.
  • Ron Francis captained the team in both Hartford and Carolina and spent 15 years with the franchise overall as a player before joining its staff in 2006. He was inducted in 2007.
  • Mark Recchi played for the team at the end of the 2005–06 season after being traded by the Pittsburgh Penguins. He was inducted in 2017.
  • Jim Rutherford was the President and General Manager in both Hartford and Carolina from 1994 to 2014. He was inducted in 2019.

Six members of the Hockey Hall of Fame played for the team before the move to North Carolina: Gordie Howe, Mark Howe, Dave Keon, Bobby Hull, Brendan Shanahan, and Chris Pronger. In addition, longtime franchise radio play-by-play announcer Chuck Kaiton received the Foster Hewitt Memorial Award in 2004, an honor granted by the Hall of Fame.

Broadcasters

The regional broadcasting rights for the Carolina Hurricanes is presently held by Bally Sports South.[60] Color commentary for Bally Sports' broadcast is performed by Tripp Tracy or former player Shane Willis, while play-by-play is provided by Mike Maniscalso.[61]

Chuck Kaiton was the team's radio play-by-play announcer from 1979 to 2018, dating to the team's days in Hartford.[62] On the television side, John Forslund was the play-by-play voice of the franchise starting in 1995, but left prior to the 2020 Stanley Cup playoffs and has since moved to NBC and later with the Seattle Kraken. Since the 2018–19 season, the Hurricanes have simulcasted audio from the television broadcasts to a network of four stations fronted by WCMC-FM in Raleigh.[61] Hurricanes games can also be heard on WWNB in New Bern, WECU in Greenville, and WZGV in Charlotte.[63]

First-round draft picks

 
The Hurricanes drafted Noah Hanifin 5th overall in the 2015 NHL Entry Draft.

Note: This list does not include selections of the Hartford Whalers.

NHL awards and trophies

Statistics

Franchise scoring leaders

These are the top-ten point-scorers in franchise (Hartford and Carolina) history. Figures are updated after each completed NHL regular season.

  •  *  – current Hurricanes player

Note: Pos = Position; GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; P/G = Points per game

Points
Player Pos GP G A Pts P/G
Ron Francis C 1,186 382 793 1,175 .99
Eric Staal C 909 322 453 775 .85
Kevin Dineen RW 708 250 294 544 .77
Rod Brind'Amour C 694 174 299 473 .68
Jeff O'Neill RW 673 198 218 416 .62
Pat Verbeek RW 433 192 211 403 .93
Sebastian Aho* C 445 182 219 401 .90
Jeff Skinner LW 579 204 175 379 .65
Blaine Stoughton RW 357 219 158 377 1.06
Geoff Sanderson LW 479 196 173 369 .77
Goals
Player Pos G
Ron Francis C 382
Eric Staal C 322
Kevin Dineen RW 250
Blaine Stoughton RW 219
Jeff Skinner LW 204
Jeff O'Neill C 198
Geoff Sanderson LW 196
Pat Verbeek RW 192
Sebastian Aho* C 182
Sylvain Turgeon LW 178
Assists
Player Pos A
Ron Francis C 793
Eric Staal C 453
Rod Brind'Amour C 299
Kevin Dineen RW 294
Andrew Cassels C 253
Jordan Staal* C 225
Teuvo Teravainen* LW 224
Sebastian Aho* C 219
Jeff O'Neill C 218
Ray Whitney LW 215

Franchise records

Note: these records include those from the Hartford Whalers.

Individual

 
With 39 wins in the 2008–09 season, Cam Ward set the franchise record for most wins by a goaltender in a season.
  • Most goals in a season: Blaine Stoughton, 56 (1979–80)
  • Most assists in a season: Ron Francis, 69 (1989–90)
  • Most points in a season: Mike Rogers, 105 (1979–80, 1980–81)
  • Most penalty minutes in a season: Torrie Robertson, 358 (1985–86)
  • Most points in a season, defenseman: Mark Howe, 80 (1979–80)
  • Most points in a season, rookie: Sylvain Turgeon, 72 (1983–84)
  • Fastest hat trick: Ray Whitney, 1 minute 40 seconds, February 8, 2007, vs. Boston Bruins
  • Most shots on goal in one game: Jeff Skinner, 13 (2014)
  • Most hat tricks in a season: Eric Staal, 4 (2008–09)
  • Most wins in a season: Cam Ward, 39 (2008–09)
  • Most shutouts in a season: Arturs Irbe (1998–99, 2000–01); Kevin Weekes (2003–04); Cam Ward (2008–09), 6
  • Most career post-season goals: Eric Staal, 18
  • Most career post-season points: Eric Staal, 40
  • Most points in one post-season: Eric Staal, 28 (2006)
  • Most shutouts in one post-season: Kevin Weekes (2002); Cam Ward (2006, 2009); Petr Mrazek (2019), 2

Team

  • Most wins in a season: 54 (2021–22)
  • Most points in a season: 116 (2021–22)
  • Most consecutive wins: 11 (2022–23)
  • Most consecutive home wins: 12 (2008–09)
  • Most consecutive penalties killed: 36 (Nov. 8—24, 2000 (twice), Dec. 21, 2014—Jan. 19, 2015)
  • Best shot differential in a game: 45 (57–12), April 7, 2009, vs. New York Islanders

References

  1. ^ "Table of Contents" (PDF). Carolina Hurricanes 2021-22 Media Guide (PDF). NHL Enterprises, L.P. Retrieved November 28, 2022.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. ^ "Carolina Hurricanes Brand Assets". CarolinaHurricanes.com. NHL Enterprises, L.P. Retrieved November 28, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  3. ^ a b Williams, Terrell (May 8, 2018). "Hurricanes Name Rod Brind'Amour as Head Coach". CarolinaHurricanes.com. NHL Enterprises, L.P. from the original on May 9, 2018. Retrieved May 8, 2018. The team also announcedd that Don Waddell will officially serve as president and general manager.
  4. ^ Canes PR (September 29, 2019). "Canes Name Jordan Staal as Team Captain". NHL.com. from the original on September 29, 2019. Retrieved September 29, 2019.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on July 25, 2018.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on February 18, 2021.
  7. ^ Callaghan, Gerry. "Natural Disaster." Archived December 2, 2012, at archive.today Sports Illustrated, October 27, 1997; Web article. Retrieved November 19, 2008.
  8. ^ Burnside, Scott. "Karmanos: Hard-nosed owner, die-hard hockey fan." November 4, 2012, at the Wayback Machine ESPN, June 6, 2008; Web article. Retrieved February 14, 2009.
  9. ^ ESPN.com, New Jersey Devils/Carolina Hurricanes NHL recap on ESPN August 17, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ SportsIllustrated.com, SI's 2001-02 NHL Team Previews: Hurricanes March 11, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ Fayetteville Online, Hurricanes fans bring the noise June 17, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ ESPN.com, NHL Attendance November 19, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ "Hurricanes tighten up for playoff run in East - USATODAY.com". usatoday30.usatoday.com. from the original on February 21, 2016. Retrieved February 8, 2016.
  14. ^ "Hurricanes Eliminated From Playoff Race". The Washington Post. Associated Press. April 4, 2007. from the original on July 13, 2017. Retrieved September 20, 2017.
  15. ^ Smith, Michael (April 28, 2020). "This Day in Canes History: April 28". NHL.com. Retrieved December 23, 2022.
  16. ^ "Tampa Bay Lightning - Carolina Hurricanes - April 9th, 2011". NHL.com. from the original on September 20, 2020. Retrieved February 23, 2021.
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on March 8, 2016. Retrieved February 8, 2016.
  18. ^ Tsn.Ca Staff. "Hurricanes ink F Semin to five-year, $35M contract extension". The Sports Network. from the original on August 1, 2013. Retrieved March 26, 2013.
  19. ^ "Hurricanes fire coach Kirk Muller". USA TODAY. from the original on September 24, 2017. Retrieved September 20, 2017.
  20. ^ "Ron Francis Named Hurricanes General Manager". National Hockey League. from the original on June 18, 2018. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
  21. ^ "Carolina Hurricanes lose burden of playoff expectations". from the original on April 21, 2016. Retrieved February 8, 2016.
  22. ^ "The Carolina Hurricanes are almost always last in NHL attendance, and that's (At least partly) by design". December 5, 2017.
  23. ^ "Hurricanes in swirl of Quebec, Las Vegas NHL relocation speculation".
  24. ^ "'No chance' Hurricanes move to Quebec".
  25. ^ "Struggling Hurricanes may move to Quebec".
  26. ^ "Greenberg to Purchase Hurricanes for $500 Million". The Hockey Writers. July 13, 2017. from the original on July 17, 2017. Retrieved July 14, 2017.
  27. ^ "Hurricanes owner confirms he received offer to sell". National Hockey League. July 13, 2017. from the original on July 14, 2017. Retrieved July 14, 2017.
  28. ^ Williams, Terrell (December 7, 2018). "Dundon Signs Agreement to Purchase Hurricanes". National Hockey League. from the original on January 13, 2018. Retrieved January 12, 2018.
  29. ^ Rosen, Dan (December 7, 2017). "Hurricanes enter into purchase agreement, will not relocate". National Hockey League. from the original on January 12, 2018. Retrieved January 12, 2018.
  30. ^ Smith, Michael (January 11, 2018). "Dundon Becomes Majority Owner of Hurricanes". National Hockey League. from the original on January 13, 2018. Retrieved January 12, 2018.
  31. ^ "Ron Francis out as general manager of Hurricanes, will serve as president of hockey ops". CBSSports.com. from the original on June 18, 2018. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
  32. ^ "Elliotte Friedman on Twitter". Twitter. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
  33. ^ "Carolina Hurricanes head coach Bill Peters resigns". Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. from the original on May 27, 2018. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
  34. ^ "Flames hire Bill Peters as new head coach". Sportsnet.ca. from the original on June 18, 2018. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
  35. ^ "Hurricanes fire former general manager Ron Francis". Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. from the original on June 23, 2018. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
  36. ^ a b "Money might be an issue in Carolina Hurricanes' GM search". Sportsnet.ca. from the original on June 18, 2018. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
  37. ^ "Hurricanes GM search being stalled because of low salary offer, says report". Sporting News. March 17, 2018. from the original on June 18, 2018. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
  38. ^ "CapFriendly - NHL Salary Caps". CapFriendly. from the original on June 4, 2018. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
  39. ^ "Rod Brind'Amour hired as head coach of Hurricanes, Don Waddell named GM". Sportsnet.ca. from the original on June 18, 2018. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
  40. ^ Jake Russell (February 17, 2019). "Don Cherry calls the Carolina Hurricanes 'a bunch of jerks' because of victory celebrations". The Washington Post. from the original on April 24, 2019. Retrieved April 24, 2019.
  41. ^ James O'Brien (February 26, 2019). "Hurricanes present next evolution of 'Bunch of Jerks' trolling". NBC Sports. from the original on April 24, 2019. Retrieved April 24, 2019.
  42. ^ a b "Facts and Figures: Hurricanes complete first sweep in best-of-7 series". NHL.com. May 4, 2019. from the original on May 4, 2019. Retrieved May 5, 2019.
  43. ^ "2019 Stanley Cup Playoffs: Five reasons the Carolina Hurricanes were swept by the Boston Bruins". www.cbssports.com. May 17, 2019. from the original on May 17, 2019. Retrieved May 17, 2019.
  44. ^ "Hurricanes sweep Rangers, advance to next round". August 5, 2020. from the original on August 16, 2020. Retrieved August 23, 2020.
  45. ^ "Bruins eliminate Hurricanes in Game 5". August 19, 2020. from the original on September 30, 2020. Retrieved August 23, 2020.
  46. ^ "Dundon Assumes Full Ownership of Hurricanes". NHL.com. June 30, 2021. Retrieved July 1, 2021.
  47. ^ Smith, Michael (November 16, 2020). "Canes, Adidas Unveil Whalers Reverse Retro Jersey". National Hockey League. from the original on February 9, 2021. Retrieved February 10, 2021.
  48. ^ "Wardrobe Change: Canes Make Black Jersey Primary on Home Ice".
  49. ^ "Canes Introduce Red Vintage-Inspired Uniform For 25th Anniversary Season". Carolina Hurricanes.
  50. ^ "NHL Reverse Retro jerseys for all 32 teams unveiled by adidas". NHL.com. October 20, 2022. Retrieved October 20, 2022.
  51. ^ "Stadium Series jerseys for Capitals, Hurricanes unveiled".
  52. ^ "Carolina Hurricanes Roster". National Hockey League. Retrieved March 13, 2023.
  53. ^ "Carolina Hurricanes Hockey Transactions". The Sports Network. Retrieved March 13, 2023.
  54. ^ "Hurricanes honor Wesley, retire No. 2". National Hockey League. Associated Press. 2009. from the original on November 11, 2013. Retrieved February 17, 2009.
  55. ^ "Canes to retire Brind'Amour's jersey". WRAL.com. 2010. from the original on July 18, 2010. Retrieved July 15, 2010.
  56. ^ a b "Hurricanes always honored Howe, quietly and unofficially". News & Observer (Raleigh). 2016. from the original on October 3, 2016. Retrieved October 2, 2016.
  57. ^ . National Hockey League. 2011. Archived from the original on May 12, 2012. Retrieved May 24, 2011.
  58. ^ "Tweetmail No. 118: Return of the Tweetmail". Carolina Hurricanes. 2016. from the original on October 13, 2016. Retrieved October 12, 2016.
  59. ^ . CNN Sports Illustrated. Associated Press. February 6, 2000. Archived from the original on November 12, 2013. Retrieved June 9, 2014.
  60. ^ "Broadcast Information". CarolinaHurricanes.com. Carolina Hurricanes Hockey Club. 2019. from the original on April 1, 2019. Retrieved July 3, 2019.
  61. ^ a b Abdelgawad, Omar (September 24, 2020). "Carolina Hurricanes: Mike Maniscalco to Take Over Play-by-Play Duties". Cardiac Cane. FanSided. from the original on January 15, 2021. Retrieved January 14, 2021.
  62. ^ "Chuck Kaiton out as Carolina Hurricanes radio broadcaster". from the original on July 25, 2018. Retrieved July 24, 2018.
  63. ^ "Broadcast Information". Carolina Hurricanes. Retrieved October 26, 2021.

External links

  • Official website

carolina, hurricanes, this, article, about, hockey, team, history, hurricanes, occurring, north, carolina, list, north, carolina, hurricanes, colloquially, known, canes, professional, hockey, team, based, raleigh, north, carolina, they, compete, national, hock. This article is about the hockey team For a history of hurricanes occurring in North Carolina see List of North Carolina hurricanes The Carolina Hurricanes colloquially known as the Canes are a professional ice hockey team based in Raleigh North Carolina They compete in the National Hockey League NHL as a member of the Metropolitan Division in the Eastern Conference and play their home games at PNC Arena Carolina Hurricanes2022 23 Carolina Hurricanes seasonConferenceEasternDivisionMetropolitanFounded1972HistoryNew England Whalers1972 1979 WHA Hartford Whalers1979 1997 NHL Carolina Hurricanes1997 presentHome arenaPNC ArenaCityRaleigh North CarolinaColorsRed white gray black 1 2 MediaTelevision Bally Sports SouthBally Sports SoutheastBally Sports Radio ESPN Greenville 107 5 FM 1570 AM ESPN New Bern 103 9 FM 1490 AM ESPN The Fan 99 9 FM The Buzz 620 AM 730 AM The Game ESPN CharlotteOwner s Thomas DundonGeneral managerDon Waddell 3 Head coachRod Brind Amour 3 CaptainJordan Staal 4 Minor league affiliatesChicago Wolves AHL Norfolk Admirals ECHL Stanley Cups1 2005 06 Conference championships2 2001 02 2005 06 Presidents Trophy0Division championships5 1998 99 2001 02 2005 06 2020 21 2021 22 Official websitewww wbr nhl wbr com wbr hurricanesThe franchise was formed in 1971 as the New England Whalers of the World Hockey Association WHA The Whalers saw success immediately winning the Eastern Division in the WHA s first three seasons and becoming the inaugural Avco World Trophy Champions to cap off the 1972 73 season The Whalers again competed for the World Trophy in 1978 this time falling short to the Winnipeg Jets in a rematch of the 1973 Finals The franchise joined the NHL in 1979 as part of the NHL WHA merger renaming themselves the Hartford Whalers The team relocated to North Carolina in 1997 rebranding themselves as the Hurricanes Carolina advanced to the Stanley Cup Finals for the first time in 2002 where they were defeated by the Detroit Red Wings The Hurricanes won the 2006 Stanley Cup over the Edmonton Oilers giving the state of North Carolina its first major professional sports championship and its only major championship as of 2023 Contents 1 Franchise history 1 1 New England Hartford Whalers 1971 1997 1 2 Move to North Carolina 1997 2001 1 3 Stanley Cup Finals and slow starts 2001 2006 1 3 1 Stanley Cup champions 1 4 Post championship slump 2006 2013 1 5 Continued decline and relocation rumors 2013 2017 1 6 Tom Dundon and the Bunch of Jerks 2018 present 2 Logos and uniforms 2 1 Original uniforms 2 2 New looks 3 Minor league affiliates 3 1 AHL IHL 3 2 ECHL 4 Season by season record 5 Players and personnel 5 1 Current roster 5 2 Retired numbers 5 3 Team captains 5 4 Hall of Famers 5 5 Broadcasters 5 6 First round draft picks 6 NHL awards and trophies 7 Statistics 7 1 Franchise scoring leaders 7 2 Franchise records 7 2 1 Individual 7 2 2 Team 8 References 9 External linksFranchise history EditNew England Hartford Whalers 1971 1997 Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Carolina Hurricanes news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article Hartford Whalers The New England Whalers were established in November 1971 when the World Hockey Association WHA awarded a franchise to begin play in Boston Massachusetts For the first two years of their existence the club played their home games at the Boston Arena and Boston Garden With the increasing difficulty of scheduling games at Boston Garden owned by the NHL rival Boston Bruins the owners decided to move the team to Hartford Connecticut beginning with the 1974 75 season While waiting for the completion of a new arena in Hartford the Whalers played the first part of the season at The Big E Coliseum in West Springfield Massachusetts On January 11 1975 the team played its first game in front of a sellout crowd at the Hartford Civic Center Coliseum and would maintain its home there through 1997 Hartford Whalers logo As one of the most stable WHA teams the Whalers along with the Edmonton Oilers Quebec Nordiques and Winnipeg Jets were admitted to the NHL when the rival leagues merged in 1979 However under pressure from the extant NHL team in the New England area the Boston Bruins the Whalers were compelled to rename the team the Hartford Whalers The Whalers were never as successful in the NHL as they had been in the WHA recording only three winning seasons They peaked in the mid to late 1980s winning their only playoff series in 1986 over the Nordiques before bowing out in the second round to the Montreal Canadiens taking the Habs to overtime of Game 7 in the process The next year the club secured the regular season Adams Division title only to fall to the Nordiques in six games in the first round of the playoffs In 1992 the Whalers made the playoffs for the final time but were bounced in the first round in seven games by the Canadiens Two years later the team hired Jim Rutherford as general manager a position that he would hold within the franchise for twenty years For years the organization maintained many Whalers connections among its off ice personnel in addition to many members of executive management and the coaching staff broadcasters Chuck Kaiton John Forslund and Tripp Tracy at the time a minor league player and equipment managers Wally Tatomir Skip Cunningham and Bob Gorman all made the move to North Carolina with the team Finally the old goal horn from the Hartford Civic Center remains in use at PNC Arena Kaiton and Forslund would both eventually leave the franchise Kaiton in 2018 and Forslund in 2021 5 6 Move to North Carolina 1997 2001 Edit The Whalers were plagued for most of their existence by limited marketability Hartford was the smallest American market in the league and was located on the traditional dividing line between the home territories for New York City and Boston teams It did not help matters that the Hartford Civic Center was one of the smallest arenas in the league seating under 16 000 spectators for hockey The Whalers off ice problems were magnified when the start of the 1990s triggered a spike in player salaries Despite assurances made when he purchased the team in 1994 that the Whalers would remain in Hartford at least through 1998 in March 1997 owner Peter Karmanos announced that the team would move elsewhere after the 1996 97 season because of the team s inability to negotiate a satisfactory construction and lease package for a new arena in Hartford On May 6 1997 Karmanos announced that the Whalers would move to the Research Triangle area of North Carolina and the new Entertainment and Sports Arena ESA in Raleigh Due to the relatively short time frame for the move Karmanos himself thought of and decided upon the new name for the club the Carolina Hurricanes rather than holding a contest as is sometimes done Later that summer the team dropped the Whalers colors of blue green and silver for a new black and red scheme matching the colors of the North Carolina State University Wolfpack with whose men s basketball team they would share the arena in Raleigh The Hurricanes inherited the Whalers place in the Northeast Division Unfortunately for the team the ESA would not be complete for two more years The only arena in the Triangle area with an ice plant was 45 year old Dorton Arena at 5 100 seats it was too small The Hurricanes chose to play home games in Greensboro 90 minutes west of Raleigh for their first two seasons after the move However the team would be based in Raleigh and practice in nearby Hillsborough effectively saddling the Hurricanes with 82 road games for the next two years This choice was disastrous for the franchise s attendance and reputation With a capacity of over 21 000 people for hockey the Greensboro Coliseum was the highest capacity arena in the NHL However Triangle area fans balked at making the 80 mile drive up I 40 to Greensboro Likewise fans from the Piedmont Triad mostly refused to support a lame duck team that had displaced the popular Greensboro Carolina Monarchs minor league franchise As a result even with the first game hosting more than 18 000 fans most games in Greensboro attracted crowds of 5 000 or fewer The crowds looked even smaller than that in the cavernous environment Furthermore only 29 out of 82 games were televised over the air and cable combined and radio play by play coverage on WPTF was often pre empted by Wolfpack basketball for whose broadcasts WPTF was the flagship station leaving these games totally unavailable to those who did not have a ticket With by far the smallest season ticket base in the NHL and attendance figures routinely well below the league average Sports Illustrated ran a story titled Natural Disaster 7 and ESPN anchors mocked the Green Acres of empty seats in a 2006 interview Karmanos admitted that as it turns out Greensboro was probably a mistake 8 Under the circumstances the Hurricanes managed to stay competitive but still finished last in the Northeast Division with 74 points nine points out of the playoffs For 1998 99 the Hurricanes curtained off most of the upper deck lowering the Coliseum s listed capacity to about 12 000 Attendance continued to lag Most games attracted crowds of well under 5 000 Conversely on the ice the Hurricanes performance improved led by the return of longtime Whalers captain Ron Francis Keith Primeau s 30 goals and Gary Roberts 178 penalty minutes They tallied their first winning season and playoff appearance since 1992 They also won the newly formed Southeast Division by eight points only their second division title as an NHL team following the 1987 Adams Division title as the Whalers Tragedy struck hours after the team s first round loss to the Bruins when defenseman Steve Chiasson was thrown from his pickup truck and killed in a single vehicle drunk driving accident Despite a move to the newly completed arena in Raleigh the Hurricanes played lackluster hockey in 1999 2000 failing to make the playoffs This season was marked by an ultimately franchise altering mid season trade which saw Primeau dealt to the Philadelphia Flyers in exchange that included future captain Rod Brind Amour With the move to the new arena the Hurricanes introduced the Storm Squad who were the very first cheerleaders for professional hockey in North America In 2000 01 the Hurricanes managed to claim the eighth seed nosing out the Boston Bruins and landed a first round match up with the defending champions the New Jersey Devils The Devils eliminated the Hurricanes in six games Down 3 0 in the series the Hurricanes extended it to a sixth game thereby becoming only the tenth team in NHL history to do so Game 6 in Raleigh featured their best playoff crowd that year as well as their loudest 9 Despite the 5 1 loss Carolina was given a standing ovation by their home crowd as the game ended erasing some of the doubts that the city would not warm up to the team 10 Stanley Cup Finals and slow starts 2001 2006 Edit The Hurricanes made national waves for the first time in the 2002 playoffs They survived a late charge from the Washington Capitals to win the division but expectations were low entering the first round against the defending Eastern Conference champion New Jersey Devils However Arturs Irbe and Kevin Weekes were solid in goal and the Hurricanes won two games in overtime as they defeated the Devils in six games Their second round matchup was against the Montreal Canadiens who were riding a wave of emotion after their captain Saku Koivu s return from cancer treatment In the third period of game four in Montreal down 2 1 in the series and 3 0 in the game Carolina would tie the game and later win on Niclas Wallin s overtime goal The game became known to Hurricanes fans as the Miracle at Molson Carolina won the next two games by a combined 13 3 margin over a dejected Habs club to take the series In the Eastern Conference Finals Carolina met the heavily favored Toronto Maple Leafs In Game 6 in Toronto the Leafs Mats Sundin tied the game with 22 seconds remaining to send it to overtime where Carolina s Martin Gelinas would score to send the franchise to their first Stanley Cup Finals appearance During this series several Hurricanes fan traditions drew hockey wide media attention for the first time fans met the team at the airport on the return from every road trip and echoed football season habits honed for games across the parking lot by hosting massive tailgate parties before each home game a relative novelty in the cold weather centric NHL Inside the building the CBC s Don Cherry lauded the RBC Center as the loudest building in the NHL praise that would be echoed in 2006 11 In the Stanley Cup Finals Carolina would face the Detroit Red Wings thought to be the prohibitive favorite all year Though the Hurricanes stunned the Wings in game one when Ron Francis scored in the first minute of overtime Detroit stormed back to win the next four games Game three in Raleigh featured a triple overtime thriller eventually won by Detroit s Igor Larionov the oldest player to score a last round goal Eric Staal was drafted by the Hurricanes in the 2003 NHL Entry Draft He was named team captain in 2010 He was later traded to the New York Rangers The Hurricanes looked poised to pick up where they left off in the 2002 03 but never recovered from a 10 loss January and finished dead last in the league with 61 points After a similarly slow start to the 2003 04 season Paul Maurice who had been the team s coach since midway through their next to last season in Hartford was fired and replaced with former New York Islanders bench boss Peter Laviolette Under Laviolette Weekes remained tough but the offense was suspect center Josef Vasicek led the team with a mere 19 goals and 26 assists for 45 points Many of the new fans attracted to the team and to hockey itself during the 2002 playoff run lost interest and attendance declined One of the few positive results of these losing years was the team s drafting of Eric Staal in 2003 Stanley Cup champions Edit The outcome of the 2004 05 NHL lockout led to the shrinking of the payroll to 26 million The Hurricanes turned out to be one of the NHL s biggest surprises turning in the best season in the franchise s 34 year history including the years as the Whalers They finished the regular season with a 52 22 8 record and 112 points shattering the previous franchise records of 94 points in the WHA set by the 1972 73 Whalers and 93 points in the NHL set in 1986 87 It was the first time ever that the franchise had passed the 50 win and 100 point plateaus The 112 point figure was good for fourth overall in the league easily their highest overall finish as an NHL team tied with the third overall Dallas Stars in points but with one fewer win than the Stars and second in the East one point behind the Ottawa Senators The Hurricanes also ran away with their third Southeast Division title finishing 20 points ahead of the Tampa Bay Lightning Attendance increased from the 2003 04 season averaging just under 15 600 per game and the team made a profit for the first time since the move from Hartford 12 In the playoffs after losing the first two games of the Conference Quarterfinal series against the Montreal Canadiens Laviolette lifted goalkeeper Martin Gerber who had been struggling to regain his form after playing through a bout of intestinal flu in favor of rookie Cam Ward This proved to be a consequential decision as the Hurricanes went on to win both games in Montreal tying up the playoff series and turning the momentum around winning the series on a game six overtime goal by Cory Stillman Carolina then faced the New Jersey Devils in the Conference Semifinals which proved surprisingly one sided as the Hurricanes beat the Devils in five games Stillman struck again once again scoring the series winning goal In the Eastern Conference Finals the Hurricanes faced the Buffalo Sabres who had finished just one spot behind the Hurricanes in the overall standings The contentious series saw both coaches Lindy Ruff and Laviolette taking public verbal shots at each other s team but in the deciding game seven the Hurricanes rallied with three goals in the third to win by a score of 4 2 Rod Brind Amour scored the game winner as the Hurricanes reached the Stanley Cup finals for the second time in team history The Hurricanes celebrate following their game seven victory in the 2006 Stanley Cup Finals The Stanley Cup Finals saw the Hurricanes facing the Edmonton Oilers The Hurricanes rallied from a 3 0 deficit in game one to win 5 4 after Rod Brind Amour scored with 30 seconds left In Game 2 the Hurricanes shelled the Oilers 5 0 to take a two game lead The Oilers won game three in Edmonton 2 1 as Ryan Smyth scored the game winning goal with 2 47 left to play Carolina rebounded in game four with a 2 1 victory and came home with a chance to win the Cup on home ice However game five saw the Oilers come back with a stunning 4 3 overtime win on a shorthanded breakaway by Fernando Pisani In Game 6 in Edmonton Carolina was soundly defeated 4 0 the only bright point for the Hurricanes was the return of forward Erik Cole from a broken neck that had sidelined him since March In Game 7 before the then second now tenth largest home crowd in franchise history 18 978 the Hurricanes won 3 1 sealing the Hurricanes first Stanley Cup championship in franchise history Cam Ward was honored with the Conn Smythe Trophy for being the playoffs most valuable player becoming just the fourth rookie to be honored with the award Several Hurricanes raised the Cup for the first time in their long NHL careers Rod Brind Amour and Bret Hedican had both played over 15 years without winning the Cup while Glen Wesley the last remaining member of the Hartford Whalers on the Hurricanes roster had waited 18 seasons On the managerial side general manager Jim Rutherford finally won the Cup in his twelfth year with the franchise since joining the Whalers in 1994 The Hurricanes Stanley Cup championship marked the first professional major league sports title for a team from North Carolina As well they were the first NHL team to win the Stanley Cup despite losing at least nine playoff games in that year the 2011 Boston Bruins the 2014 Los Angeles Kings the 2017 Pittsburgh Penguins and the 2019 St Louis Blues are the only other teams to have achieved this feat Post championship slump 2006 2013 Edit The Hurricanes were unable to follow up their recent success Losing four players to free agency in the off season and 222 man games to injury during the 2006 07 the team struggled throughout the regular season 13 and once eliminated in the last game the Hurricanes finished third in the Southeast and 11th overall in the Eastern Conference 14 This finish made them the first champions since the 1938 39 Chicago Black Hawks to have failed to qualify for the playoffs both the seasons before and after their championship season and the third champion overall to not defend its title after both the Blackhawks and the 1995 96 New Jersey Devils In the 2007 08 Carolina again missed out as Washington Capitals stormed back to take the division title on the last day of the season leaving the Hurricanes second in the division and ninth overall in the conference and making the Hurricanes only the second club in NHL history to miss the playoffs for two seasons running after a Stanley Cup triumph In 2009 the Hurricanes acquired Jussi Jokinen through a trade with the Tampa Bay Lightning He has played with nine different NHL teams before leaving for the Finnish Liiga After a slow start to the 2008 09 season Cup winning coach Peter Laviolette was fired in early December and replaced by his own predecessor Paul Maurice Teetering on the edge of the playoff picture again the club on February 7 acquired utility forward Jussi Jokinen from the Tampa Bay Lightning in exchange for Wade Brookbank Josef Melichar and Carolina s fourth round draft pick in 2009 then reacquired winger Erik Cole from the Edmonton Oilers at the March trade deadline and proceeded on a 12 3 2 run to close out the season The stretch run included nine straight wins matching a franchise record from the 2005 06 season and capped off a streak of 12 straight home wins which set a new franchise mark The team finished sixth in the Eastern Conference with 97 points the second most points in franchise history The Hurricanes 2009 playoff run featured two tight series with dramatic finishes Game 4 of the first round matchup with the New Jersey Devils saw Stanley Cup playoff history when Jussi Jokinen scored with 2 seconds left in regulation to win the game the latest regulation game winning goal in NHL history Then in Game 7 the Devils took a 3 2 lead into the final two minutes of the game at the Prudential Center in Newark before the Hurricanes struck With 1 20 to play Tim Gleason saved a puck on his knees at the right point passed it to Joni Pitkanen on the left boards who then hit Game 4 hero Jussi Jokinen at the far post for the tying goal Just 48 seconds later Chad LaRose sprang Eric Staal for a solo down ice rush to give the Hurricanes 4 3 game and series win Staal s goal was the latest regulation Game 7 winning goal in playoff history The Game 7 comeback would become known as the Shock at the Rock 15 In the second round matchup with the top seeded Boston Bruins the Hurricanes ran out to a 3 1 lead before the Bruins battled back for two wins In Game 7 in Boston Scott Walker scored the game and series winner 18 46 into overtime to send Carolina to the Eastern Conference finals against the Pittsburgh Penguins The Penguins though put a decisive end to the Hurricanes string sweeping the series 4 0 on the way to their own Stanley Cup championship As a result of their surprise run very few changes were made in the off season Veterans such as Aaron Ward Andrew Alberts and Stephane Yelle were brought in to help drive the team further but things did not go according to plan The Hurricanes experienced a 14 game losing streak spanning October and November and midway through the year the Hurricanes replaced their only post lockout captain Rod Brind Amour with Eric Staal Despite improved play during the second half of the season they could not overcome the deficit from early on in the season The Hurricanes would end up with the seventh overall pick in the 2010 NHL Entry Draft eventually selecting Jeff Skinner from the Kitchener Rangers of the Ontario Hockey League OHL Brind Amour retired over the 2010 off season to take a coaching job with the club Jeff Skinner was awarded the Calder Memorial Trophy for his rookie season performance in the 2010 11 season The 2010 11 season was widely expected to be a transitional year from the veteran heavy high salary club that opened 2009 10 to a younger cheaper base The Hurricanes contended for a playoff slot for the entire season aided by Skinner s emergence as an offensive phenomenon who as the youngest player in the league would lead all rookies in points Raleigh hosted the 2011 NHL All Star Game in January and Eric Staal captained a team he selected opposite a team selected by the Detroit Red Wings Nicklas Lidstrom that featured Skinner the youngest All Star in NHL history Cam Ward and for the SuperSkills competition defenseman Jamie McBain The Hurricanes went into the final day of the season able to determine their own fate but lost 6 2 to the Tampa Bay Lightning to finish ninth in the East 16 Skinner was awarded the Calder Memorial Trophy as rookie of the year the first player in franchise history to receive that honor In December 2011 the Carolina Hurricanes fired coach Paul Maurice and hired Kirk Muller On February 20 2012 the Carolina Hurricanes signed Tim Gleason to a four year 16 million extension and two days later on February 22 they also signed Tuomo Ruutu to a four year 19 million extension Two months later the Carolina Hurricanes announced that they had signed Jiri Tlusty to a two year deal that would pay him 1 5 million for 2012 13 and 1 7 million for 2013 14 Gleason and Tlusty would eventually be traded to the Washington Capitals and the Winnipeg Jets over the next few seasons Despite the signings of Gleason Ruutu and Tlusty the Hurricanes would finish fifth in the Southeast Division and twelfth in the Eastern Conference during the 2011 12 season which forced them to miss the playoffs for a third consecutive season On May 9 2012 the 2006 Stanley Cup champions Carolina Hurricanes Game 7 victory was recognized as one of the NC Hall of Fame s Great Moments series 17 During the 2012 NHL Entry Draft the Carolina Hurricanes traded Brandon Sutter Brian Dumoulin and their 2012 first round draft pick Derrick Pouliot to the Penguins in exchange for Jordan Staal uniting the player with his older brother Eric Staal On March 25 2013 the Hurricanes signed Alexander Semin to a five year deal worth 35 million 18 However in the lockout shortened 2012 13 season the team would finish third in the Southeast Division and 13th in the Eastern Conference which would make the team miss the playoffs for the fourth consecutive season after a strong start was cut short by an injury to starting goaltender Cam Ward Bill Peters coached the Hurricanes from June 2014 to April 2018 Continued decline and relocation rumors 2013 2017 Edit Before the 2013 14 season the Hurricanes were realigned into the new Metropolitan Division They would finish seventh in the division during the 2013 14 season ahead of only the New York Islanders and would miss the playoffs for the fifth consecutive season which prompted management to fire head coach Kirk Muller 19 In addition longtime general manager Jim Rutherford was moved to an advisory role after the season with longtime Whalers Hurricanes star Ron Francis announced as his replacement on April 28 2014 20 On June 19 2014 Bill Peters was named head coach becoming the fifth head coach in franchise history Peters teams would not break the Hurricanes playoff drought During the 2014 15 season the team finished last in the Metropolitan Division and would miss the playoffs for the sixth consecutive season 21 After team captain Eric Staal was traded to the New York Rangers at the trade deadline the team finished sixth in the division during the 2015 16 season Things did not improve in the 2016 17 season The Hurricanes finished seventh in the division missing the playoffs for the eighth consecutive season The Hurricanes also experienced uncertainty about their future in Raleigh during this time Karmanos was looking to sell the team something he d been trying to do for years Attendance at PNC Arena had declined at a consistent rate since 2009 It became so bad the team finished second to last in average league attendance in 2014 and 2015 22 Rumors started circulating in 2015 that the Hurricanes were possible contenders to move to either Las Vegas or Quebec City 23 The Quebec rumors in particular were widely reported with the Hurricanes and the NHL both refuting the claims 24 25 Las Vegas would eventually gain an expansion team in the Vegas Golden Knights Tom Dundon and the Bunch of Jerks 2018 present Edit Before the 2017 18 season the Hurricanes unveiled new uniforms On July 13 2017 it was reported that Chuck Greenberg had sent Karmanos a letter of intent to buy the team for 500 million 26 27 Greenberg would ultimately back out of a deal On December 7 2017 it was announced that Thomas Dundon signed an agreement to purchase the Hurricanes 28 which ensured that the team would not be relocated 29 The deal was finalized on January 11 2018 with Dundon becoming majority owner and having a 61 percent stake in the team while Karmanos retained a minority interest 30 Dundon wasted little time in overhauling the Hurricanes front office On March 8 2018 the team announced that general manager Ron Francis had been moved to the role of president of hockey operations 31 However Sportsnet reporter Elliotte Friedman reported that the promotion was likely in name only noting that there were rumblings Francis and Dundon did not see eye to eye 32 non primary source needed Subsequently coach Bill Peters resigned from his position on April 20 2018 33 to pursue a similar opportunity with the Calgary Flames he ultimately replaced Glen Gulutzan as the Flames head coach three days later 34 and the Hurricanes officially fired Francis from the organization altogether on April 30 2018 35 leaving vacancies in both the head coach and general manager positions Early in the Hurricanes search for a replacement general manager it was reported that Dundon s salary offerings for the position could be prohibitive in attracting quality candidates 36 Sportsnet s Nick Kypreos reported that the Hurricanes were offering in the ballpark of 400 000 a year 37 a fraction of the salary figures of many other teams coaches 38 let alone those of their general managers who serve in a higher ranking position Leading up to Kypreos report candidates such as Nashville Predators assistant general manager Paul Fenton New Jersey Devils assistant general manager Tom Fitzgerald and Los Angeles Kings assistant general manager Mike Futa had all reportedly passed on the position 36 Rod Brind Amour was hired as head coach in 2018 He won the Jack Adams Award as the NHL s best coach in 2021 Ultimately on May 8 2018 the Hurricanes announced the hiring of former Atlanta Thrashers general manager Don Waddell as team president and general manager Waddell had previously been serving as the team s interim general manager since the promotion of Francis At the same time it was announced that former team captain Rod Brind Amour had been named head coach after serving with the team as an assistant coach since 2011 39 On April 4 2019 the Hurricanes won 3 1 over the New Jersey Devils clinching a playoff spot for the first time since 2009 and only the second time since their Cup win During their stretch run the Hurricanes gained notice for their on ice victory celebrations which they called Storm Surges This led Don Cherry of Hockey Night in Canada to call the Hurricanes a bunch of jerks The Hurricanes adopted Bunch of Jerks as a battle cry 40 even going as far as projecting it on the ice at PNC Arena before and after games 41 During the 2019 Stanley Cup playoffs on April 24 the Hurricanes defeated the defending 2018 Stanley Cup champions the Washington Capitals 4 3 in double overtime in game seven winning their first playoff series since 2009 The team would then go on to defeat the New York Islanders in four straight games in the second round recording the first best of seven playoff series sweep in franchise history and advancing to the Eastern Conference Finals for the first time since 2009 42 It was also the first time since 1993 that an opposing team the Islanders that swept their opponent in the first round the Pittsburgh Penguins would then go on to lose four straight and drop the series 42 This trend continued into the third round against the Hurricanes favor as they themselves were swept by the Boston Bruins thus losing the 2019 Eastern Conference Finals 43 On February 22 2020 on the 40th anniversary of the Miracle on Ice Hurricanes emergency goaltender David Ayres became the first emergency goaltender in NHL history to win a game a 6 3 win against the Toronto Maple Leafs the team whose minor league affiliate he works for as a Zamboni driver and maintenance man The season would come to an abrupt end on March 11 due to the COVID 19 pandemic On August 3 2020 Andrei Svechnikov became the first Hurricanes Whalers player to score a hat trick in the postseason in a 4 1 win over the New York Rangers By beating the Rangers the Hurricanes made the playoffs for a second straight season However they lost to the Bruins in five games 44 45 The loss also marked the first time since the 2001 playoffs that the Hurricanes lost in the first round The 2020 21 season concluded with the Hurricanes winning the Central Division their first division championship since winning the Southeast Division in 2006 It was also the first time since moving to Raleigh that they had qualified for the postseason three years in a row and the first time in the history of the franchise that a head coach had taken the team to the playoffs in three consecutive years They defeated the Nashville Predators in the first round in six games but lost to the Tampa Bay Lightning in the second round in five games Defenseman Jaccob Slavin won the Lady Byng Memorial Trophy notably only having two penalty minutes PIM for the entire season Defenseman Dougie Hamilton was named to NHL s All Star second team and goaltender Alex Nedeljkovic was named to NHL s All Rookie team and placed third in the Calder Memorial Trophy voting while head coach Brind Amour was awarded the Jack Adams Award being the first in Hartford Carolina history to receive it On June 30 2021 it was announced that Tom Dundon had purchased all remaining minority shares in the team 46 The 2021 off season saw the Hurricanes overhaul the roster resulting in many players departing Warren Foegele was traded to Edmonton for Ethan Bear Ian Cole and Brendan Smith were signed to complement the depth on defense The team also overhauled their goaltending trading away Alex Nedeljkovic for a pick and signing Frederik Andersen and Antti Raanta as the new goalie tandem In perhaps their most talked about moves the Hurricanes signed Tony DeAngelo and signed Jesperi Kotkaniemi to an offer sheet The 2021 22 NHL season concluded with the Hurricanes winning the Metropolitan Division for the first time in franchise history This was the first time the Hurricanes had ever won division titles in back to back years since relocation The Hurricanes finished the regular season with 54 wins the most in franchise history Andersen and Sebastian Aho each represented the team at the 2022 NHL All Star Game In the playoffs the top seeded Hurricanes defeated the Boston Bruins in the first round before falling to the New York Rangers in seven games Logos and uniforms EditThe Hurricanes primary logo has always been a stylized hurricane with a storm warning flag on a hockey stick as the secondary logo A stylized black triangle sat behind the flag referencing the Triangle region After the team s first season in 1997 the team altered the color scheme to a slightly darker shade of red and kept the other colors The Carolina Hurricanes currently wear black uniforms at home and white uniforms on the road While black is one of the team s core colors until 2022 the Hurricanes kept its usage at a minimum opting for red helmets and red pants while using black exclusively as a trim color along with silver Nevertheless the Hurricanes have worn black alternate uniforms for select games since 2007 Original uniforms Edit The initial Hurricanes uniforms featured the primary logo in front with the secondary logo on the shoulders One enduring feature of this uniform was the red and black storm warning flags that dot the tail along with silver red black and white stripes In 2000 black trim was added on the player s name and upon moving to Reebok s Edge template in 2007 piping was added on the shoulder yoke In 2008 the Hurricanes unveiled their first black alternate uniform featuring the flag logo in front and the primary logo recolored to dark grey on the shoulders As with the primary uniforms warning flag patterns dot the tail albeit recolored to silver and black V stripes of red and silver accent the sleeves and socks New looks Edit In 2013 the Hurricanes replaced their primary uniforms with a new set The biggest changes for these uniforms included the omission of black and silver On the red uniform black was relegated exclusively to the neck piping letter trim and logo while on the white uniform it was featured more prominently on the numbers and striping Silver was almost completely removed from both the red and white uniforms except for the logo outline In addition a red nameplate with white letters and black trim was placed near the red shoulder yoke of the white uniforms Both sets removed the flag logo and warning flag patterns while letters were updated to Univers Condensed font The front logo also reduced in size compared to the prior set Despite these changes the Hurricanes continued to wear the prior black alternate uniform with this new set Upon moving to Adidas AdiZero template in 2017 the Hurricanes made little changes to their white uniform However their new red uniform brought back a few elements from the original set including black striping and the warning flag pattern now recolored with a dark red shade on the tail In 2018 the Hurricanes unveiled a new black alternate uniform featuring an updated flag logo corrected to a hurricane warning flag This flag logo also became the new additional logo On the dark grey shoulder yoke the primary logo was placed on the right while the Flag of North Carolina was added to the left Both logos were recolored in black and grey The logo also features the state of North Carolina in the negative space between the flags This alternate has since become the Hurricanes primary home uniform during the playoffs Also in 2018 the Hurricanes began wearing green Heritage uniforms from the team s Hartford years In its first season the throwbacks were used twice both against the Boston Bruins for the 2019 20 season the Hurricanes wore them once at home against the Los Angeles Kings and in the 2021 22 season they wore them once against the New Jersey Devils During home games with the Whalers uniforms the Brass Bonanza theme would be played after the horn In 2019 a new white uniform was released replacing the one worn since 2013 This new uniform featured the CANES nickname written diagonally in front with the flag logo returning on the shoulders The warning flag patterns and red letters with black trim also returned from the original set The new uniform came at the behest of owner Tom Dundon who was not a fan of the previous white uniform For the 2020 21 season the Hurricanes would wear a Reverse Retro uniform using the template of the 1980s Whalers uniforms but with a grey base grey being the only color used by both teams as a nod to the 1992 1997 uniforms 47 The Hurricanes have not worn variants of their uniforms often On April 5 2022 the Hurricanes wore their alternate black pants with the white road uniforms for the first time in a game against the Buffalo Sabres Two nights later also against the Sabres the Hurricanes paired their alternate black helmets and pants with the primary red home uniform On December 23 2022 against the Pittsburgh Penguins the Hurricanes began wearing red helmets with the white road uniforms In August 2022 the Hurricanes officially promoted their black uniform to their full time home uniform 48 They also brought back the original 1997 2007 red uniform as an alternate in commemoration of the 25th anniversary of the franchise in Carolina 49 Later that year the Hurricanes unveiled their second Reverse Retro uniform this time using a red version of the CANES diagonal wordmark uniform 50 For the Hurricanes appearances at the 2023 NHL Stadium Series they wore black uniforms with red accents but without any white elements The uniform features the primary logo in front and enlarged numbers 51 Minor league affiliates EditAHL IHL Edit 1979 1980 Springfield Indians 1980 1990 Binghamton Whalers 1990 1994 Springfield Indians 1994 1997 Springfield Falcons 1997 1999 Beast of New Haven 1999 2001 Cincinnati Cyclones 2001 2006 Lowell Lock Monsters 2006 2010 Albany River Rats 2010 2020 Charlotte Checkers 2020 present Chicago WolvesECHL Edit 1998 2019 Florida Everblades 2019 2020 Greenville Swamp Rabbits 2021 present Norfolk AdmiralsSeason by season record EditThis is a list of the last five seasons completed by the Hurricanes For the full season by season history see List of Carolina Hurricanes seasonsNote GP Games played W Wins L Losses T Ties OTL Overtime Losses Pts Points GF Goals for GA Goals against Season GP W L OTL Pts GF GA Finish Playoffs2017 18 82 36 35 11 83 228 256 6th Metropolitan Did not qualify2018 19 82 46 29 7 99 245 223 4th Metropolitan Lost in Conference Finals 0 4 Bruins 2019 20 68 38 25 5 81 222 193 4th Metropolitan Lost in First Round 1 4 Bruins 2020 21 56 36 12 8 80 179 136 1st Central Lost in Second Round 1 4 Lightning 2021 22 82 54 20 8 116 278 202 1st Metropolitan Lost in Second Round 3 4 Rangers Players and personnel EditCurrent roster Edit viewtalkedit Updated March 13 2023 52 53 No Nat Player Pos S G Age Acquired Birthplace20 Sebastian Aho A C L 25 2015 Rauma Finland31 Frederik Andersen G L 33 2021 Herning Denmark8 Brent Burns D R 38 2022 Barrie Ontario5 Jalen Chatfield D R 26 2021 Ypsilanti Michigan15 Dylan Coghlan D R 25 2022 Duncan British Columbia44 Calvin de Haan D L 31 2022 Carp Ontario18 Jack Drury C L 23 2018 New York New York71 Jesper Fast RW R 31 2020 Nassjo Sweden51 Jake Gardiner D L 32 2019 Minneapolis Minnesota41 Shayne Gostisbehere D L 29 2023 Pembroke Pines Florida24 Seth Jarvis C R 21 2020 Winnipeg Manitoba73 Ondrej Kase RW R 27 2022 Kadan Czech Republic52 Pyotr Kochetkov G L 23 2019 Penza Russia82 Jesperi Kotkaniemi C L 22 2021 Pori Finland48 Jordan Martinook A LW L 30 2018 Brandon Manitoba88 Martin Necas C R 24 2017 Nove Mesto na Morave Czech Republic23 Stefan Noesen RW R 30 2021 Plano Texas67 Max Pacioretty LW L 34 2022 New Canaan Connecticut22 Brett Pesce D R 28 2013 Tarrytown New York13 Jesse Puljujarvi RW R 24 2023 Alvkarleby Sweden32 Antti Raanta G L 33 2021 Rauma Finland76 Brady Skjei D L 28 2020 Lakeville Minnesota74 Jaccob Slavin A D L 28 2012 Erie Colorado11 Jordan Staal C C L 34 2012 Thunder Bay Ontario26 Paul Stastny C L 37 2022 Quebec City Quebec21 Derek Stepan C R 32 2021 Hastings Minnesota37 Andrei Svechnikov RW L 22 2018 Barnaul Russia86 Teuvo Teravainen LW L 28 2016 Helsinki FinlandRetired numbers Edit Carolina Hurricanes retired numbersNo Player Position Career No retirement2 1 Glen Wesley D 1994 20032003 2008 February 17 2009 54 10 Ron Francis C 1981 19911998 2004 January 28 200617 Rod Brind Amour C 2000 2010 February 18 2011 55 The Hurricanes also honor three numbers within the organization but do not display their banners publicly 3 Steve Chiasson D 1997 1999 who died in an automobile accident immediately after the 1998 99 season 56 9 Gordie Howe RW 1977 1980 56 57 63 Josef Vasicek F 2000 2006 who died in the 2011 Lokomotiv Yaroslavl plane crash 58 Besides the above numbers Wayne Gretzky s No 99 was retired for all the NHL s member teams at the 2000 NHL All Star Game 59 Notes 1 When the Whalers moved to North Carolina to begin the 1997 98 NHL season they returned the previously retired 2 for Rick Ley D 1972 1981 and 19 for John McKenzie RW 1977 1979 to circulation while retaining Howe s 9 without public display Wesley who wore No 20 in Hartford was the only Hurricane to wear 2 prior to its re retirement 19 has been issued to several players since the move Team captains Edit Rod Brind Amour was the Hurricanes team captain from 2005 to 2010 Note This list of team captains does not include captains from the Hartford Whalers NHL and New England Whalers WHA Kevin Dineen 1997 1998 Keith Primeau 1998 1999 Ron Francis 1999 2004 Rod Brind Amour 2005 2010 Eric Staal 2010 2016 Justin Faulk and Jordan Staal 2017 2018 co captains Justin Williams 2018 2019 Jordan Staal 2019 presentHall of Famers Edit Paul Coffey spent one and a half seasons in Carolina near the end of his career as well as two seasons prior 20 games in Hartford He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2004 Ron Francis captained the team in both Hartford and Carolina and spent 15 years with the franchise overall as a player before joining its staff in 2006 He was inducted in 2007 Mark Recchi played for the team at the end of the 2005 06 season after being traded by the Pittsburgh Penguins He was inducted in 2017 Jim Rutherford was the President and General Manager in both Hartford and Carolina from 1994 to 2014 He was inducted in 2019 Six members of the Hockey Hall of Fame played for the team before the move to North Carolina Gordie Howe Mark Howe Dave Keon Bobby Hull Brendan Shanahan and Chris Pronger In addition longtime franchise radio play by play announcer Chuck Kaiton received the Foster Hewitt Memorial Award in 2004 an honor granted by the Hall of Fame Broadcasters Edit The regional broadcasting rights for the Carolina Hurricanes is presently held by Bally Sports South 60 Color commentary for Bally Sports broadcast is performed by Tripp Tracy or former player Shane Willis while play by play is provided by Mike Maniscalso 61 Chuck Kaiton was the team s radio play by play announcer from 1979 to 2018 dating to the team s days in Hartford 62 On the television side John Forslund was the play by play voice of the franchise starting in 1995 but left prior to the 2020 Stanley Cup playoffs and has since moved to NBC and later with the Seattle Kraken Since the 2018 19 season the Hurricanes have simulcasted audio from the television broadcasts to a network of four stations fronted by WCMC FM in Raleigh 61 Hurricanes games can also be heard on WWNB in New Bern WECU in Greenville and WZGV in Charlotte 63 First round draft picks Edit The Hurricanes drafted Noah Hanifin 5th overall in the 2015 NHL Entry Draft Note This list does not include selections of the Hartford Whalers See also List of Carolina Hurricanes draft picks 1997 Nikos Tselios 22nd overall 1998 Jeff Heerema 11th overall 1999 David Tanabe 16th overall 2000 none 2001 Igor Knyazev 15th overall 2002 Cam Ward 25th overall 2003 Eric Staal 2nd overall 2004 Andrew Ladd 4th overall 2005 Jack Johnson 3rd overall 2006 none 2007 Brandon Sutter 11th overall 2008 Zach Boychuk 14th overall 2009 Philippe Paradis 27th overall 2010 Jeff Skinner 7th overall 2011 Ryan Murphy 12th overall 2012 none 2013 Elias Lindholm 5th overall 2014 Haydn Fleury 7th overall 2015 Noah Hanifin 5th overall 2016 Jake Bean 13th overall Julien Gauthier 21st overall 2017 Martin Necas 12th overall 2018 Andrei Svechnikov 2nd overall 2019 Ryan Suzuki 28th overall 2020 Seth Jarvis 13th overall 2021 none 2022 noneNHL awards and trophies EditMain article List of Carolina Hurricanes award winners Stanley Cup 2005 06Prince of Wales Trophy 2001 02 2005 06Conn Smythe Trophy Cam Ward 2005 06Frank J Selke Trophy Rod Brind Amour 2005 06 2006 07King Clancy Memorial Trophy Ron Francis 2001 02Lady Byng Memorial Trophy Ron Francis 2001 02 Jaccob Slavin 2020 21Lester Patrick Trophy Peter Karmanos Jr 1997 98Calder Memorial Trophy Jeff Skinner 2010 11Jack Adams Award Rod Brind Amour 2020 21William M Jennings Trophy Frederik Andersen 2021 22 Antti Raanta 2021 22Statistics EditFranchise scoring leaders Edit These are the top ten point scorers in franchise Hartford and Carolina history Figures are updated after each completed NHL regular season current Hurricanes playerNote Pos Position GP Games played G Goals A Assists Pts Points P G Points per game Points Player Pos GP G A Pts P GRon Francis C 1 186 382 793 1 175 99Eric Staal C 909 322 453 775 85Kevin Dineen RW 708 250 294 544 77Rod Brind Amour C 694 174 299 473 68Jeff O Neill RW 673 198 218 416 62Pat Verbeek RW 433 192 211 403 93Sebastian Aho C 445 182 219 401 90Jeff Skinner LW 579 204 175 379 65Blaine Stoughton RW 357 219 158 377 1 06Geoff Sanderson LW 479 196 173 369 77Goals Player Pos GRon Francis C 382Eric Staal C 322Kevin Dineen RW 250Blaine Stoughton RW 219Jeff Skinner LW 204Jeff O Neill C 198Geoff Sanderson LW 196Pat Verbeek RW 192Sebastian Aho C 182Sylvain Turgeon LW 178Assists Player Pos ARon Francis C 793Eric Staal C 453Rod Brind Amour C 299Kevin Dineen RW 294Andrew Cassels C 253Jordan Staal C 225Teuvo Teravainen LW 224Sebastian Aho C 219Jeff O Neill C 218Ray Whitney LW 215 Franchise records Edit Note these records include those from the Hartford Whalers Individual Edit With 39 wins in the 2008 09 season Cam Ward set the franchise record for most wins by a goaltender in a season Most goals in a season Blaine Stoughton 56 1979 80 Most assists in a season Ron Francis 69 1989 90 Most points in a season Mike Rogers 105 1979 80 1980 81 Most penalty minutes in a season Torrie Robertson 358 1985 86 Most points in a season defenseman Mark Howe 80 1979 80 Most points in a season rookie Sylvain Turgeon 72 1983 84 Fastest hat trick Ray Whitney 1 minute 40 seconds February 8 2007 vs Boston Bruins Most shots on goal in one game Jeff Skinner 13 2014 Most hat tricks in a season Eric Staal 4 2008 09 Most wins in a season Cam Ward 39 2008 09 Most shutouts in a season Arturs Irbe 1998 99 2000 01 Kevin Weekes 2003 04 Cam Ward 2008 09 6 Most career post season goals Eric Staal 18 Most career post season points Eric Staal 40 Most points in one post season Eric Staal 28 2006 Most shutouts in one post season Kevin Weekes 2002 Cam Ward 2006 2009 Petr Mrazek 2019 2Team Edit Most wins in a season 54 2021 22 Most points in a season 116 2021 22 Most consecutive wins 11 2022 23 Most consecutive home wins 12 2008 09 Most consecutive penalties killed 36 Nov 8 24 2000 twice Dec 21 2014 Jan 19 2015 Best shot differential in a game 45 57 12 April 7 2009 vs New York IslandersReferences Edit Table of Contents PDF Carolina Hurricanes 2021 22 Media Guide PDF NHL Enterprises L P Retrieved November 28 2022 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint url status link Carolina Hurricanes Brand Assets CarolinaHurricanes com NHL Enterprises L P Retrieved November 28 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b Williams Terrell May 8 2018 Hurricanes Name Rod Brind Amour as Head Coach CarolinaHurricanes com NHL Enterprises L P Archived from the original on May 9 2018 Retrieved May 8 2018 The team also announcedd that Don Waddell will officially serve as president and general manager Canes PR September 29 2019 Canes Name Jordan Staal as Team Captain NHL com Archived from the original on September 29 2019 Retrieved September 29 2019 Chuck Kaiton out as Carolina Hurricanes radio broadcaster Luke DeCock column July 24 2018 News amp Observer Archived from the original on July 25 2018 Ex Hurricanes broadcaster John Forslund joins Seattle Kraken Raleigh News amp Observer Archived from the original on February 18 2021 Callaghan Gerry Natural Disaster Archived December 2 2012 at archive today Sports Illustrated October 27 1997 Web article Retrieved November 19 2008 Burnside Scott Karmanos Hard nosed owner die hard hockey fan Archived November 4 2012 at the Wayback Machine ESPN June 6 2008 Web article Retrieved February 14 2009 ESPN com New Jersey Devils Carolina Hurricanes NHL recap on ESPN Archived August 17 2012 at the Wayback Machine SportsIllustrated com SI s 2001 02 NHL Team Previews Hurricanes Archived March 11 2007 at the Wayback Machine Fayetteville Online Hurricanes fans bring the noise Archived June 17 2006 at the Wayback Machine ESPN com NHL Attendance Archived November 19 2007 at the Wayback Machine Hurricanes tighten up for playoff run in East USATODAY com usatoday30 usatoday com Archived from the original on February 21 2016 Retrieved February 8 2016 Hurricanes Eliminated From Playoff Race The Washington Post Associated Press April 4 2007 Archived from the original on July 13 2017 Retrieved September 20 2017 Smith Michael April 28 2020 This Day in Canes History April 28 NHL com Retrieved December 23 2022 Tampa Bay Lightning Carolina Hurricanes April 9th 2011 NHL com Archived from the original on September 20 2020 Retrieved February 23 2021 Great Moments NC Sports Hall of Fame Archived from the original on March 8 2016 Retrieved February 8 2016 Tsn Ca Staff Hurricanes ink F Semin to five year 35M contract extension The Sports Network Archived from the original on August 1 2013 Retrieved March 26 2013 Hurricanes fire coach Kirk Muller USA TODAY Archived from the original on September 24 2017 Retrieved September 20 2017 Ron Francis Named Hurricanes General Manager National Hockey League Archived from the original on June 18 2018 Retrieved June 17 2018 Carolina Hurricanes lose burden of playoff expectations Archived from the original on April 21 2016 Retrieved February 8 2016 The Carolina Hurricanes are almost always last in NHL attendance and that s At least partly by design December 5 2017 Hurricanes in swirl of Quebec Las Vegas NHL relocation speculation No chance Hurricanes move to Quebec Struggling Hurricanes may move to Quebec Greenberg to Purchase Hurricanes for 500 Million The Hockey Writers July 13 2017 Archived from the original on July 17 2017 Retrieved July 14 2017 Hurricanes owner confirms he received offer to sell National Hockey League July 13 2017 Archived from the original on July 14 2017 Retrieved July 14 2017 Williams Terrell December 7 2018 Dundon Signs Agreement to Purchase Hurricanes National Hockey League Archived from the original on January 13 2018 Retrieved January 12 2018 Rosen Dan December 7 2017 Hurricanes enter into purchase agreement will not relocate National Hockey League Archived from the original on January 12 2018 Retrieved January 12 2018 Smith Michael January 11 2018 Dundon Becomes Majority Owner of Hurricanes National Hockey League Archived from the original on January 13 2018 Retrieved January 12 2018 Ron Francis out as general manager of Hurricanes will serve as president of hockey ops CBSSports com Archived from the original on June 18 2018 Retrieved June 17 2018 Elliotte Friedman on Twitter Twitter Retrieved June 17 2018 Carolina Hurricanes head coach Bill Peters resigns Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Archived from the original on May 27 2018 Retrieved June 17 2018 Flames hire Bill Peters as new head coach Sportsnet ca Archived from the original on June 18 2018 Retrieved June 17 2018 Hurricanes fire former general manager Ron Francis Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Archived from the original on June 23 2018 Retrieved June 17 2018 a b Money might be an issue in Carolina Hurricanes GM search Sportsnet ca Archived from the original on June 18 2018 Retrieved June 17 2018 Hurricanes GM search being stalled because of low salary offer says report Sporting News March 17 2018 Archived from the original on June 18 2018 Retrieved June 17 2018 CapFriendly NHL Salary Caps CapFriendly Archived from the original on June 4 2018 Retrieved June 17 2018 Rod Brind Amour hired as head coach of Hurricanes Don Waddell named GM Sportsnet ca Archived from the original on June 18 2018 Retrieved June 17 2018 Jake Russell February 17 2019 Don Cherry calls the Carolina Hurricanes a bunch of jerks because of victory celebrations The Washington Post Archived from the original on April 24 2019 Retrieved April 24 2019 James O Brien February 26 2019 Hurricanes present next evolution of Bunch of Jerks trolling NBC Sports Archived from the original on April 24 2019 Retrieved April 24 2019 a b Facts and Figures Hurricanes complete first sweep in best of 7 series NHL com May 4 2019 Archived from the original on May 4 2019 Retrieved May 5 2019 2019 Stanley Cup Playoffs Five reasons the Carolina Hurricanes were swept by the Boston Bruins www cbssports com May 17 2019 Archived from the original on May 17 2019 Retrieved May 17 2019 Hurricanes sweep Rangers advance to next round August 5 2020 Archived from the original on August 16 2020 Retrieved August 23 2020 Bruins eliminate Hurricanes in Game 5 August 19 2020 Archived from the original on September 30 2020 Retrieved August 23 2020 Dundon Assumes Full Ownership of Hurricanes NHL com June 30 2021 Retrieved July 1 2021 Smith Michael November 16 2020 Canes Adidas Unveil Whalers Reverse Retro Jersey National Hockey League Archived from the original on February 9 2021 Retrieved February 10 2021 Wardrobe Change Canes Make Black Jersey Primary on Home Ice Canes Introduce Red Vintage Inspired Uniform For 25th Anniversary Season Carolina Hurricanes NHL Reverse Retro jerseys for all 32 teams unveiled by adidas NHL com October 20 2022 Retrieved October 20 2022 Stadium Series jerseys for Capitals Hurricanes unveiled Carolina Hurricanes Roster National Hockey League Retrieved March 13 2023 Carolina Hurricanes Hockey Transactions The Sports Network Retrieved March 13 2023 Hurricanes honor Wesley retire No 2 National Hockey League Associated Press 2009 Archived from the original on November 11 2013 Retrieved February 17 2009 Canes to retire Brind Amour s jersey WRAL com 2010 Archived from the original on July 18 2010 Retrieved July 15 2010 a b Hurricanes always honored Howe quietly and unofficially News amp Observer Raleigh 2016 Archived from the original on October 3 2016 Retrieved October 2 2016 Kaiton s Korner Feb 26 2011 National Hockey League 2011 Archived from the original on May 12 2012 Retrieved May 24 2011 Tweetmail No 118 Return of the Tweetmail Carolina Hurricanes 2016 Archived from the original on October 13 2016 Retrieved October 12 2016 Perfect setting Gretzky s number retired before All Star Game CNN Sports Illustrated Associated Press February 6 2000 Archived from the original on November 12 2013 Retrieved June 9 2014 Broadcast Information CarolinaHurricanes com Carolina Hurricanes Hockey Club 2019 Archived from the original on April 1 2019 Retrieved July 3 2019 a b Abdelgawad Omar September 24 2020 Carolina Hurricanes Mike Maniscalco to Take Over Play by Play Duties Cardiac Cane FanSided Archived from the original on January 15 2021 Retrieved January 14 2021 Chuck Kaiton out as Carolina Hurricanes radio broadcaster Archived from the original on July 25 2018 Retrieved July 24 2018 Broadcast Information Carolina Hurricanes Retrieved October 26 2021 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Carolina Hurricanes Official website Portals Ice hockey United States Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Carolina Hurricanes amp oldid 1145963285, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.