Cape Breton Post

Another early exit

Hurricanes limp into ninth straight off-season with no playoffs

- BY JOEDY MCCREARY

The Carolina Hurricanes changed owners this season. They’ll soon have a new general manager. Perhaps a new coach, too.

What didn’t change was how early another yet off-season started.

Missing the playoffs for the ninth straight season, the Hurricanes finished up with a 3-2 overtime victory over the Tampa Bay Lightning on Saturday night.

“It’s disappoint­ing - obviously, we wanted to be in the playoffs and we were expecting big things out of our hockey club this year and fell short,” veteran goalie Cam Ward said.

Carolina’s playoff drought is the longest in team history, the longest active drought in the NHL and only the fourth of nine or more seasons in the history of the league.

The Colorado-New Jersey franchise also missed out from 1979-87, while the Florida Panthers (2001-11) and Edmonton Oilers (2007-17) went a leaguereco­rd 10 seasons between playoff appearance­s.

So, either way, the Hurricanes will make history in 2018-19.

“I know we have a good group of guys and we just need to put it all together,” forward Justin Williams said. “When you don’t win, you don’t stay together. So there’s probably some things that will be different, but you’ve got to keep pushing forward.”

Some things to know about the Hurricanes’ disappoint­ing 2017-18 season, and a look to ‘18-19:

TIPPING POINT

The official, mathematic­al eliminatio­n came a week before the season finale, in the 79th game of the season for the third straight year, but things went awry in the months before that. The Hurricanes lost 3-1 to San Jose in February, missing a chance to move into playoff position, and after that game, coach Bill Peters repeatedly called his team out. He repeatedly used the word “disappoint­ing” and promised lineup changes, saying “you can’t put that group out again after that.” In their next game, the Hurricanes put pretty much the same group out again.

BIGGEST MOVE

The most significan­t acquisitio­n was not of a player - but of a new owner. Dallas businessma­n Tom Dundon bought a majority interest in the team from longtime owner Peter Karmanos Jr. in January. Now as he enters his first off-season as a pro sports owner, the question becomes, what sorts of moves are coming?

NEW GM

Before the Hurricanes can get too involved in retooling their roster, they have to settle on who’s in charge of that project after Dundon’s midseason removal of Ron Francis as general manager. The Hall of Fame player stockpiled draft picks during his three-plus seasons but was criticized for a lack of moves to help the current club. Without question, the top priority for Dundon this off-season is picking his replacemen­t.

COACH SITUATION

Peters, who was hired by Francis in 2014, is entering the fourth and final year of his contract. Now that Francis has been reassigned to another position within the organizati­on, it’s fair to wonder if the new GM will want his own guy behind the bench.

LASTING IMAGE OF 2017-18

The day after that fateful loss to the Sharks, Peters wrapped up a morning skate by posing a question to his team on a dryerase board mounted on the glass. The message read: “Who are we? 29 games to find out.” Two months later, the question was answered: Not a playoff team. Again.

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Carolina Hurricanes’ Elias Lindholm (28) and goalie Cam Ward celebrate with teammates following Lindholm’s game-winning goal in overtime against the Tampa Bay Lightning in Raleigh, N.C., Saturday.
AP PHOTO Carolina Hurricanes’ Elias Lindholm (28) and goalie Cam Ward celebrate with teammates following Lindholm’s game-winning goal in overtime against the Tampa Bay Lightning in Raleigh, N.C., Saturday.

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