Journal Pioneer

Hurricanes pushing for playoff spot

- BY JOEDY MCCREARY

In less than a month, the Carolina Hurricanes have gone from last place in the Eastern Conference to the edge of the playoff picture.

The Hurricanes enter the weekend four points behind Boston for the East’s eighth and final playoff spot with seven games remaining.

It’s been a remarkable turnaround for a team that earlier this week inherited the dubious distinctio­n of owning the NHL’s longest active playoff drought - and all it took was earning at least one point in a franchiser­ecord 13 straight games.

Heading into the final week of the season, they’ve got a chance - a slim one, but a chance nonetheles­s - to shed that label as quickly as they earned it.

“The belief system is very strong right now,” coach Bill Peters said.

They know they’ve got to remain near-perfect, though, starting with Saturday night’s game against Dallas and continuing through next week’s two-game road swing through playoff-bound Pittsburgh and Minnesota.

“It’s fun. That’s why you play the game,” said forward Jeff Skinner, who along with many of his teammates has never skated in a playoff game. “I think you look at guys are feeding off of each other, guys are playing well, we’re playing well as a team and it’s a lot of fun coming to the rink when you’ve got things on the line. Hopefully we can keep this thing rolling

and keep it that way.”

The only other team in club history to earn points in 12 consecutiv­e games went on to hoist the Stanley Cup in 2006. These Hurricanes have gone 9-0-4 since March 9 to vault back into contention. They broke that 11-year-old club record Thursday night with a 2-1 overtime victory over Columbus in which Skinner scored the tying goal with 4:20 left in regulation, then set up Noah Hanifin’s winner 2:16 into OT.

A pair of first-round draft picks has led the way: Skinner (2010) scored goals in a careerbest six straight games, piling up nine points in that stretch, and Elias Lindholm (2013) had either a goal or an assist - or both - in 11 of those 13 games.

“We absolutely have a shot here to do this,” said Hanifin, their first-round pick in 2015.

Carolina’s string of seven straight years without making the tournament became the longest in the league when Edmonton clinched its first playoff berth since 2006. Coincident­ally, the Oilers’ last appearance in the post-season came in 2006 - when they lost in Game 7 of the Stanley Cup final to Carolina.

The Hurricanes’ only playoff berth since that championsh­ip season came in 2009 - when they won two early-round Game 7s to advance to the Eastern Conference final.

Since then, they haven’t been close very often, finishing at least 10 points back in each of the last five years.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Carolina Hurricanes’ Teuvo Teravainen (86), of Finland, celebrates with Jeff Skinner (53) and Victor Rask, top, of Sweden, following Skinner’s goal while Columbus Blue Jackets’ Seth Jones (3) skates away during the third period of an NHL game in...
AP PHOTO Carolina Hurricanes’ Teuvo Teravainen (86), of Finland, celebrates with Jeff Skinner (53) and Victor Rask, top, of Sweden, following Skinner’s goal while Columbus Blue Jackets’ Seth Jones (3) skates away during the third period of an NHL game in...

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