Call & Times

Defensemen injuries are already piling up early

- By STEPHEN WHYNO

Deep NHL playoff runs Jason Demers went on during his playing career usually ended the same way.

“The injuries just accumulate­d too much,” he said. “And then you’re just not playing at 100%.”

That attrition is already showing early in the first round this spring at Demers’ old position, as defenses have been depleted by existing and new injuries, from Tampa Bay’s Mikhail Sergachev and Colorado’s Samuel Girard being out long term to Carolina’s Brett Pesce going down Monday night and Washington being down to minor leaguers to fill its many voids.

There were 70 goals scored over the first 10 games in the first round, a product of not just hot offense sparked by some of the league’s top players but team-wide struggles to keep the puck out of the net.

“It’s really hard if you don’t have some depth and guys that can step right in and can have impact,” said three-time Stanley Cup-winning defenseman Ken Daneyko, now an NHL Network analyst. “When you’re missing a top player like a Ser-gachev like Tampa is, it makes it that much more difficult, but you find a way to rally around other guys. You have to. And if you don’t have enough, well that’s going to be tough to make some noise in the playoffs.”

Pesce’s injury is the latest potentiall­y significan­t one to crop up, leaving Game 2 against the New York Islanders hobbled following a noncontact play. Coach Rod Brind’Amour said afterward the situation was “not looking good,” and it’s the first major test of depth for the slight championsh­ip favorite Hurricanes.

Tony DeAngelo would be the next veteran defenseman up.

“We’re in kind of wait-and-see mode right now,” Brind’Amour said Tuesday, acknowledg­ing there’s some extra time before his team goes for a 3-0 series lead Thursday night on Long Island. “Don’t want to really jump the gun yet.”

Boston will be without trade deadline pickup Andrew Peeke for at least the next two games at Toronto because of an injury Bruins coach Jim Montgomery deemed week to week.

The Metropolit­an Division-rival Capitals have been dealing with blue line losses for weeks now, finishing the regular season without injured Rasmus Sandin and Nick Jensen, as well as Ethan Bear, who’s in the player assistance program. Rookie Vincent Iorio was injured in their Game 1 defeat Sunday at the New York Rangers, pressing Lucas Johansen in for his NHL playoff debut.

Johansen joined fellow American Hockey League call-up Dylan McIlrath in Washington’s lineup. If nothing else, the team is accustomed to drawing from AHL Hershey.

“The same way we have with other injuries, departures that we’ve had all year: It’s going to be opportunit­y for other players to step up and then also not putting that on one person’s shoulders,” coach Spencer Carbery said recently. “The group — D corps, forwards — doing a little bit more to help alleviate (the absences).”

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