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A two-week road grind, a stack of injuries, and a 4–2 record that says more about this team’s spine than the scoresheet. We unpack how the Hurricanes managed to bank points while learning hard lessons about where their ceiling really is—and what still holds them back.

We start with the backbone: goaltending. Frederik Andersen looked like a metronome, while Brandon Bussi delivered high-danger saves that kept the bench calm. With Pyotr Kochetkov nearing a return, we talk through real rotation choices and why competition could be a feature, not a bug. From there, we spotlight the forward duos carrying the offense: Aho–Jarvis buzzing with synchronized reads, Staal–Martinook eating tough minutes, and the Stankoven–Blake surge that adds speed and edge. The third winger on each line is the lever; we examine Ehlers’ timing next to elite linemates, Taylor Hall’s steadying presence for the kids, and the case for giving Bradley Nadeau real top-nine minutes.

Then we go straight at the problem the standings don’t hide: a power play stuck at 2-for-29. We break down why the puck dies after lost draws, why zone entries stalled, and how the absence of a committed net-front turns shots into shrugs. The fixes are specific: win the first touch, assign a true screen-and-jam role, vary flank shooting for deflections, and let Ghost’s return unlock deception up top. Meanwhile, a battered blue line held with Sean Walker’s workload, Mike Reilly’s calm, and a fast-learning Nikishin. Call-ups mattered: Joel Nystrom’s skating and poise earned special teams minutes, and we tee up what Domenick Fensore can add as a power play quarterback.

With a home stretch ahead, the ask is simple—stop playing with food. Build multi-goal cushions, clean the second periods, and use friendlier matchups to hardwire better habits. If Ehlers clicks, Svechnikov leans into his power game, and the man advantage finds grease in the blue paint, this group shifts from resilient to ruthless.

Highlights

• Injuries stack up yet results stay solid
• Andersen steady, Bussi steps in with poise
• Aho–Jarvis chemistry drives top-unit chances
• Staal–Martinook tilt ice in hard minutes
• Stankoven–Blake spark with pace and retrievals
• Svechnikov’s slump and power identity missing
• Ehlers learning fit with elite linemates
• Power play entries, draws, and net-front issues
• Walker and Reilly stabilize blue line minutes
• Nikishin grows into PK and tougher matchups
• Nystrom earns trust; Fensore’s QB upside
• Home stand focus: finish chances, fix PP habits

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