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    Adam Proteau
    Adam Proteau
    Jun 1, 2025, 22:16

    For yet another year, the Carolina Hurricanes squandered a very good regular season by falling meekly to the Florida Panthers in the Eastern Conference final.

    The loss might’ve been slightly more palatable to Hurricanes fans had Carolina lost in six or seven games to the defending Stanley Cup-champion Panthers, but that wasn’t how it turned out. Instead of putting up a strong fight, the ‘Canes fell in five games, producing only 10 goals against the Panthers while allowing 21 goals. 

    By any metric, the series loss was as deflating as it gets for Carolina, and now we’re in the off-season, with the Canes having many areas to address. Indeed, in the paragraphs below, we’re going to explain why the Hurricanes may be the most fascinating team to keep an eye on this summer.

    The Hurricanes have approximately $28.4 million in salary cap space to use this off-season, setting them up to be big-time players in the free agency and trade markets. And the crazy thing is most of their core is locked up under contract, including star forwards Sebastian Aho, Andrei Svechnikov, Seth Jarvis and youngster Logan Stankoven, as well as goalies Frederik Andersen and Pyotr Kochetkov, and cornerstone defenseman Jaccob Slavin. Even if they were cap-strapped and unable to add any talent, the ‘Canes would still be a playoff team in the mediocre Metropolitan Division next year.

    But here's the start of where things get especially interesting for Carolina: the performance of Andersen and Kochetkov against Florida was not good. And while both goalies are signed for next season on team-friendly contracts, does Hurricanes GM Eric Tulsky want to keep going back to the well with those two?

    Even if Tulsky did want to make a change in net, there aren't any Vezina Trophy contenders available in free agency, and getting one via trade may be difficult. So Carolina will either have to run it back with Andersen and Kochetkov at least to begin next season, or he’ll have to be creative and gamble somewhat with a veteran who could benefit from a change of environment – someone like New Jersey Devils UFA goalie Jake Allen. 

    That said, the biggest area of concern for the Hurricanes is their defense corps – a group that has been one of the deepest and most talented in the league in recent years. However, against the Panthers, the ‘Canes defense had some turnstile-like qualities, particularly in the case of veteran and looming UFA Dmitry Orlov.

    The 33-year-old blueliner was Carolina’s second highest-paid D-man at $7.75-million this year, but time and again, he was torched by Florida, giving Tulsky a difficult decision: does he re-sign Orlov at a higher rate of pay – because you know other teams will be willing to do that – or does he allow Orlov to depart via free agency?

    Meanwhile, Carolina’s highest-paid defenseman – Brent Burns – is also a UFA. Burns is the second-oldest player in the league at 40 years of age, and he made $8-million last year. But his offensive game has fallen off precipitously in the past two years, from 18 goals and 61 points in 2022-23, to 10 goals and 43 points in 2023-24, to only six goals and 29 points this season.

    Brent Burns defends against Carter Verhaeghe. (James Guillory-Imagn Images)

    What’s the right dollar amount and contract term for a guy with a ton of miles on his competitive odometer? Because, like Orlov, Burns will have many suitors who’d take him on a one or two-year contract to potentially put them over the top. And who knows – maybe Burns doesn’t see the Hurricanes as the team that can give him his last, best chance at winning a championship.

    In any case, it’s clear that Tulsky is approaching a crossroads of sorts with his group of players. We know Hurricanes owner Tom Dundon is one of the more aggressive owners in the NHL, so we don’t see the Hurricanes sitting back for a season and waiting for the deep UFA class of 2026 to spend their cap space on. Tulsky showed this season he was willing to take big swings at the plate with the Martin Necas/Mikko Rantanen/Stankoven trade tree, and while that didn’t work out ideally for Carolina, we absolutely see the Hurricanes involved with more blockbuster trades this summer.

    The ‘Canes are now squarely in “regular-season success means nothing if you can’t replicate it in the playoffs” territory. And the opportunity is there for the taking in the Metro, which offers its teams an easier path to the Eastern final than Atlantic Division teams have in front of them. But something significant has to change in Carolina – whether that’s with the acquisition of Toronto Maple Leafs star Mitch Marner or some other needle-mover who is interested in changing teams – and the Hurricanes will almost assuredly be front and center when it comes to making notable alterations. 

    The status quo isn’t an option for Tulsky and Co., so no one should be shocked when Carolina becomes a deeper and better squad for the 2025-26 campaign. They have the ability to look good for most of the season, but when the games became more important, the shine was off the bumper for the Hurricanes. And that’s going to lead to a vastly different-looking ‘Canes team next year.

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