

Carolina Hurricanes forward Seth Jarvis is just 23 years young, yet is already making his mark in franchise record books.
Sunday evening, Jarvis tied the franchise record for most shorthanded goals in a season, scoring his fifth against the New York Islanders.
"It's cool," Jarvis said on tying the record. "Have to give credit to the guy I'm playing with [Aho]. He's set me up a lot this year. But yeah, it's fun to be able to do something cool like that and hopefully, there's a few more games to try and break that."
Jarvis, who has eight career shorthanded goals (tying him for fifth in franchise history alongside Stew Gavin, Kevyn Adams, Erik Cole, Chad LaRose and Jordan Staal), has grown into a truly dangerous shorthanded player.
Not only does he have the work ethic and defensive acumen to win board battles and knock down passes, but he also has the speed, talent and smarts to turn the tide on opponents.
"There's really no set plays on the PK,' said Sebastian Aho, who set up Jarvis' shorthanded tally. "Just, [Jaccob Slavin] knocks the puck down and I end up getting it. Good talk by him, he's yelling 'Time, time, time,' so I knew I had time to turn and look and obviously I saw Jarvy flying up through the neutral zone. Just an easy pass and then he took over and did the rest with a nice shot in the net."
The last time a Carolina Hurricane scored five shorthanded games in a season was all the way back in March 5, 2004 as former forward and current Buffalo Sabres general manager Kevyn Adams set the mark against the Atlanta Thrashers.
Not only was that SHG the game-winner, but it was also a last-second buzzer beater in overtime as well.
So does Jarvis have a future in NHL management when he finally calls it a career?
"Me a being a GM? F--- no," Jarvis said. "God no. No. No. Yeah, I'm not going to be a GM ever."
Jarvis' shorthanded tally also tied the league lead for shorthanded scoring (Sam Reinhart, Alex Tuch) with his SHG and he and Sebastian Aho also tied Brandon Hagel for the most shorthanded points this season (7) as well.
"We've seen it all year, especially on the special teams," said Carolina coach Rod Brind'Amour on Jarvis and Aho's shorthanded chemistry. "It's such a crucial time of the game. If you can score on it, that's just a back breaker. So we love it, love seeing it. There's kind of more open ice and obviously the power play guys are not thinking about stopping goals. So there's some good opportunities and he's obviously taken advantage of it."
Stay updated with the most interesting Carolina Hurricanes stories, analysis, breaking news and more! Tap the star to add us to your favorites on Google News to never miss a story.