Hurricanes Ride Dominant Defense to Rare Playoff Double Sweep

AAS Editorial Team

Hurricanes Ride Dominant Defense to Rare Playoff Double Sweep

A double sweep to open the National Hockey League playoffs hasn't happened in more than 40 years. But after humbling the Ottawa Senators and Philadelphia Flyers in lightning-quick fashion, the Carolina Hurricanes look primed to finally win a Stanley Cup.

That's not to say the road doesn't get tougher from here — a collision course with the Colorado Avalanche would, in all certainty, give us the best-on-best Stanley Cup the hockey world craves.

Defensive Dominance

Detractors have been quick to point to underwhelming competition in the first two rounds, especially a Flyers team that looked young and rattled for a second-round foe. But that discounts what Carolina does to teams when they're at their best: bringing offences to a screeching halt.

The Hurricanes' defensive numbers through the first two rounds are staggering. One of the benefits of dominating possession is your opponent simply spends a lot of time trying to win the puck back.

Staggering Statistics

Over the eight games against the Senators and the Flyers, the Hurricanes won the scoring battle at even strength 16-6 (+10). Just as remarkable: opponent power plays are only one goal better than Carolina over that same eight-game stretch; the goal differential for Carolina's penalty kill is just -1.

Six even-strength goals against in eight games is remarkable but in line with what we witnessed from this Hurricanes team all season. It is simply very difficult to even get the puck into Carolina's zone, and in the oft chance teams do, it's another task entirely to try and create scoring chances from the dangerous areas of the ice.

Structured Defensive System

Carolina's personnel play tightly within structure and are exceptional at keeping opposing forwards on the perimeter. We observe the same relationship on the penalty kill, where a four-man unit of Jordan Staal, Jordan Martinook, Jaccob Slavin, and Jalen Chatfield can completely shut down the game.

Said another way, Carolina's defensive zone is hockey's Bermuda Triangle. Watch a Carolina game, and one thing becomes crystal clear: This team will forecheck you into oblivion, and inexperienced teams can struggle mightily against the pressure.

Opponents Stifled

One of the parts not lost on me from the first two rounds was how many quality forwards from both Ottawa and Philadelphia found zero space to operate against Carolina's vaunted defence. In fact, if you look at the forward groups of both teams and compare their shot volumes from the regular season versus their head-to-head matchup with Carolina, there is a staggering drop-off.

It's not just that so many players had such decisive, double-digit drop-offs in opportunity, it's that Carolina also did it to some of the most dangerous players on the ice. Skaters like Brady Tkachuk, Drake Batherson, Travis Konecny, and Trevor Zegras were bottled up.

The only two consequential skaters who outperformed were Tim Stutzle and Christian Dvorak, and that outperformance is only a function of shot volume. Stutzle was blanked at evens in four games against Carolina, and Dvorak had just one helper.

Goaltending Excellence

Sprinkle some great goaltending behind all of it through Frederik Andersen and his absurd .950 save percentage, and you can see why Carolina has swept the competition.

Quest For The Cup

Ask anyone in the Hurricanes organization and they'll tell you the job isn't finished. Few teams have more postseason wins than Carolina over the past decade, and yet they still haven't raised the Stanley Cup since 2006.

There's been a tortured history there of late, especially in the Eastern Conference Final. Carolina has been here two of the past three years, with both of those bids ending in disappointment.

More NHL‌ News: