Our Three Winners — Technician 2/12/18

Page 12

Sports

TECHNICIAN

PAGE 12 • MONDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2018

Hurricanes control their own fate

Andrew Schnittker Sports Editor

With 26 games to play, the Carolina Hurricanes find themselves in unfamiliar territory. Saturday night’s 3-1 win over the Colorado Avalanche vaulted the Canes into the Eastern Conference’s final wild card spot, with their 61 standings points one ahead of the Columbus Blue Jackets and New York Islanders*. While Carolina has found itself in playoff position at different points this season, this is the first time the team has been in that spot this late in the year since the 2010-11 season. With under a third of the regular-season schedule left to play, Carolina is in a good spot — but staying there is another story. The team has made its way into that spot before during this year, but ended up quickly falling back out. So, what do the Canes need to do to ensure they play more than 82 games this year? On paper, it’s relatively simple: win divisional games. The Metropolitan Division is going to get five playoff teams, its customary top three and both Eastern Conference Wild Card spots. That leaves five spots for eight teams. The Washington Capitals are in. They lead the division with 70 points in the standings, and are nine points clear of the Islanders on the outside of the playoff picture. The Pittsburgh Penguins will also likely make it. They sit second with 66 points, and while they have played more games than a number of teams, they are the two-time defending Stanley Cup

Madison Bell

Champions and have a talented core led by forwards Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin. So, that leaves six teams fighting for three spots, the Hurricanes, Islanders, Blue Jackets, Philadelphia Flyers and New York Rangers. For the purpose of this exercise, we’re going to say the Rangers miss. While it’s foolish to count out a team with Henrik Lundqvist in net, the Rangers currently sit last in the division with 59 points, and general manager Jeff Gorton recently sent a letter to fans hinting that the team is looking at blowing up its roster. Down to five teams for three spots. The Blue Jackets would appear to be a likely playoff team as well. Columbus is right outside the playoff picture with 60 points and struggles to score, but has a Vezina-caliber goalie in Sergei Bobrovsky. Goaltending counts the most this time of year, which should propel Columbus into the postseason. Four teams for two spots. That leaves the Canes, the Devils right ahead of them at 62 points* (albeit with two fewer games played), the Islanders right behind them at 60 and the Flyers two points ahead at 63 (with one fewer game played)*. In order to make the playoffs, the Canes need to finish better than two of those teams, and they control their ability to do that. The Canes have yet to play a single game this year against the Devils, with the four-game season series (two at home, two away) coming up. The Canes have played one game against

ALEX ZACHMAN/TECHNICIAN

Hurricanes captain Jordan Staal gets into the zone before a faceoff into the third period. Canes drop the Game to the Blues 2-1 at PNC Arena on Oct. 27 for a home record of 1-2-1. The Hurricanes are currently 7th in the Metropolitan Division.

the Flyers (an overtime loss at home on Feb. 6) and have one game at PNC Arena and two games in Philadelphia remaining. The team has split one home and one away game with the Islanders this year, with one of each left. Next weekend will be a big one for the Canes, with three games in four nights Thursday to Sunday, with two (home and away) with the Devils and one at home against the Islanders. That’s nine crucial games remaining on the schedule that will go a long way towards determining the team’s playoff fate. Carolina will need more of the same from both of its last two games, with balanced scoring throughout

the lineup, good special teams play and strong goaltending from both Cam Ward and Scott Darling. The door to the postseason is open for the Carolina Hurricanes. With so many headto-head games left against fellow wild card competitors, the team controls its fate. The Canes themselves are the ones who control whether or not they will be able to end the NHL’s longest active playoff drought. *This story was written and published before the final results of Sunday’s Islanders, Devils and Flyers games.

Club Hockey looks to bring Admiral’s Cup back to Raleigh

Staff Writer

The NC State club hockey team is heading to the Atlantic Coast Collegiate Hockey League (ACCHL) postseason tournament this weekend in Charlottesville, Virginia as the No. 3 seed to compete for the Admiral’s Cup. The Wolfpack (14-6, 7-2 ACCHL) is set to take on James Madison University at Main Street Arena in Charlottesville for the quarterfinals. If the Pack advances past the quarterfinals, it has the potential to face the No. 2 seed University of Virginia, who defeated NC State in last year’s Admiral’s Cup Finals. NC State’s two league losses were an away loss against Charlotte and the only home loss of the season to Virginia. The season was highlighted by two wins in PNC Arena over UNC-Chapel Hill and an away win against the No. 5 tournament seed Wake Forest.

State is on a five-game winning streak heading into the tournament and is looking for another run to the championship game after having two consecutive appearances, both ending in losses for the Pack. The last time State won the Admiral’s Cup was back in 2011. NC State is led by seven seniors, including forward Luis Gimenez who has 16 goals and 21 assists. Senior forward Sam Banasiewicz leads the team with 25 goals and 18 assists. Freshman defenseman Cam Mazikowski will be a big factor for the Pack defensively and offensively heading into the tournament as he has scored 10 goals and has nine assists. Mazikowski recently received the league’s Rookie of the Year honors. Junior forward Tyler Alfonzetti also received ACCHL Scholar Athlete of the Year and has contributed six goals and two assists. In net, junior goalie Joey Hall has played the most games for the Pack and has a .893 save

SINDY HUANGTECHNICIAN

Sam Banasiewicz, a fourth-year majoring in public relations, hits the hockey puck during the club hockey game against UNC-Chapel Hill on Jan. 29 in PNC Arena. The Wolfpack beat the Tar Heels 6-5 for its second Brickyard Brawl win this season.

percentage and has allowed only 3.60 goals per game. Puck drop against James Madison is set

for Friday at 4:30 p.m. and can be viewed on PackTV’s YouTube channel, campus cable channel 32.2 or in Talley Student Union.


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