Hockey

Hurricanes chase Schmid in dominant Game 1 win over Devils

The Carolina Hurricanes got goals from Brett Pesce and Seth Jarvis alongside a suffocating defensive performance in the opening period to jump quickly on the visiting New Jersey Devils for a 5-1 win Wednstesday night in the opener of their second-round playoff series.

Carolina scores 3 straight goals en route to 5-1 victory on home ice

A male ice hockey player wearing number 24 yells in celebration as a teammate wearing number 74 skates over to him with his arms stretched wide.
Hurricanes' Seth Jarvis (24) celebrates with Jaccob Slavin after scoring a goal during the first period of a 5-1 win over the Devils in Game 1 of their second-round series on Wednesday night at PNC Arena in Raleigh, N.C. (Karl B DeBlaker/The Associated Press)

The Carolina Hurricanes spent the first period swarming the puck and closing just about any fleeting bit of open ice the New Jersey Devils could find.

It was a dominating start to their second-round playoff series — and the blueprint the Hurricanes know they must follow going forward.

The Hurricanes got goals from Brett Pesce and Seth Jarvis alongside a suffocating defensive performance in the first, allowing Carolina to jump quickly on New Jersey en route to a 5-1 win Wednesday night to start this best-of-seven series.

Jesperi Kotkaniemi, Brady Skeji and Jesper Fast also scored for the Hurricanes, who took the visiting Devils completely out of any type of first-period flow while surrendering a single shot on goal. Meanwhile, Pesce scored on a low-flying shot through traffic to beat Akira Schmid and Jarvis blew past Ryan Graves near the blue line to beat Schmid over his glove for a 2-0 lead.

By the time Kotkaniemi followed early in the second, Schmid was headed for the bench.

"That's a super-skilled team that is fast and comes in waves," said Carolina forward Jordan Martinook, who found Kotkaniemi for his point-blank putaway. " If you can stay on top of them and kind of limit their space, that's what we're going to have to do.

"Yeah, it's hard. It's a lot of work, but we're willing to put it in."

Game 2 is Friday night in Raleigh.

Nathan Bastian scored for the Devils, who played this one without trade-acquisition Timo Meier following his huge hit from New York Rangers forward Jacob Trouba during Monday's Game 7 win. Bastian's goal came when he got loose coming into the zone to beat Frederik Andersen at 5:02 of the second period, but the Devils got not closer.

"They backed us into a corner right away," Devils coach Lindy Ruff said.

The Hurricanes pushed into the second round after beating the New York Islanders, with the Game 6 clincher coming Friday night. That gave a team with an injury-hit group of forwards a few extra days to regroup, and Carolina jumped right back in to establish its style and play confidently from in front with the backing of a loud home-ice crowd.

"We played fast, physical," defenceman Brady Skjei said. "We got some pucks to the net. It was just the way we wanted to start, that first period."

The Devils are in the playoffs for the first time since 2018 and won a series for the first time in 11 years. But they had less than 48 hours following the Game 7 clincher against the Rangers to get ready for Wednesday's puck drop. Ruff had said Tuesday he liked jumping right into a series to keep rolling.

Instead, the Devils' lone shot in the first period was a wrister from Bastian that looked more like an entry pass from the blue line before dribbling its way to Andersen at 12:15.

New Jersey eventually began to establish its style in the second, but by then, the Devils were fighting uphill.

"We didn't get to our game," forward Jesper Bratt said. "We were a little sloppy on the puck. We were a little slow getting to pucks and supporting each other. When you're not supporting each other against a team like this ... you're not going to create that much."

The Hurricanes went back to Andersen in net over Antti Raanta after Andersen got his first start of the playoffs in the Game 6 clincher against the New York Islanders. He finished with 18 saves.

The 22-year-old Schmid had been terrific in the first round, posting a 1.38 goals-against average and a .951 save percentage while posting two shutouts. But he surrendered three goals on 11 shots.

"It had nothing to do with our goalie," Ruff said. "I could've taken multiple players out."

Vitek Vanecek had 10 saves on 11 shots in relief, though he survived one second-period power play that saw Carolina's Sebastian Aho hit the left post, then Jarvis follow with his own ping moments later.

Add some “good” to your morning and evening.

Get up to speed on what's happening in sports. Delivered weekdays.

...

The next issue of The Buzzer will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in the Subscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.