Can anyone beat the Hurricanes? Why Carolina is 7-0 in the NHL playoffs

Can anyone beat the Carolina Hurricanes?

They improved to 7-0 in the 2026 NHL playoffs with a 4-1 road victory against the Philadelphia Flyers on Thursday, May 7. And in doing so, they showed why they are so formidable.

A turning point occurred in the second period with the game tied 1-1. Taylor Hall rocked Philadelphia's Travis Sanheim into the boards.

"I was in a vulnerable spot and he decides to finish his check and it just felt like his hands drove my head right through the wall," Sanheim said. "I thought it was a pretty dirty play."

Hall was called for a five-minute major in order to trigger a review. A two-minute penalty was issued instead.

The Flyers weren't happy, but they still had a power play in order to break a tie. But 11 seconds later, it was the Hurricanes who broke the tie when Carolina forced a turnover and Jordan Staal fed defenseman Jalen Chatfield for a short-handed goal.

Here's why the Hurricanes are unbeaten in the playoffs:

They're hard to play against

Carolina plays an aggressive style that frustrates opponents. The 'Canes never trailed in the opening sweep of the Ottawa Senators and added to that in Game 1 against the Flyers.

But Philadelphia scored two quick goals in Game 2. No problem. The Hurricanes kept chipping away, tied the game and won 3-2 in overtime.

Philadelphia had a 5-on-3 power play in Game 3 and wasn't able to muster much.

Hurricanes have scoring depth

Thursday was Staal's night with a goal and an assist. It was his first goal of these playoffs.

The Hurricanes have more than enough scoring to go around.

Logan Stankoven is tied for the playoff goal lead with six. Hall has nine points and Jackson Blake has eight. Nikolaj Ehlers has goals in each of the past two games. They're unbeaten despite Andrei Svechnikov not scoring until Thursday.

Frederik Andersen is strong in net

Andersen had a regular season to forget with a 3.05 goals-against average and .874 save percentage. Brandon Bussi supplanted him at one point.

But coach Rod Brind'Amour went with the veteran Andersen in the playoffs, and it has paid off. Andersen has two shutouts and has given up two or fewer goals in each game. He's just the third goalie in the last 30 years to open 7-0.

The Flyers are banged up with Owen Tippett and Noah Cates unable to play. But unless the Flyers can figure out the Hurricanes, they, like the Senators, will be swept.

Then it comes down to whether the Hurricanes and Brind'Amour can get past the conference finals. The way they're playing, it's possible.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Hurricanes beat Flyers to remain unbeaten in playoffs: Why they're 7-0

Canes Stay Perfect: Hurricanes 4, Flyers 1

May 7, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Carolina Hurricanes center Jordan Staal (11) scores a goal against Philadelphia Flyers goaltender Dan Vladar (80) during the first period in game three of the second round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Xfinity Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Eric Hartline-Imagn Images | Eric Hartline-Imagn Images

The Carolina Hurricanes extended their winning ways with a 4-1 win over the Philadelphia Flyers on Thursday night in the Xfinity Mobil Arena.

The Canes remain undefeated in postseason play and now lead this second round series, 3-0. They are 7-0 overall in these playoffs.

Going back to the regular season, they have won 16 of their last 18 games.

Frederik Andersen earned another win in goal and made 18 saves out of 19 shots.

The Flyers came out fired up and had several scoring chances early, but failed to convert. They hit the post a couple of times and the other times Andersen and the Carolina defense were both equal to the task.

Late in the period, Jordan Staal took a puck off the boards during a powerplay and tucked it past goalie, Dan Vladar to start off the scoring.

Trevor Zegras tied it up early in the second but that would be the only time they could get one past Andersen.

During a shorthanded opportunity a bit later in the period, Staal fed a wide open Jalen Chatfield who made no mistake as he gave the Canes a 2-1 lead.

At 3:52 into the third period, Andrei Svechnikov rifled in a one-timer to give Carolina a 3-1 lead. It was another powerplay goal for the Canes, who went 2-9 on the night.

K’Andre Miller and Jordan Martinook then got the puck to a streaking Nikolaj Ehlers and “Fly” broke in alone and roofed in a beautiful goal to virtually put the game out of reach.

Carolina’s balanced scoring made a statement in this game.

On the other side, the penalty kill was perfect, even during over a minute of a 5-3, disadvantage. This was due to a poor sportsmanship call on coach Rod Brind’Amour.

Obviously it was far from a perfect game but the Hurricanes did what they had to do for the win. It was another penalty filled fiasco at times. The Canes were called for 10 penalties while the Flyers were called for 15, but six of them were called with less than three minutes left in the game when the home team intentionally tried to rough up the Canes.

Carolina will look for another sweep as they face the Flyers for game four on Saturday.

Game Summary – https://www.nhl.com/scores/htmlreports/20252026/GS030223.HTM

Event Summary – https://www.nhl.com/scores/htmlreports/20252026/ES030223.HTM

Highlights –

Hurricanes beat the Flyers 4-1 in Game 3, take a 3-0 series lead

PHILADELPHIA — Jordan Staal and Andrei Svechnikov scored on the power play and Jalen Chatfield added a short-handed goal, keying a special teams effort that helped the Carolina Hurricanes win their seventh straight playoff game, 4-1 over the Philadelphia Flyers in Game 3 on Thursday night.

The Hurricanes — who outshot the Flyers 30-19 —can complete their second straight postseason series sweep in Game 4 on Saturday in Philadelphia.

The Hurricanes — coming off a Game 1 shutout and a Game 2 overtime thriller — again rode the hot hand of Frederik Andersen in net to move to the brink of a sweep.

The Flyers, the last team in the East to clinch a playoff spot who then beat Pittsburgh in the first round, had a few sensational early looks at the net but again failed to finish and again failed on the power play. They had the worst power-play efficiency (15.7%) in the NHL this season and did not score with the man advantage in Game 3.

To make it worse, Chatfield scored to make it 2-1 in the second just 11 seconds into the Flyers’ power play with Taylor Hall in the box for boarding.

The Flyers hit Andersen with 15 shots during 19 minutes of overtime in Game 2 and whiffed on their chance at the win — and perhaps their best shot at making this a competitive series — when Travis Konecny missed a makeable look on a breakaway.

Konecny fired another clean look minutes into Game 3, only for Andersen to knock it away with his pads. Porter Martone, the Flyers’ teen sensation, rang the right side of the post moments later and two great chances at goals meant nothing on the scoreboard.

The Flyers still had a chance on the power play but were stymied and fell at that point to 1 for 12 in the series and 3 for 29 in nine playoff games.

The Hurricanes are too playoff tested, too veteran savvy to not capitalize on Philadelphia’s slow start.

Staal punched in a rebound in the first period for the 1-0 lead.

Trevor Zegras, a 26-goal scorer held without a point the previous four games, tied the game for the Flyers from one knee in the second period.

That was it for the Flyers. They went 0 for 5 on the power play while the Hurricanes were 2 of 7.

Svechnikov and Nikolaj Ehlers scored in the third period, the latter of which sent Flyers fans headed toward the exits.

NHL playoff history is still against the Flyers. Only four teams that trailed 3-0 in a seven-game series have come all the way back to win — the 1942 Toronto Maple Leafs, 1980 New York Islanders, 2010 Flyers and 2014 Los Angeles Kings.

Game 37: St. Louis Cardinals at San Diego Padres

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 06: Gavin Sheets #30 of the San Diego Padres hits a home run against the San Francisco Giants in the fourth inning at Oracle Park on May 06, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images) | Getty Images

St. Louis Cardinals (21-15) at San Diego Padres (22-14), May 7, 2026, 7:10 p.m. PST

Watch: Padres.TV

Location: Petco Park – San Diego, Calif.

Listen: 97.3 The Fan



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Yankees option RHP Brendan Beck following MLB debut against Rangers; to call up Kervin Castro

The New York Yankees are making a change in the bullpen.

The Yankees are optioning Brendan Beck and, according to the NY Daily News' Gary Phillips, are set to call up Kervin Castro ahead of the team's road trip, which begins Friday night against the Milwaukee Brewers.

Beck entered the game in relief of opener Paul Blackburn and pitched three full innings, allowing two earned runs on two hits, walking three batters and striking out one. He threw 52 pitches, 28 of them strikes.

Yankees manager Aaron Boone brought in trusty southpaw Tim Hill to replace Beck with the team trailing 2-1. A sixth-inning explosion of offense would turn the tide for the Bronx Bombers, and they would eventually cruise to a 9-2 win, the team's sixth straight series win.

Beck will return to the Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders, and in his stead, Castro will join the Yankees bullpen.

The Yankees chose Beck in the second round of the 2021 MLB Draft out of Stanford University. Beck's young career has been hampered by injury, and he did not pitch for the organization in both 2022 and 2024.

In spite of this, Beck has gradually climbed the ladder of the team's farm system, and made his MLB debut during Thursday afternoon's series-clinching home victory against the Texas Rangers.

Castro has not pitched in the MLB since 2022, when he appeared in 10 total games for the San Francisco Giants and Chicago Cubs.

Since joining the organization in November of 2023, Castro has rebounded from UCL reconstruction surgery to impress mightily at the Triple-A level with the RailRiders.

The 27-year-old Castro has thoroughly earned the opportunity to stake his claim for a spot in a Yankees bullpen which -- at least on paper -- looks like one of the team's few weaknesses.

Dbacks Drop Another Series: Dbacks 2, Pirates 4

May 7, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Arizona Diamondbacks pitcher Zac Gallen (23) throws against the Pittsburgh Pirates in the first inning at Chase Field. Mandatory Credit: Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images | Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images

The Dbacks dropped the series finale and the series on Thursday afternoon as the Dbacks offense simply did not show up to the ballpark for the second straight game. Alex D’Agostino said it best on twitter: The Diamondbacks just lost a series in which none of their starters went less than six innings and no bullpen arm gave up a single run. Brutal.

The gut punch is also a silver lining of this series was that the starting pitching showed up. The starting staff was able to eat 19.1 innings in the 3 game set and allowed just 5 earned runs good for a 2.36 ERA. Maybe that meeting by Torey lit a fire under those guys? Most of this quality starting was due to ERod and Soroka as 4 of the 5 runs were given up by Gallen on Thursday. Gallen’s final line wasn’t terrible as he was atleast able to get through 6 IP, but they really needed Gallen to continue the momentum started by ERod and Soroka. A team that once used to count on Zac Gallen to be the stopper in a World Series contending rotation just a few seasons ago needed more Thursday and Gallen continued his trend of not being able to deliver. Jack Sommers said it best in a tweet, to paraphrase, Zac Gallen has a 4.70 ERA after 8 starts… last year 4.83 ERA… Very, very sadly this is just who he is now. It’s 41 starts.

Perhaps what is most frustrating watching Gallen pitch is that it still feels like the Zac Gallen of old is just within reach, and then he gives up a big inning. That big inning came in the 5th on Thursday. Gallen entered the inning having given up only 1 run in the game so far, and got 2 quick outs. Then with 2 outs he gave up a single, walked the next batter, and then gave up 2 consecutive singles and all of a sudden the Dbacks go from being up 2-1 to being down 3-2. Had Gallen been able to just get one more out and not walk guys and give up consecutive hits, this would have been a quality outing where the Dbacks could have potentially pulled it out despite only scoring 2 runs. So close, but yet so far.

The bullpen was simply outstanding this series pitching 7.2 scoreless innings of relief. That was continued on Thursday as Brandyn Garcia, Ryan Thompson, and Paul Sewald looked dominant. After the struggles this team has had over the past few seasons with the bullpen, I definitely believe this group deserves a shout out.

The real culprit in the series was the ‘big 3’ not being so big. In the 3 games Perdomo, Marte, and Carroll went a combined 6-29 batting .207 with just 4 RBI. Carroll was atleast able to hit his 5th HR of the season on Thursday, but it was just a solo shot. Overall the quality of at bats from this group needs to improve. Lots of unproductive quick outs. After Skenes went 8 innings yesterday, Keller needed just 84 pitches to get through 6 innings on Thursday as the Dbacks hitters were once again just making it too easy.

The New York Mets come to Chase Field tomorrow and this team really needs to show us something and get back over .500. They will face 2 more good starting pitchers on Friday and Saturday in Nolan Mclean and Clay Holmes who have been rolling so far this season and this offense needs to get back to seeing pitches, taking walks, and getting some traffic on the bases. They also need Ryne Nelson and Merrill Kelly to pick back up the torch that Gallen just fumbled and get this starting rotation back on track to where it was the past 2 days. Hopefully this team is in a much better position when I recap again next Tuesday!

Was Jed Ortmeyer The Wrong Scapegoat For The Rangers?

Christopher Hanewinckel-Imagn Images
Christopher Hanewinckel-Imagn Images

In case you missed it, Rangers boss Chris Drury is cleaning house. Jed Ortmeyer is out as director of player development.

Our superior judge of hockey personnel Jess Rubenstein has some thoughts on that. Go, Jess, Go!

"The 47-year-old spent the previous nine seasons in the role following an eight-year playing career, which included three years with the Rangers," Rubenstein recalls.

The change comes following a second straight season without the playoffs for New York, which finished last in the Eastern Conference in 2025-26 and holds the third-best odds for the No. 1 overall pick in Tuesday’s NHL Draft Lottery.

Here's why Ortmeyer is the wrong guy to blame for the mess the Rangers are in:

1- You had four different coaches with four different systems

2- Ortmeyer's job was development, but he cannot develop young players when the core is all veterans

3- How can Ortmeyer develop players when they don't draft correctly? 

4- And it is not Ortmeyer's fault when those drafted are pushed to the NHL before they are ready or they skip time in Hartford

5- Ortmeyer can't develop young players when they are traded in their first year (Exhibit A Mancini).

Mets' Christian Scott strikes out six Rockies, continues to impress Carlos Mendoza

Christian Scott is emerging as a bright spot for the Mets.

With the series win already in the bag entering today's make-up game against the Colorado Rockies, Scott was handed the start and delivered an impressive performance. He tunneled his four-seam fastball and cutter at high levels of both volume and effectiveness, combining for 71 of his 82 total pitches and 46 of his 52 strikes (per Statcast).

Scott struck out six Rockies batters, allowing just three hits and two walks. The lone run he surrendered came in the bottom of the fourth inning, when Rockies switch-hitting utility man Willi Castro laced a two-out single to right field to drive designated hitter Tyler Freeman home from second base. 

Scott immediately bounced back to shut the door on the inning, freezing Jake McCarthy with a nasty sweeper for the punch-out, stranding the two Rockies left on base.

The following inning, with the Mets leading 2-1, Scott was pulled by Mets manager Carlos Mendoza after walking Rockies leadoff hitter Edouard Julien on four pitches. Mendoza summoned Huascar Brazobán from the bullpen, who promptly recorded the third out to end the fifth.

The Mets would eventually relinquish their lead, and with the score 2-2, Craig Kimbrel's nightmare eighth inning - culminating in a gargantuan grand slam off the bat of McCarthy - doomed the Mets to a 6-2 defeat, the team's 23rd loss of the season.

Despite the result, both Scott and Mendoza kept their chins up and dismissed speculation that Scott had more left in the tank when he was pulled.

In his postgame press conference, Mendoza explained that he "had a number of pitches in mind, and he pretty much went over [it]." It makes sense that the team is paying close attention to Scott's pitch count, given the fact that the 26-year-old righty missed the entirety of the 2025 season after going under the knife for combined Tommy John and internal brace surgery in September of 2024.

When asked how he felt about leaving the game in the fourth inning, Scott emphasized his "respect" for his manager's decision.

The ailing Kodai Senga's return to the Mets' starting rotation is still to be determined, and combined with the well-documented struggles of veteran southpaw starters David Peterson and Sean Manaea, Scott has a golden opportunity to stake his claim as a regular starter. 

Through three starts on a strict pitch count, Scott's impressive 3.27 ERA, 1.18 WHIP, and 15 strikeouts through just 11 innings pitched should give Mets fans, coaches, and executives alike hope for the pitcher's present and future.

Jacoby Brissett will be the Arizona Cardinals starting quarterback to begin 2026

CINCINNATI, OHIO - DECEMBER 28: Jacoby Brissett #7 of the Arizona Cardinals warms up prior to a game against the Cincinnati Bengals at Paycor Stadium on December 28, 2025 in Cincinnati, Ohio. (Photo by Dylan Buell/Getty Images) | Getty Images

While the speculation and discussion was fun for a little bit, today ended the flirtation with the Arizona Cardinals getting a 42-year old Aaron Rodgers.

Not that anything is official, but Ian Rapoport is reporting he will be with the Pittsburgh Steelers in 2026.

This coincides with Josh Weinfuss reporting that the Cardinals will make Jacoby Brissett their starter for the 2026 season and are working towards a contract that reflects that.

Now the question becomes how much will that contract adjustment reflect his play and being an NFL starter for the team expected to be one of the two worst in the league?

Brissett since 2024 is 2-15 as a starter, and has helped the New England Patriots and Cardinals land top five NLF Draft picks in back-to-back drafts.

While high picks are invaluable, how much will that be worth to the Cardinals, especially with Carson Beck in tow and the Cardinals needing to find out what they have in Beck unless Brissett finds a way to start winning games.

The real question becomes, how many games do you expect Brissett to start in 2026 and what is that worth to the Cardinals as a organization?

Mets' Craig Kimbrel on allowing go-ahead grand slam, what went wrong vs. Rockies

With the Mets and Colorado Rockies tied at 2-2 in the bottom of the eighth inning on Thursday, manager Carlos Mendoza turned to veteran reliever Craig Kimbrel to keep the score intact.

However, things went sideways fast.

Kimbrel let up back-to-back singles and then walked Willi Castro to load the bases with no one out. New York was out of challenges, so Kimbrel or Francisco Alvarez couldn't challenge what was called ball four on a full count, as the pitch looked to clip the top of the zone. After that, Kimbrel allowed a grand slam to Jake McCarthy down the right field line as the Rockies took a 6-2 lead.

Mendoza and Kimbrel both thought reviews would reverse the call as the ball appeared to land in foul territory beyond the RF pole, but the call stood. Kimbrel said he was "hoping it was foul," but took the blame for missing on a couple of pitches that cost the team.

"On the home run pitch, it was just location. I was trying to go up and I yanked it down," Kimbrel said. "It really all started with the leadoff guy. I got ahead of him, tried to bury a breaking ball, left it up, gave him an opportunity to put it in play and got a hit. And then the hit-and-run.

"Just really, right there with first and third was trying to get a strikeout. Felt like I did, they didn't feel like he went on the check swing. Then it turned into a walk, which turned into a grand slam."

Mendoza was asked about the decision to go to Kimbrel, noting Luke Weaver was unavailable, and explained what he saw from the veteran right-hander.

"They were aggressive, especially on his fastball," Mendoza said. "Back-to-back singles to start the inning, and then obviously there was a walk there. Again, I think they were just pretty aggressive on his fastball. Got too much over the plate and they took advantage of it."

As for the grand slam being fair or foul, Mendoza said there wasn't a good camera angle to change the call on the field.

"It was close, especially from our angle," Mendoza said. "I couldn't tell. Whatever they called on the field, I was pretty sure it was going to stand. And then we called down, and Harrison said the same thing, there's not an angle there that you could tell fair or foul. It just didn't go our way there."

New York will look to put the loss behind them as they travel to Arizona and faces the Diamondbacks on Friday.

Mookie Betts injury update: Dodgers star close to return

Mookie Betts appears close to returning to the Los Angeles Dodgers' lineup.

Betts has been dealing with an oblique injury that’s kept him out of action since April 4.

Betts has seen limited action this season, playing in just eight games. He's gone 5-of-28 at the plate with seven runs, seven RBIs and two home runs. He's walked four times.

The eight-time All-Star is scheduled to be in Oklahoma City for a rehab assignment with the organization's Triple-A affiliate. An announcement from the Oklahoma City Comets' official social media account states that Betts will play on Friday, May 8 and Saturday, May 9.

The Dodgers have compiled a 17-12 record in the 29 games played without Betts. The Dodgers remain at the top of the National League West standings with a 23-14 record, splitting their last 10 games with a 5-5 record.

When will Mookie Betts return to Dodgers?

Betts could return on Monday, May 11, when the Dodgers play the San Francisco Giants at Dodger Stadium, according to Fabian Ardaya of The Athletic.

When do Dodgers play next?

The Dodgers will begin a three-game home series against the Atlanta Braves for Mother's Day Weekend on Friday.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Mookie Betts injury update, latest on Dodgers star

Sabres Predicted To Select 6-Foot-3 Forward In New Mock Draft

The 2026 NHL Entry Draft is less than two months away. Due to this and the draft lottery now passed, The Athletic's Scott Wheeler recently released his first 2026 NHL Mock Draft

In it, Wheeler predicted that the Sabres will end up selecting forward Ryan Roobroeck as their first-round pick this year. 

Roobroeck is a fascinating prospect who has shown plenty of promise at the OHL level. This was especially the case during the 2024-25 season, as he recorded 41 goals, 46 assists, and 87 points in 64 games with the Niagara IceDogs. 

Roobroeck also had strong offensive numbers for the IceDogs during this season, posting 30 goals, 28 assists, and 58 points in 49 games. With numbers like these, it is clear that the 6-foot-3 winger has good upside. 

While the Sabres are cementing themselves as legitimate contenders, it is still important for them to boost their prospect pool as they enter their window. Taking a gamble on a big prospect like Roobroeck would make sense for Buffalo if he is still available because of it. 

It will be interesting to see if Roobroeck ends up becoming a Sabre at this year's draft. However, for now, the Sabres' focus is beating the Montreal Canadiens in the second round. 

Wasn't 1 in 9.2 quintillion hard enough? Bigger NCAA tournaments mean bigger brackets, too

The NCAA will expand its DIvision I basketball tournaments from 68 to 76 teams next season. The change isn't expected to radically disrupt the familiar bracket for most casual fans. Here is a breakdown of some key numbers to know:

0 — The number of mid-major schools that advanced past the first weekend of either tournament the last two seasons.

1 in 9.2 quintillion — The estimated odds against picking a perfect bracket even before adding eight games to the mix.

4 — Games matching No. 12 seeds and No. 16 seeds in the opening round.

8 — The number of teams being added to each tournament (men and women). It's also the number of new games being added to each tourney.

15 — The number of years since the NCAA last expanded the tournaments (from 64 to 68 in 2011).

120 — Total number of games for the two tournaments over seven days between the bracket announcement and the conclusion of the secound round.

131 — As in $131 million, the amoung of new revenue the NCAA expects to share with tournament participants under the expansion.

300 — As in $300 million, the extra funding the NCAA expects to get from new advertising opportunities tied to expansion, including the addition of liqour ads that had largely been off limits.

2032 — The year the current $8.8 billion broadcast deal between the NCAA and partners like CBS, TNT and others expires, raising the potential for more change.

350,000 — As in $350,000, the value of a NCAA-distributed "unit' for a men's team that reached the tournament.

___

AP March Madness: https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness

Luka Doncic injury timeline: When will Lakers star return?

Luka Doncic is making progress but doesn't seem to be anywhere near a return to the court.

The Los Angeles Lakers star has been ruled out for Game 2 of the Western Conference semifinals against the Oklahoma City Thunder with a left hamstring strain, according to the league's injury report as of 10:30 p.m. ET on May 6.

The Lakers have been without their leading scorer since April 2 when he suffered a Grade 2 hamstring strain in a loss against the Thunder. Doncic missed the Lakers' remaining regular-season games and start of the postseason, including a first round, 4-2 series win against the Houston Rockets.

The Lakers advanced to face the Thunder in the conference semifinals, where they are down 1-0, following a 108-90 loss in Game 1 on May 5.

Doncic has been seen shooting at Lakers' practices. He told reporters after their Wednesday practice that he is doing "everything he can" to get back on the court and join the team in the playoff battle amidst a championship chase.

"I'm feeling good and working out every day, trying to come back," Doncic told reporters. "Right now, I'm running, but I haven't done any contact."