Vancouver Canucks' 2027 Stanley Cup Odds Revealed

With the 2025-26 season now complete, BETMGM has released betting odds for who will hoist the Stanley Cup in 2027. Among the favourites are the Colorado Avalanche and the 2026 Stanley Cup champions, the Carolina Hurricanes. As for the Vancouver Canucks, they are way down the list and hold the 32nd-best odds of lifting the Stanley Cup next year. 

As of June 15, 2026, Vancouver's betting odds to win the 2027 Stanley Cup are 501.00. This means that if a $1.00 CDN bet was placed and the Canucks won the Cup, the payout would be $501.00 CDN. There is significant separation between Vancouver and the rest of the league, as the Calgary Flames, who have the 31st-best odds, are set at 301.00. 

The Canucks are projected to finish near the bottom of the standings for the 2026-27 season. Vancouver is currently in a rebuild, with most fans in the market hoping the Canucks can win the first overall pick next year and draft Landon DuPont first overall. This season, Vancouver finished 32nd in the NHL, but lost the 2026 Draft Lottery twice and will pick third overall later this month. 

*Note: This article is not betting advice but rather provides information on what bets are available.  

Apr 14, 2026; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; The Vancouver Canucks celebrate their victory against the Los Angeles Kings at Rogers Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images
Apr 14, 2026; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; The Vancouver Canucks celebrate their victory against the Los Angeles Kings at Rogers Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images

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The Canadiens Won’t Have To Imitate The Hurricanes

It’s almost a tradition in the NHL that when a team wins the Stanley Cup, other general managers take notes and try to emulate the latest champions’ recipe. That’s how the Tampa Bay Lightning decided to adapt a more robust style of play after being eliminated twice by the much tougher Florida Panthers two years in a row, for instance. Don’t expect the Montreal Canadiens to do that, though. When Kent Hughes was appointed as the Habs’ GM back in January 2022, he was quite clear: he had a plan, and he was going to stick to it.

The good news, however, is that the Canadiens won’t have to imitate the Canes; there are already many similarities between the two teams. Perhaps the most obvious one is that both teams are led by relatively young coaches who have been in their players’ shoes and were once hard-working, highly successful players. It allows them to be closer to their players and to call them out when the effort level isn’t there. They may not do it publicly, but they are comfortable enough to speak to their players and “tell them their truth,” as Martin St-Louis would say. Although Rod Brind’Amour did it very publicly after the first game of the Eastern Conference against the Habs, calling Jacob Slavin’s game the worst he had ever seen him play.

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The second similarity between the two clubs is their sound financial structure. No team has ever won a Stanley Cup with a player earning over $10 million per season. The Panthers won twice with Sergei Bobrovsky, who had a $10M cap hit, but that’s as far as it went. Winning teams have enough money to go around. Their stars don’t break the bank with no regard to how the organization will be able to surround them with the right pieces to win. The Canes’ top earners are Sebastian Aho ($9.75 M) and Nikolaj Ehlers ($8.5 M). The two highest-paid players on the Vegas Golden Knights? Jack Eichel ($13.5 M) and Mitch Marner ($12 M).

In Montreal, Hughes has been very savvy in contract negotiations. He made a big splash with the Noah Dobson trade last season and managed to keep the former New York Islanders’ blueliner’s cap hit at $9.5 M, before managing to sign Lane Hutson to a very team-friendly $8.85 M per season. Nick Suzuki, Cole Caufield, and Juraj Slafkovsky are all signed long-term with cap hits lower than $8 M per season. Mike Matheson ($6 M) and Kaiden Guhle ($5.55 M) also have very reasonable contracts, and as veteran contracts start to expire (Josh Anderson) or be moved (Brendan Gallagher), Hughes will have money to work with to add key pieces to his roster because he has talked his players into leaving money on the table for the greater good.

It will be interesting to see whether Hughes can sell the idea to Ivan Demidov this summer. It sure sounded like the Russian winger was receptive on dressing-room clear-out day when he said he had spoken to Hutson and they both agreed it was important to sign long-term, because Montreal is building a team with the potential to win multiple Cups in the years to come.

The third similarity between the Habs and the Canes is in the way they play. The coaches do not tolerate any passengers, and both want their players to fully commit to playing both sides of the puck. As soon as they lose the puck, the switch in their head goes from attack to defense in a matter of seconds, and they apply an intense forecheck. Of course, Carolina showed that it had mastered that style of play much better than the young Canadiens have, but it takes time, and that’s perfectly normal.

Finally, both teams succeeded in the playoffs because they showed real team effort. Neither first line stole the show; Aho and Andrei Svechnikov had 12 and 11 points, respectively, in 19 games. Suzuki and Caufield had 16 and 13 in the same number of games. In the playoffs, you need all 20 guys pulling together in the same direction; it doesn’t matter whose name is on the scoresheet. What matters are the names that get engraved on the Cup at the end of the playoffs, and on there, there’s no mention of the points they got or the salary they took home; it’s about one single team: a team’s triumph.


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Maple Leafs 2026 NHL Draft Pick: The Case For Brek Liske

With the first overall pick of the 2026 NHL draft, the Toronto Maple Leafs will have no choice but to take the best player available, which is also the method that GM John Chayka will be using going into the draft.

With left winger Gavin McKenna sitting at the top of several rankings and mock drafts, and not far behind him is left winger Ivar Stenberg, chances are the Maple Leafs are taking a forward with the first pick of the draft.

However, with their 60th pick, coming in the second round, there is an opportunity to still select a great defenseman. That's something the organization lacked for many years.

With that in mind, here is the case to select defenseman Brek Liske, who is ranked 60th in the consolidated rankings of eliteprospects.com.

Liske, 18, is coming off his second full season in the WHL for the Everett Silvertips. He's become an important D-man for the Silvertips, often paired with projected 2027 first overall pick Landon DuPont on the back end.

The right-handed shot blueliner played 52 regular-season games for Everett, scoring seven goals and 24 points. Liske also registered a respectable plus-36 in the campaign, finishing sixth on the Silvertips in that category.

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His production and performance in the regular season were fairly standard, but instrumental for the Silvertips to finish atop the standings. However, Liske was a different animal when it came to the WHL post-season.

The Beausejour, Man., native was a star for Everett in the playoffs, recording four goals and 17 points in 18 games en route to a WHL championship. Liske finished fifth in team scoring for the post-season, but another impressive stat is that the D-man completed the playoff campaign with the greatest plus-minus rating in the league at a plus-25.

While he wasn't exactly the superstar of the Silvertips, he was still a key contributor in an important role alongside DuPont. His role on Everett is similar to a Brent Seabrook next to a Duncan Keith - he's not the flashiest, but as a two-way defenseman, he gets the job done in pretty much all situations.

Liske didn't generate a point in five games at the Memorial Cup, earning a plus-three at the tournament. But he showed a sign of growth and promise in Everett's WHL playoff campaign.

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Before this past year, Liske had his rookie season with the Silvertips, putting up two goals and 11 points in 66 appearances. That was followed by a one-point playoff campaign across 13 post-season contests.

Before that, in 2023-24, he played for Northern Alberta Xtreme at the U-18 level in the CSSHL. He scored 11 goals and 32 points in 27 outings. Following that campaign, he joined the Silvertips, who drafted him 10th overall in the 2023 draft, and played six games split evenly between regular season and playoffs. He didn't score in that post-season, but put up a goal and an assist in his three appearances of the regular season.

NHL Central Scouting has listed Liske 44th among North American skaters and the 12th-best defenseman of that same ranking. Central Scouting recorded the youngster at 6-foot-1 and 190 pounds.


Image

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Taylor Hall-Logan Stankoven-Jackson Blake line is a big reason Carolina won the Stanley Cup

Logan Stankoven was 7 years old and Jackson Blake on the verge of his seventh birthday when Taylor Hall was the No. 1 pick in the 2010 NHL draft.

Fast-forward more than a decade and a half later, and the “Kids and the Hall” line was a huge reason the Carolina Hurricanes won the Stanley Cup.

“Great all playoffs, all year,” coach Rod Brind’Amour said. “Their game really hasn’t changed for months.”

Offsetting power-play struggles through the first three rounds and sagging production from the top line of Seth Jarvis, Sebastian Aho and Andrei Svechnikov for much of the playoffs, Hall, Stankoven and Blake combined for 29 of the Hurricanes’ 66 goals during their title run.

That included the two scored on Carter Hart in Game 6 against Vegas to close out the final.

“Those two just work so hard,” Blake said. “They make it a whole lot easier on me to play out there, for sure. They were unbelievable all playoffs long, and it was so fun and to cap it off with this is very special.”

Hall had what will go down as the Game 6 winner, completing at 18 seasons the longest stretch between getting picked first and winning the Cup. The 34-year-old winger who was NHL MVP in 2017-18 while playing for New Jersey thrived as a role player with Carolina, his seventh team in the league.

“You never know what kind of turn your life’s going to take,” said Hall, who joined Carolina from Chicago as part of a three-team trade in January 2025 and signed an extension a few months later. “I got fortunate coming here. A special group to do it with. They allowed me, personally, just to come in and have success and that says a lot.”

In that same deal, the Hurricanes got big winger Mikko Rantanen from Colorado. He lasted just 13 games with them before getting flipped to Dallas.

The centerpiece of that return was Stankoven, who was most of the way through his first season with the Stars.

“I didn’t see it coming,” Stankoven said. “It was tough at first just to kind of swallow it and realize that I was getting shipped out.”

Stankoven became the center Carolina needed and led the team in playoff goals with 11. Blake assisted on Hall’s goal and scored the second one in Game 6, showing up big as the youngest player to lift the Cup this time.

“I have no words right now,” the 22-year-old Blake said. “I’m out of breath. But this is the greatest feeling I’ve ever had in my life. It’s unbelievable. And to do it with these guys, my family here and everyone here supporting us, it’s unbelievable.”

It all worked because Stankoven was able to fill the void in the middle that had prevented the Hurricanes from getting over the hump.

Hall became the muscle. Blake was the distributor. Stankoven turned out to be the finisher, while also creating the offense at even strength.

“It’s what you dream of as a kid is to obviously, one, win a Stanley Cup, but you want to be a difference-maker in the NHL,” the 23-year-old Stankoven said. “I know that I’m not a finished product. I still have work to put in, and I’m still a young guy. I just want to keep working at my game and just being a sponge.”

While the Stars are more than happy to have Rantanen in his prime, Stankoven made the best of the move 15 months ago. Last summer, he signed a $48 million contract through 2034 and already looks to be worth every penny.

“Everything kind of happens for a reason,” Stankoven said. “Dallas got their player, and I just want to become the best version of myself here in Carolina.”

John Tortorella makes a case to stay after leading Golden Knights to the Stanley Cup Final

LAS VEGAS — The Vegas Golden Knights already made one major coaching decision, and now they likely will need to make another one.

They hired John Tortorella with eight games left in the regular season in a move that included firing Bruce Cassidy. But there were no guarantees Tortorella would remain the coach beyond this season.

By taking Vegas all the way to the Stanley Cup Final before the Golden Knights lost in six games to the Carolina Hurricanes, Tortorella would seem to have a good argument to get an extended stay. But he wasn’t ready to think about that after a 3-0 loss that ended his team’s season.

“I’ve got to swallow this a little bit,” Tortorella said.

As he has done since coming aboard, Tortorella praised the organization and the players, and even with the loss to Carolina still quite fresh, he didn’t sound like a coach ready to step away as his 68th birthday approaches.

“I feel very fortunate to get to know the team, get to know the organization,” Tortorella said. “It’s a first-class organization. Just to have the opportunity. I wanted to coach. I want to coach. To jump in with this gang, I feel so fortunate.”

The Golden Knights had fallen from first to third place in the Pacific Division when general manager Kelly McCrimmon made the bold move to fire Cassidy, who coached Vegas to the 2023 Stanley Cup.

“If we didn’t have the expectations and the belief in our team that we do, we probably would have let this thing ride out,” McCrimmon said at the time. “We like our team a lot, and we think our team has a chance to win. We needed to make this change to help that happen.”

McCrimmon turned out to be right.

The Golden Knights took off under Tortorella, going 7-0-1 to finish the regular season and claim the Pacific Division for the fifth time in the franchise’s nine years. They then eliminated Utah and Anaheim in six games each in the first two rounds of the NHL playoffs.

Then came the real shocker, a sweep of Colorado, which not only won the Presidents’ Trophy, but had gone 8-1 in the postseason.

That set up the final with Carolina, and the Golden Knights took 2-1 series lead. But the Hurricanes then won three in a row to capture their first Cup in 20 years and send Vegas players into an offseason of what-could-have-beens.

Should he return, Tortorella likes his chances to make another deep run next year, and the Golden Knights again will possess one of the NHL’s more talented rosters that includes players such as Mitch Marner, Jack Eichel, Pavel Dorofeyev and Mark Stone.

This also is an organization not afraid to go look for more talent.

“I know we’re on the wrong end of it here, but I just feel that’s a strong room,” Tortorella said. “I’m anxious to see what happens next year because it has another chance.”

Doesn’t sound like a coach ready to hang it up.

What management thinks should be known in the coming days.

Once a journeyman, Brandon Bussi backstops the Hurricanes to the Stanley Cup championship

LAS VEGAS — Hours before Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final, Rod Brind’Amour praised Brandon Bussi while also expressing some measure of relief that the Carolina Hurricanes did not need to turn to their backup goaltender during this playoff run.

“Haven’t had to use him, (and) to be honest, I hope we don’t because something’s gone wrong,” Brind’Amour said.

Turns out the late-blooming goaltender came out of the bullpen after all and backstopped the Hurricanes to the Stanley Cup.

“I thought they were really good tonight, Vegas,” Hurricanes wing Jackson Blake said. “If it wasn’t for Bus, there’s no way we’re winning that game.”

After Frederik Andersen was in net for every minute of the first three rounds and the start of the final, Bussi came in during Game 3 and finished out the series. He stopped 81 of the 87 shots he faced against Vegas as Andersen’s status was shrouded in mystery; the veteran from Denmark did not dress from Game 4 on because of a knee injury that was only revealed after the final was over.

“Freddie battled,” Brind’Amour said. “He got a little nicked up, wasn’t 100%. I felt for him, but he got us here and then Bus took over. This is a team.”

Bussi and Andersen embraced after Game 6 ended. Andersen, at 36 the second-oldest player on the team, was the first player captain and playoff MVP Jordan Staal handed the Cup to after getting it from Commissioner Gary Bettman.

“It’s disbelief, really,” Andersen said. “I did not expect that. It really beat every emotion I could think of or what I’ve been feeling.”

Bussi, a 27-year-old from Long Island, was not an unknown quantity for the Hurricanes because he played in nearly half their games this season, winning 31 of his 39 starts to help Carolina earn the top seed in the Eastern Conference. He got a three-year extension at a bargain-basement $5.7 million price in February.

Before the past several months, he was on track for the career of a journeyman.

Going undrafted, he spend several years in the Boston Bruins’ farm system with the Maine Mariners of the ECHL and Providence Bruins of the American Hockey League. Liking what they saw, the astute back-to-back champion Florida Panthers signed him last summer to be their third goalie behind Sergei Bobrovsky and Daniil Tarasov.

Trying to get him to the AHL in Charlotte, the Panthers lost Bussi when Carolina claimed him off waivers. He and fiancée Mary Raclawski were 10 hours into a drive from from South Florida to North Carolina when his agent called to tell him the Hurricanes had claimed him.

“The next thing you know, the following day I’m in Raleigh and I’m on the opening night roster,” Bussi said. “It’s crazy.”

Injuries to Andersen and Pyotr Kochetkov thrust him into an important role for a top contender.

Bussi was even more needed in the final. He entered at the second intermission in Game 3 with the Hurricanes down 4-0. He stopped all 18 shots to allow a stirring comeback, and the only goal he allowed was the Golden Knights’ winner in double overtime when the puck took a bad bounce off the end boards behind him and Bussi inadvertently kicked it in.

In the Game 6 clincher, Bussi denied playoff-leading goal-scorer Brett Howden, who got in all alone in the first period. He stopped Tomas Hertl on a 2-on-1 rush in the second, much to the joy of family members watching from the stands. Then Bussi robbed Hertl and Mark Stone on quality scoring chances in the final few minutes of regulation.

“Their goalie gives them a really good opportunity in the second part of the series to give them the opportunity to win the Stanley Cup,” Golden Knights coach John Tortorella said.

Hurricanes fans in Las Vegas chanted “Buss-i! Buss-i!” on the way to his third career shutout. A journeyman no more, Bussi is now a Stanley Cup champion. So is Andersen.

“This is something everyone dreams of,” Andersen said. “You don’t really know what it feels like until you try it, and now we’re here.”

Final Ex-Files – Four Former Sabres Win The Cup With Carolina, Jack Eichel On The Losing Side

The 2025-26 NHL season ended on Sunday with the Carolina Hurricanes hoisting the Stanley Cup after a 3-0 victory in Game 6 of the Stanley Cup Final over the Vegas Golden Knights in Las Vegas. After falling behind 2-1 in the series, the Canes returned to stifling their opposition defensively, and defeated the Golden Knights with a balanced offensive attack.  

Three former Sabres on the Hurricanes earned their first Cup ring, while ex-Golden Knight William Carrier, won his second Cup in four years. Former Hart Trophy winner Taylor Hall, who finished second in scoring for Carolina behind linemate Jackson Blake, led the club with a +14 plus/minus, scored the game-winner in Game 6, and finished second in Conn Smythe voting behind veteran center Jordan Staal. 

Two others; Eric Robinson and Mark Jankowski, along with Carrier made up the Canes effective fourth line that provided energy and allowed Carolina head coach Rod Brind’Amour to roll four lines without concern of matchup issues or defensive liabilities. 

Final Stats

Taylor Hall - GP 19, G 7, A 12, Pts 19, 16:29 ATOI, +14, 55 SOG, 14 PIM

Eric Robinson - GP 19, G 3, A 5, Pts 8, 10:47 ATOI, +5, 26 SOG, 16 PIM

Mark Jankowski - GP 19, G 1, A 4, Pts 5, 11:36 ATOI, +2, 14 SOG

William Carrier - GP 19, G 0, A 4, Pts 4, 10:01 ATOI, +3, 15 SOG

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The Western Conference champs were able to stay with the Hurricanes and get them to play a more wide open game early on, but as the series progressed, Carolina was able to clamp down on the Golden Knights, especially their core group led by former Sabres captain Jack Eichel. Eichel finished second to Mitch Marner in playoff scoring with 22 points, but ended up being mostly a distributor, with 20 assists and only two goals. The former second overall pick went the final eight games of the playoffs scoreless. 

Defenseman Brayden McNabb represented a profile in courage for not missing a game after taking a slapshot to the face in Game 2. The 35-year-old continued to average over 20 minutes after the injury, and ended the playoffs with 10 points.  

Final Stats

Jack Eichel -  GP 22, G 2, A 20, Pts 22, 22:27 ATOI, 52 SOG, 16 PIM

Brayden McNabb - GP 21, G 1, A 9, Pts 10, 20:49 ATOI, 19 SOG, +13, 23 PIM  

 

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A big trade swing, then a bold reset that powered the Hurricanes to the Stanley Cup

The coach is the same. The system is the same. The core is the same.

That is nothing against Rod Brind’Amour, considered one of the best behind the bench in the NHL, or Jordan Staal, Jaccob Slavin, Sebastian Aho and Seth Jarvis, who have been the centerpiece of the Carolina Hurricanes making the playoffs year after year.

But the difference this year came from all the new talent general manager Eric Tulsky added over the past 17 months to get over the hump. It added up to the franchise winning the Stanley Cup for the second time and first since 2006.

Tulsky took a big swing by acquiring elite winger Mikko Rantanen from Colorado in January 2025 and also got veteran Taylor Hall from Chicago as part of the three-team blockbuster. When Rantanen didn’t want to be part of Carolina’s long-term future, Tulsky traded him to Dallas and received center Logan Stankoven and two first-round picks, one of which became part of getting defenseman K’Andre Miller on July 1.

Two days later, the Hurricanes won the bidding competition to sign top free agent Nikolaj Ehlers, the speedy winger who gave them just what they needed after seven consecutive postseason appearances without a trip to the final. Falling one goal short so many times in key situations, Ehlers, Stankoven, Hall and Miller put an end to the rite of spring of wondering where that would come from.

All of them fit in with Brind’Amour, who requires his players to commit to a demanding brand of hockey that isn’t for everyone.

“We’ve really focused on finding people who fit the way we want to play,” Tulsky said. “We ask players to play a very distinctive style, and our scouts have done a great job finding players who can come in and look their best playing the way Rod needs them to play.”

The Hurricanes’ run started with a miss

Trading for Rantanen was a huge risk. It involved sending talented forwards Martin Necas and Jack Drury to the Avalanche in a gamble that the big Finnish winger was the missing piece.

Rantanen had six points in 13 games with Carolina, and it became clear it was not a good fit. Discussions with Toronto involving Mitch Marner did not lead to him waiving his no-trade clause, and instead he wound up in Las Vegas and was key to the Golden Knights’ run to the final.

Rather than letting the situation play out with the likelihood he would depart in free agency, Tulsky flipped Rantanen to Dallas for Stankoven and a pair of first-round picks. One went to the New York Rangers for Miller, whose presence shored up depth on the blue line.

“We never want to get worried about the what ifs,” Tulsky said. “That being said, sometimes it doesn’t go the way you hoped, and you’ve got to be ready to figure out how you’re going to move forward from there.”

Stankoven led the team with 11 goals during this dominant run of 16 victories in 19 games.

Hurricanes make all the right moves after

It was the same old story every time. The Hurricanes weren’t just a great regular-season team that failed in the playoffs. They won at least one series in six of Brind’Amour’s first seven years as coach, including three trips to the East final.

Tulsky, a former scientist who got into the sport by blogging about it as a fan and was promoted to succeed Don Waddell two years ago, didn’t blow it up. But he didn’t stand pat, either.

The changes — including claiming goaltender Brandon Bussi off waivers from back-to-back champion Florida just before opening night in October — worked out swimmingly. Playing in the NHL for the first time at 27, Bussi won 31 of 39 starts during the season, then stepped in during the final in place of Frederik Andersen and backstopped them the rest of the way, including a shutout in the Game 6 clincher.

“We have the confidence in Bus,” Brind’Amour said. “He makes a ton of big saves. Even when there’s breakdowns, we trust him back there, gives us tons of confidence to play our game and just be aggressive all night.”

Aggressive is the Golden Knights’ way, going after every big-name free agent or trade candidate, and it led to the Stanley Cup in 2023 and three runs to the final in their first nine years of existence. But Carolina has also become that team.

“Fundamentally, we want to be aggressive,” Tulsky said. “Rod has the team playing very aggressive on the ice. We want to be aggressive off the ice, too. And when you have a chance to add a really high-end player, we never want to miss out on it.”

Carolina did not miss on Ehlers, who turned out to be key and scored the empty-netter that sealed the title. Getting him, Stankoven, Hall, Miller and others also made longtime holdovers like Staal and grinding forward Jordan Martinook believe they could get the job done.

“When your team is trying to get better all the time, it’s something that you can get behind,” Martinook said. “Obviously, we took a run of Mikko, it didn’t work out, but look what we got from it. Stanks and Key, those are two of the pieces that we got from it. Hallsy was part of that, too. Those are three incredibly important pieces to our team. It just shows that they’re ready to take chances all the time.”

Golden Knights’ improbable run comes to crashing halt with shutout loss on home ice

LAS VEGAS — The Vegas Golden Knights’ improbable run through the Stanley Cup Final came to a crashing halt with a 3-0 loss to Carolina in Game 6.

Vegas, which has been to the Cup final three times in its nine-year existence, never had been shutout in a Stanley Cup Final game.

In all three trips to the final, the champion celebrated on the Golden Knights’ home ice.

In Vegas’ first year, it was Alex Ovechkin and the Washington Capitals celebrating after winning in five games. In 2023, the Knights won the Cup in just their sixth year, beating the Florida Panthers in five games.

This time around, it was the Hurricanes who stormed into T-Mobile Arena and dominated behind the stellar play of goalie Brandon Bussi.

As the Hurricanes raced from the bench to celebrate, and later skated around the ice with the Cup, several thousand Carolina fans in attendance cheered them on.

“It’s not a good feeling right now, this is tough to be on the side of it,” Vegas defenseman Brayden McNabb said. “But on the other side, luckily, these chances don’t come around very often. So, it stings. You guys have no idea what some of these guys went through, and just the fact that they’re out there, it’s pretty special to be a part of.”

For Vegas, it was the end of a magical ride that began on March 30, when John Tortorella replaced Bruce Cassidy as coach, with hopes of sparking life into one of the league’s most talented lineups, but one that had lost its spark.

Though Cassidy just led Vegas to the title three years earlier, general manager Kelly McCrimmon felt a new bench boss was needed to spark the Knights’ confidence.

It worked, immediately.

Vegas went from third place in the Pacific Division and in jeopardy of missing the playoffs altogether with the trajectory it was on, to finishing the season 7-0-1 and winning the division.

“He was awesome coming in,” Vegas defenseman Shea Theodore said. “I felt like he really brought a change going into the postseason. ... He’s been great.”

After falling behind 2-1 to the Utah Mammoth in the opening round, the Knights went on an 11-2 run through the playoffs, including a sweep of the Presidents’ Trophy-winning Colorado Avalanche in the Western Conference Final.

The Knights opened the Cup final with a 2-1 series lead, but Hurricanes coach Rod Brind’Amour switched goaltenders — from Frederik Andersen to Bussi — and it proved to be the difference.

Meanwhile, Tortorella stood firm on his goalie choice, Carter Hart, in favor of Adin Hill, the starting goaltender when Vegas won the Cup three years earlier.

Hart became the first goalie in NHL history to allow at least four goals in the first five games of a Stanley Cup Final, and saw his save percentage go from .922 through the first three rounds to .826 against the Hurricanes.

As the Golden Knights head into the offseason, the first order of business for McCrimmon will be to determine whether or not to retain Tortorella for a long-term contract or move on to what would be the team’s fifth coach in 10 seasons.

“I like the team,” Tortorella said. “It’s a good group of guys. Driven. As I said, the experience, they’re good pros. it’s a really good team.”

PWHL Las Vegas names Kim Weiss coach ahead of inaugural season

PWHL Las Vegas names Kim Weiss coach ahead of inaugural seasonKim Weiss, who became the second woman to serve as an assistant coach in the AHL earlier this year, was named head coach of the PWHL’s expansion team in Las Vegas on Monday.

Weiss, 37, spent the last two seasons with the Colorado Eagles, the AHL affiliate of the Colorado Avalanche. She started with the Eagles as a video coach in 2024 and was promoted to assistant coach in January 2026, becoming the second woman to be a full-time assistant in AHL history. The first was Jessica Campbell, who was an assistant for Coachella Valley from 2022 to 2024 before she was promoted to the NHL’s Seattle Kraken.

“I am thrilled to welcome Kim Weiss as the first Head Coach of PWHL Las Vegas,” PWHL Las Vegas general manager Dominique DiDia said in a news release. “Throughout her coaching career, Kim has consistently demonstrated an exceptional ability to develop players, build strong team cultures, and achieve success at the highest levels of the game.”

During her time in Colorado, the Eagles earned a Pacific Division title (2025) and made two trips to the Calder Cup playoffs, including a run to the Western Conference final that ended last week. A native of Potomac, Md., Weiss served as a guest coach for the Avalanche in 2023-24 and worked during the last four Avalanche development camps. She also served as an assistant coach at Trinity College — her alma mater — with the men’s hockey program in 2023-24.

“It’s an honor to become a head coach at the highest level of the women’s game and I couldn’t be more excited to join PWHL Las Vegas,” Weiss said in a statement. “Much of what I’ve experienced over the last few years wasn’t something I dreamed about growing up because those opportunities simply didn’t exist. I’m incredibly grateful for the people and organizations that have helped me along the way, especially the Colorado Avalanche and Colorado Eagles.

“I’ll carry many of the lessons I learned from one of the best organizations in hockey as we build a first-class environment for our players, staff, and fans in Las Vegas.”

Weiss and DiDia have some history, having played three seasons together at Trinity College, where Weiss served two seasons as captain and set program records in points (108) and goals (62). Weiss also has experience training forward Hayley Scamurra, who signed with Vegas after winning a Walter Cup with the Montreal Victoire.

“Having played alongside her in college, I have seen firsthand the character, integrity, leadership and competitiveness that define her, and her values align perfectly with the culture we are building in Las Vegas,” DiDia said.

Weiss joins a Vegas team that has already signed eight players to its inaugural roster, including Walter Cup champion teammates Scamurra, Erin Ambrose and Maureen Murphy, and 24-year-old former Minnesota defender Kendall Cooper. Vegas has also signed U.S. star Hilary Knight, but according to a source briefed on the situation, Knight will be traded to Detroit for a 2026 first-round pick when the league’s trade freeze lifts on June 16.

Vegas has until Monday at 3 p.m. ET to sign two more players in the PWHL’s complicated, six-phase expansion roster-building process. The team will then continue to add to its roster through the PWHL Draft, which is being held in Detroit on Wednesday, and free agency, which opens on Friday.

This article originally appeared in The Athletic.

Colorado Avalanche, NHL, Women's Hockey, women's sports

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Canadiens Should Boost Blueline Depth By Trading For Flames Defender

The Montreal Canadiens will be a team to keep an eye on during this summer. When looking at their current roster, it is fair to argue that they could use another right-shot defenseman. 

Because of this, one trade candidate who the Canadiens should consider targeting this summer is Calgary Flames defenseman Zach Whitecloud.

If the Canadiens acquired Whitecloud, he would provide them with another solid right-shot defenseman who could be a fit on their second pairing and penalty kill. However, even if he dropped to bottom pairing minutes, he would still have the potential to be a nice pickup for a Canadiens club that will be looking to take another step forward next season. 

Questions about Whitecloud's future in Calgary have come up since the Flames acquired him in the deal that sent Rasmus Andersson to the Vegas Golden Knights. It is understandable, as the Flames are rebuilding and Whitecloud is a solid veteran defenseman with good value. Because of this, the Habs would be wise to at least kick tires on him this off-season. 

In 78 games this season split between the Golden Knights and Flames, Whitecloud recorded two goals, 15 assists, 17 points, 124 hits, and 140 blocks. He notably picked up his play in a bigger role with the Flames, however, posting 10 assists in 31 games. 

OFFICIAL: Penguins, Newest Trade Acquisition Finalize Contract For 2026-27 Season

On Saturday, the Pittsburgh Penguins made their first trade of the 2026 offseason, sending defensive prospect Emil Pieniniemi to the Florida Panthers in exchange for forward Oliver Okuliar, who is under contract with the SHL's Skellefteå AIK for one more season.

However, it looks like the unsigned restriced free agent could be on his way back to North America to join the Penguins next season instead.

First reported by Swedish outlet Expressen and later announced by Penguins' GM and POHO Kyle Dubas, Okuliar and the Penguins finalized a contract that will bring the Slovakian forward to the organization in 2026-27, nullifying the final year of his current contract with reigning SHL-champion Skellefteå. The deal is a one-year, two-way contract that runs through the end of next season and is worth $850,000 at the NHL level.

The 26-year-old was Skellefteå's best player en route to their title, amassing six goals and 13 points in 15 playoff games, which tied him for first and landed him in second for those categories, respectively, in the SHL playoffs. 

In 46 regular season games with Skellefteå, Okuliar had 15 goals and 29 points. Last season followed a 2024-25 AHL campaign with the Charlotte Checkers that included 19 goals and 41 points in 69 games. 

The 6-foot-2, 190-pound undrafted center has yet to appear in an NHL game, as he has bounced between North America and Europe for most of his playing career. He spent a few seasons in the QMJHL and WHL before returning to Czechia, sprinkling some time in Finland and Sweden as well. He returned to the AHL with the Panthers' organization in 2024-25, went back to Sweden, and is now an unsigned RFA.

Okuliar has also represented Slovakia on several occasions internationally, most recently during the 2026 Winter Olympics - where he registered one goal and two points in six games - and at the 2026 World Championship in Switzerland, putting up two goals and five points in seven games. 

Penguins Trade Defenseman Emil Pieniniemi To PanthersPenguins Trade Defenseman Emil Pieniniemi To PanthersThe Pittsburgh Penguins made a trade on Saturday.

Bookmark THN - Pittsburgh Penguins on your Google News tab to follow the latest Penguins news, roster moves, player features, and more!    

Would A Trade For Former Canucks Goaltender Markström Make Sense For Vancouver?

A familiar name to Vancouver Canucks fans hit trade rumours a couple of days ago. 

Kevin Weekes of ESPN was the first to report that the New Jersey Devils are “gauging market interest” for goaltender Jacob Markström. The former Canuck left Vancouver in free-agency in 2020 and ended up going from the Calgary Flames to the Devils via trade. He signed a two-year extension worth $6M per year in October of 2025, with both years including modified no-trade clauses. 

Markström’s 2025–26 season wasn’t terrible, by any means. The 36-year-old started the bulk of the Devils’ games, putting together a record of 23–19–1 and a 3.07 GAA and .883 SV%. The previous post-season, despite winning only one game, the goaltender managed to put up a 2.78 GAA and .911 SV% in New Jersey’s first-round loss to the Carolina Hurricanes. In Game 5 of this series, he faced 54 shots. He’s a capable goaltender who likely wants to chase a Stanley Cup as his NHL career progresses. 

That said, could the right move result in Markström returning to Vancouver? 

Why A Move For Markström Could Make Sense

As a Canuck, Markström’s time in Vancouver began when he was brought into the organization as part of the Roberto Luongo trade in 2014. He didn’t make the full-time jump to the NHL until the 2015–16 season, during which he registered a 2.73 GAA and .915 SV% in 33 games played. The goaltender spent four seasons as teammates of now co-Presidents of Hockey Operations Daniel and Henrik Sedin, having also played alongside them at the 2013 IIHF World Championship and 2016–17 World Cup of Hockey. Markström also spent three seasons in Vancouver with Manny Malhotra as an assistant coach. 

There’s a clear familiarity between Markström and the organization that could provide success from a culture perspective. With Vancouver’s current status as a rebuilding team, bringing back a former player in Markström could make sense if they were able to acquire assets as a return for taking on the veteran’s salary. Canucks General Manager Ryan Johnson has made it clear that he’s a big believer in acquiring leaders moving forward, and given his previous experience with Vancouver and how big of an impact he had on some of the team’s young players in his time there, Markström’s return could provide a neat story. However, logistically speaking, this isn’t a path the Canucks should follow. 

Why Trading For Markström Is Not Something The Canucks Should Do

The first — and most obvious — thing to consider is how bringing in Markström would make Vancouver’s already-cluttered goaltending situation even more cluttered than it already is. For a deal for Markström to work, Vancouver would need to send one of Thatcher Demko or Kevin Lankinen back the other way. With Lankinen’s contract currently carrying a no-move clause, Demko would have to be the one flipped — though this could only take place before July 1, as Demko’s own no-move clause would kick-in alongside his new $8.5M annual cap hit. 

Even if, hypothetically, Demko is moved for Markström, the Canucks still haven’t erased their cluttered goaltending issue. While they may have shaved $2.5M per year (and a whole extra year of $8.5M) off their goaltending budget in this scenario, they’d still have to deal with the fact that Nikita Tolopilo is also waiting in the wings — this time unable to be sent down to the Abbotsford Canucks without having to pass through waivers. 

Unless they flipped both Demko and Tolopilo somehow — which could still be possible, but would take a lot of work — Vancouver would be losing out on assets for a goaltender. 

Something else to keep in mind when it comes to a Markström move is that the goaltender has yet to win his first Stanley Cup — something that would likely be a priority for him given that he can still perform well and is still capable of stealing games for his team. Through his 16-year NHL career, Markström has only made the post-season three times — once with Vancouver (2020), once with the Flames (2022), and once with New Jersey (2025). The farthest he has gone is Game 7 of the second round. As his career draws on, it’s likely Markström would want to chase a Cup with a contending team rather than engage in another rebuild. 

The veteran also has a 20-team no-trade list in the first year of his deal, though it’s unclear which teams are currently on it. 

Feb 12, 2020; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Vancouver Canucks goalie Jacob Markstrom (25) celebrates after being named first star the Vancouver victory over the Chicago Blackhawks at Rogers Arena. Vancouver won 3 -0. Mandatory Credit: Bob Frid-USA TODAY Sports
Feb 12, 2020; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Vancouver Canucks goalie Jacob Markstrom (25) celebrates after being named first star the Vancouver victory over the Chicago Blackhawks at Rogers Arena. Vancouver won 3 -0. Mandatory Credit: Bob Frid-USA TODAY Sports

A Markström Move Makes Sense For Contending Teams — Not Vancouver  

Despite the cultural fit, as much as Vancouver has relied on bringing back old voices in shaping their management staff, bringing Markström back to the Canucks isn’t a move that the organization should pursue at this moment. While recouping assets to take on his two-year contract would be favourable for a Vancouver team that doesn’t look to be contending any time soon, there are too many moving pieces that would need to be juggled in order for him to make his return, including packaging up one or two of their current goaltenders. 

At the end of the day, Markström’s services would be best suited for a different team — one that’s closer to contending than Vancouver currently is. 

Make sure you bookmark THN's Vancouver Canucks site and add us to your favourites on Google News for the latest news, exclusive interviews, breakdowns, and so much more. Also, don't forget to leave a comment at the bottom of the page and engage with other passionate fans through our forum. This article originally appeared on The Hockey News.

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The Life O' Reilly: Former Senators Defenseman Hoists The Stanley Cup

It's been a long road to get here, but former Ottawa Senators defenseman Mike Reilly has himself a Stanley Cup ring.

Reilly, the lone former Senator on the Cup-winning Carolina Hurricanes, was a healthy scratch in the final game on Sunday night, a 3-0 victory over the Vegas Golden Knights, but was still a key member of the club this season.

So, as is tradition, he fired on his skates and full gear to be part of the photos and on-ice celebrations.

The Wrap Around show recentlly discussed the idea of the Senators going after Jake DeBrusk in a trade.

Reilly signed with the Hurricanes as a free agent and appeared in 42 regular-season games this season, recording nine points. The Minnesota native also contributed during Carolina's playoff run, picking up two points in two postseason games against the Flyers, including a two-assist performance in Game 2 of the Eastern Semifinals.

Having a player as good as Reilly as a black ace in the playoffs certainly speaks to the 'Canes depth.

"Yeah, I'm probably the extra guy, but I understand," Reilly said after his two-point game last month. "I'm just trying to stay as ready as I can and as sharp as I can. At times, it's not that easy, but when your name gets called, you gotta be ready."

Signing with a team as good as Carolina, the eventual Cup winner, Reilly had to know he might be in a battle for playing time. But he got into just enough games this season, one more than the 41-game minimum required to have his name engraved on the Cup.

It's certainly been an interesting few years for Reilly, who's with his seventh NHL team. During his stop with the Islanders in 2024, three years after he left the Senators, he suffered a concussion, and during routine testing, doctors discovered he needed heart surgery to address a preexisting condition. 

Who knew that a concussion could have a silver lining?

Moments like that suddenly shove hockey to the background and make you think about life and the big picture, but Reilly had a successful procedure and was obviously able to make a full recovery.

That ordeal, combined with his long NHL road to get here, made the former Senator's Sunday night victory party all the sweeter.

By Steve Warne
The Hockey News

This story was first published at The Hockey News' Ottawa Senators site. Check out more from THN.com/Ottawa at the links below.

Jason York Shares A Wild Mike Babcock Story From Their Anaheim Days
Senators Reveal Their First-Round Draft Approach 
Former Senators Forward Retires From Hockey At 34
Senators Top Amateur Scout Weighs In On Yakemchuk's First Pro Season
LA Kings Get Their Man, And The Ex-Senators Coaching Drought Continues
Why Brady Tkachuk Is Poised For A Monster Bounce-Back Season

When is Carolina Hurricanes' Stanley Cup parade? What we know

The Carolina Hurricanes won their first Stanley Cup championship since 2006 when they defeated the Vegas Golden Knights 3-0 on Sunday, June 14.

It completed a 16-3 run through the playoffs, the best since the 1988 Edmonton Oilers went 16-2. The Hurricanes swept the first two rounds against the Ottawa Senatorsand Philadelphia Flyers, beat the Montreal Canadiens in five games in the Eastern Conference finals and overcame a 2-1 series deficit in the Stanley Cup Finals to defeat the Golden Knights in six games.

The clinching game was at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. When will the Hurricanes celebrate in front of their home fans? Here's what we know:

When is the Carolina Hurricanes' Stanley Cup parade?

The Carolina Hurricanes will hold their Stanley Cup championship parade in downtown Raleigh, North Carolina on Saturday, June 20.

The team said more details will be announced later.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: When is Hurricanes' Stanley Cup parade? What we know