HURRICANE FORCE: Canes blank Vegas 3-0, win 2nd Stanley Cup title | Live Updates

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Last updated: Monday, June 15, 2026 4:31AM GMT
Caniacs celebrate as Hurricanes win Stanley Cup

RALEIGH, N.C. (WTVD) -- The Hurricanes have done it. They beat the Vegas Golden Knights 4-2 in the best-of-seven Stanley Cup Final to win their first Stanley Cup championship since 2006

Check back here for live updates.

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4:23 AM GMT

Once a journeyman, Bussi backstops Hurricanes to Stanley Cup championship

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.

Brandon Bussi has been top-shelf in goal for the Canes. He had 22 saves in a Game 6 shutout.
Brandon Bussi has been top-shelf in goal for the Canes. He had 22 saves in a Game 6 shutout.

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

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 Sunday night. 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.

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."

- The Associated Press

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4:11 AM GMT

Canes players talk after winning the Stanley Cup

Check out the video below as a few Carolina Hurricanes players talk after winning the Stanley Cup.

Seth Jarvis interview:

ABC11's Kate Rogerson talked with Jarvis after Canes' Stanley Cup win.
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4:31 AM GMT

Vegas' 'Fortress' crumbles under Hurricane pressure as Canes win Stanley Cup

The Carolina Hurricanes won their first Stanley Cup championship in 20 years on Sunday night, using a suffocating defense in Game 6 to shut down the Vegas Golden Knights 3-0 and winning three straight games of a thrilling final filled with momentum swings and spectacular offense.

Brandon Bussi, who entrance late into Game 3 helped turn around the series for Carolina, recorded his first career playoff shutout in stopping 22 shots. Jackson Blake had a goal and assist, and Taylor Hall scored just 3:47 into the game to set the tone. Nikolaj Ehlers added an empty-net goal.

The Golden Knights, who made an unlikely run just to reach the final, struggled badly to muster any kind of offense in Game 6 and went 18:37 between shots on goal in the second and third periods. Playing in their third Cup final, this is the first time they have been shut out.

This clinching game was what many observers expected the series to be like between the defensive-minded teams, but each side watched leads of two-plus goals disappear in the first three games.

Now, the Cup belongs to the Hurricanes, led by coach Rod Brind'Amour, who also captained Carolina to its 2006 title.

This was the first game of the series that Vegas goalie Carter Hart didn't allow four goals in a game. He finished with 20 saves.

The Hurricanes began to assume control of the series after falling behind by the score of 4-0 in Game 3. They came back force overtime, and though the Canes lost, they outplayed the Golden Knights from there on out.

Reflecting the do-or-die situation for the Golden Knights, they made several lineup changes, with Brett Howden replacing the injured William Karlsson at second-line center. Mitch Marner could have moved there, but remained at right wing.

Original Golden Knight Reilly Smith made his Cup final debut at third-line right wing and Braeden Bowman made his playoff debut at fourth-line right wing. Kaedan Korczak replaced Dyland Coghlan on the third defensive pairing.

This story will be updated.

- The Associated Press contributed.

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4:07 AM GMT

Jordan Staal becomes oldest player to win Conn Smythe Trophy

Rod Brind'Amour knows a thing or two about how Jordan Staal is feeling. Now the Carolina Hurricanes' coach, Brind'Amour was their captain when they won the Stanley Cup two decades ago, and now Staal wears the "C."

Before the final against Vegas started, Brind'Amour was clear about one thing.

Conn Smythe winner and Canes captain Jordan Staal hoists the Stanley Cup.
Conn Smythe winner and Canes captain Jordan Staal hoists the Stanley Cup.

"We're not here today without Jordan Staal," he said. "I can promise you that. We're very lucky. And as a coach, you're super fortunate to have a guy like that be your leader."

The 37-year-old Staal led the Hurricanes to the second championship in franchise history by being the two-way shutdown center and faceoff ace he has been his entire NHL career. By elevating his game and leading them in goals with six in the final against the Golden Knights, Staal won the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP.

He is the oldest player to win the honor.

"He's always really good, but yeah, he's stepped it up at such a pivotal time," teammate Seth Jarvis said. "It's incredible to watch, and it's so much fun playing with him and being around him."

Staal is the longest-tenured player in the organization. He was also the only player on the roster with a Cup ring, from winning with the Penguins in 2009.

The 17 years in between is the longest gap between championships, breaking the record of 16 held by Chris Chelios.

"That's a lot of years," Staal said. "It's amazing. This is something I've been going after ever since we got the first one. You want to win it again and again and again. What a feeling."

Staal joined the Hurricanes in 2012 in a trade from Pittsburgh on his wedding day. His first half-dozen years with them passed without a postseason appearance.

"I don't want to say that the losing that he had to do for four, five years when he got here might have fueled him even more, but I think it did," fellow veteran Jordan Martinook said. "The fact that he's seen some pretty dark days here and then to be on the other side of it ... he stuck through it the whole time."

The past seven seasons, Staal and the Hurricanes made the playoffs but failed to reach the final. He became captain in the middle of that stretch in 2020, taking on a role once filled by Brind'Amour from 2005-10 and older brother Eric from 2010-16.

Staal took on the weight of those premature exits.

"Each scar, each moment just drives a hunger even deeper into you," Staal said. "Being a part of this core and all the scars that we've gone through just brings that care factor for each other that we want it for each other that much more."

Staal has never gotten the Selke Trophy as the league's best defensive forward, but he has been a finalist and this run shows why. He won more than 56% of his faceoffs and is so valuable on draws that he begins power plays just to get the Hurricanes the puck.

"People got to see what I've know for forever - what kind of player he is, what kind of leader he is," Brind'Amour said. "And here we go, he's finally rewarded."

Told of Brind'Amour's pre-series comment that the team would not have gotten this far without him, Staal praised his coach and downplayed changing anything in his game. The two shared a long hug on the ice in the moments after the Game 6 win.

"I'm just being me," Staal said. "I'm not really anyone different. But just my day-to-day presence is showing up and working. That's all I've done since I got here in Carolina, and being consistent with that must have been enough."

The offensive outburst against Vegas put Staal over the top for the Conn Smythe after it looked like Logan Stankoven and Taylor Hall were Carolina's front-runners. He never scored 30 goals in a season, but his six in the final put him in the record books with the likes of Hall of Famers Mario Lemieux and Mike Bossy.

"I'm not really surprised," Brind'Amour said. "You take the goals away, it'd be the same impact. It's just added that extra element."

- The Associated Press contributed.