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

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Last updated: Tuesday, June 16, 2026 6:06PM GMT
Carolina Hurricanes: Stanley Cup Champs

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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3:14 AM GMT

Slavin joins Ken Morrow as only Americans to win Olympic gold, NHL title in same year

Jaccob Slavin tried not to think about the possibility. Now it is a reality.

He and the Carolina Hurricanes winning the Stanley Cup on Sunday night put him in an exclusive club. Slavin became the second American and eighth player to hoist the Cup and take home an Olympic gold medal in the same year.

Jaccob Slavin joins Ken Morrow as the only Americans to win Olympic gold and the Stanley Cup in the same year.
Jaccob Slavin joins Ken Morrow as the only Americans to win Olympic gold and the Stanley Cup in the same year.

Ken Morrow until now was the only U.S. player to accomplish the feat. He was on 1980 "Miracle on Ice" Olympic team and a member of the New York Islanders as it started its dynasty of four titles in a row.

"I used to joke I was a trivia question for a lot of years: Who's the only guy that ever did that? Only player I was at that time, not just American, but the only player," Morrow told The Associated Press last week.

All the other players to do it are Canadian: Steve Yzerman and Brendan Shanahan with Detroit in 2002; Jonathan Toews, Duncan Keith and Brent Seabrook with Chicago in 2010; and Drew Doughty with Los Angeles in 2014.

William Carrier wins the Cup in Las Vegas again

One of the original Golden Knights, William Carrier was there at the end of their inaugural 2017-18 season when they lost in Game 5 of the final on home ice to Washington. That is better remembered for Alex Ovechkin's primal yell when he lifted the Cup for the first time.

Carrier would rather remember 2023, when he was part of Vegas winning it all, beating Florida in five games. Three years later, he was celebrating in the same arena with Carolina. Asked what was different this time around, Carrier acknowledged he's "just older."

"I'm going to enjoy every moment of it," Carrier said. "Your first win, everything goes fast. You don't know what's going on. So I'm going enjoy this one with the family a lot more."
Frederik Andersen honors late agent Claude Lemieux

Hurricanes goaltender Frederik Andersen played late in the Eastern Conference Final and early in the Stanley Cup Final before his agent, Claude Lemieux, died by suicide on May 28 at age 60.

Lemieux, a three-time Cup champion from his playing days, was on Andersen's mind after finally reaching hockey's mountaintop at age 36.

"He would be so proud and all that," Andersen said. "He's a competitor. He always wanted the best for me, and his players, and his family. It's tough to really describe how much he has meant to me, and how cool it is to have my name on that trophy with him."

Jackson Blake tears up after hugging dad

Carolina right wing Jackson Blake was speaking with reporters when his dad rushed up and hugged him closely. Jason Blake played 13 seasons in the NHL beginning in 1998-99, but never won the Cup.

"He's been my right-hand man through it all," Jackson Blake said. "I don't even know why I'm crying, but it's just unbelievable. For him to be here and my whole family to be here, so special. I have no words. When I saw him, something just hit me, so emotional. I didn't think there were going to be any tears for me, but it's all good. It's worth it."

- The Associated Press contributed.

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Jun 15, 2026, 11:08 PM GMT

First Stanley Cup sighting at RDU

The Stanley Cup has arrived.

Canes captain Jordan Staal hoisted the Cup after the team arrived at RDU on Monday.

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Jun 15, 2026, 8:20 PM GMT

Raleigh mayor proclaims Saturday as 'Carolina Hurricanes Day'

As the City of Raleigh basks in a professional sports championship, Mayor Janet Cowell has officially proclaimed June 20 (Saturday) as "Carolina Hurricanes Day" in honor of the team's 2026 Stanley Cup Championship victory.

The Hurricanes won their second Stanley Cup on Sunday night, beating the Las Vegas Golden Knights 4-2 in the best-of-seven series and bringing the Cup back to Raleigh for the first time in 20 years.

Logan Stankoven celebrates the Stanley Cup victory on Sunday in Las Vegas.
Logan Stankoven celebrates the Stanley Cup victory on Sunday in Las Vegas.

To commemorate the achievement, the Hurricanes will host a championship parade in downtown Raleigh on Saturday beginning at 11 a.m. The final parade route is still being determined and will be shared with the public as soon as it is finalized.

Residents throughout Raleigh and the surrounding region are invited to join the celebration and honor the Hurricanes players, coaches, staff, and fans who helped make this championship season unforgettable.

Mayor's Proclamation

WHEREAS, the Carolina Hurricanes franchise began in 1971 as the New England Whalers of the World Hockey Association, joining the National Hockey League in 1979 as the Hartford Whalers, before relocating to Raleigh, North Carolina, in 1997, rebranding as the Carolina Hurricanes; and
WHEREAS, the Carolina Hurricanes persevered through the challenges of relocation, built a passionate and loyal fan base throughout North Carolina, and reached their first Stanley Cup Final in 2002 before capturing their first Stanley Cup Championship in 2006; and
WHEREAS, on June 14, 2026, the Carolina Hurricanes secured their second Stanley Cup Championship by defeating the Las Vegas Golden Knights in the Stanley Cup Final, further cementing their place among the National Hockey League's most respected franchises and bringing the Stanley Cup back to Raleigh after twenty years; and
WHEREAS, under the leadership of head coach Rod Brind'Amour, who led the franchise to its first Stanley Cup title in 2006 as the team's captain, is one of few in National Hockey League history to win the Stanley Cup both as a player and as head coach; and
WHEREAS, Carolina Hurricanes captain Jordan Staal was awarded the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP, stepping up with iconic performances including goals in five consecutive games; and
WHEREAS, the 2026 Stanley Cup Championship serves as a source of civic pride and inspiration for residents throughout Raleigh and North Carolina, demonstrating the power of determination, teamwork, and community spirit;
NOW, THEREFORE, do I, Janet Cowell, Mayor of the City of Raleigh, North Carolina, do hereby proclaim June 20th, 2026 as
CAROLINA HURRICANES DAY
IN WITNESS THEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and caused the Great Seal of the City of Raleigh, North Carolina, to be affixed this 15th day of June 2026.

Janet Cowell
Mayor

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Jun 15, 2026, 4:27 AM GMT

Hall goes from No. 1 pick to MVP to Stanley Cup champion

Taylor Hall was a No. 1 pick in the draft in 2010. He was the NHL's MVP in 2018.

Now, he is a Stanley Cup champion.

"You never know. You never know what kind of turn your life's going to take," Hall said after hoisting the trophy. "It was heavy. It was heavy, unbalanced but amazing."

No longer in the prime of his career, the 34-year-old Hall was one of the biggest reasons the Carolina Hurricanes won 16 of 19 games during this playoff run.

"He's fast, he's physical (and) he makes great plays with the puck," defenseman Jaccob Slavin said. "He's selling out to block shots. And so you need that. He's really just been a complete player this whole playoffs."

Hall took on a workmanlike role on a line alongside 23-year-old Logan Stankoven and 22-year-old Jackson Blake. That trio led the way through the first three rounds of the playoffs and in the final against Vegas. Hall was a force in every way - generating offense, hammering opponents and sacrificing himself on defense.

"Every line on our team has a physical aspect, and I think it falls on me to play like that," Hall said. "Florida last year, there wasn't a guy on their team that didn't hit and didn't make it really, really hard to be on the ice against them and you watch and learn."

Hall fit in quickly with Carolina

With Chicago, Hall played Carolina on Jan. 20, 2025, and liked what he saw in a hard-fought overtime loss.

"I got a first-hand glimpse of the intensity in which we play," Hall said.

His agent had approached him about the Hurricanes' interest in him and a few days later he joined them as part of the same three-team trade that got them Mikko Rantanen. Initially, Hall was not in shape to play coach Rod Brind'Amour's brand of hockey.

But general manager Eric Tulsky liked what he saw in Hall.

"He brings a blend of speed, skill and heaviness that really fits for us," Tulsy said. "He has the ability to get pucks into the zone, win pucks along the way and he has the vision and creativity and skill to get pucks to the middle and create scoring chances off it. We spend a lot of time in the offensive zone, and we need players like him who can not just win the battle along the wall but get it to premium ice and create those top-tier chances and he's been able to do that for us."

After starting in Edmonton and also playing for New Jersey, Arizona, Buffalo, Boston and Chicago, Carolina felt right.

"I've been kind of everywhere," Hall said. "I got here and felt really at home within a couple days."

He settled in the Raleigh area, and before the end of April signed a three-year extension worth just over $3 million annually. A lot went into it, including a bad experience as a free agent during the pandemic and being able to drive his dog to his offseason home.

"I was happy here, and I love the way we play and ultimately I saw this as a place that I think we could be here," Hall said. "That's what I envisioned, and everything else seemed like it made a lot of sense."
No MVP ego

Brind'Amour as a player was a grinder, a defense-first center who made a living out of stopping players like Hall. As a coach, he knew all about Hall's skill as a winger, his 93-point season in 2017-18 with New Jersey that got him the Hart Trophy and the kind of offensive talent the Hurricanes were getting.

The player who arrived was nothing like that.

"He didn't bring any of that, 'I'm an MVP' and I'm going to do it this way.' It was, 'What do I have to do?'" Brind'Amour said. "When he first got with us, he was playing like 12 minutes a night. It didn't matter. It was whatever he has to do to win. That's refreshing, and that's good on him."

Hall helped Carolina reach the 2025 Eastern Conference Final, then he and the team faltered against the defending-champion Panthers. That turned out to be an important lesson for a guy in his 30s thirsty for a title.

"I didn't play well in that conference final at all, and I think just the way that Florida played and the way that I played, it was a learning experience for me even at 33," Hall said. "It was just different way to play in the playoffs. There's a way to play, and there's a way that the really good teams do it. I took it over the summer and tried to just get better and better."

Putting that into practice allowed Hall to set a record. His 18 seasons between getting drafted by Edmonton are the most before hoisting the Stanley Cup in league history for a No. 1 pick.

All because Hall made a conscious decision to fit exactly what the Hurricanes needed.

"It's great for the role that we need him to play," Slavin said. "I think he still has all the talent in the world, and you witness it night in and night out. He's been great. And, yeah, has he adapted a little bit to how we play here? I think so. But that just speaks to the player that he is."

- The Associated Press contributed.