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		Aho's blast pushes Hurricanes past 
		Devils 5-4 in double OT to advance in Stanley Cup Playoffs
			[April 30, 2025]  
			By AARON BEARD 
			RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Rod Brind'Amour had just watched his Carolina 
			Hurricanes skate through a debacle of a first period, putting them 
			in a three-goal hole on a night they had a chance to advance in the 
			Stanley Cup Playoffs on home ice.
 So what was he hoping to see in the second period?
 
 “Anything,” he said matter-of-factly.
 
 He got it and more, all the way through to Sebastian Aho's 
			ticket-punching goal that finally buried the New Jersey Devils.
 
 Aho hammered a one-timer past Jacob Markstrom at 4:17 of the second 
			overtime to help the Hurricanes beat the Devils 5-4 on Tuesday night 
			to clinch their first-round playoff series in five games.
 
 Aho's score off a feed from Shayne Gostisbehere came with the 
			Hurricanes on a four-minute power play on a double-minor 
			high-sticking penalty by Dawson Mercer that sent Jesperi Kotkaniemi 
			skating off to the tunnel with a towel to his right eye. Aho 
			provided the capper, the only lead Carolina would have in a wild 
			game that pushed them into the second round.
 
 “Unreal," Aho said. “Obviously you almost like black out for a 
			second there. The crowd goes nuts, guys are jumping on you and it's 
			unreal. Yeah, really good feeling.”
 
 Carolina is the first team to advance to the second round, and next 
			faces the winner of the Montreal-Washington series. The Capitals 
			lead 3-1 in that one.
 
 The Hurricanes are also the fourth team in league history to win a 
			series in seven straight postseasons, first since the Montreal 
			Canadiens went 10 straight from 1984-93.
 
			
			 
			The Devils skated out to a 3-0 lead in the opening 10 minutes, only 
			to see Carolina erupt for four goals in a chaos-filled second period 
			to level the game. But things settled down into a tough grinding 
			finish for the third period and extra periods, capped ultimately by 
			Aho's second goal on the power play on the night.
 Aho also had the goal that tied it 4-4 with 8:33 left in the second 
			period with the Hurricanes holding a two-man advantage.
 
 Taylor Hall, Jackson Blake and Andrei Svechnikov also scored for 
			Carolina, which is one of four teams in the playoffs for at least 
			seven straight years. But the Hurricanes are the only one of that 
			group to win at least one postseason series each time.
 
 “Proud of the group for digging in,” Brind’Amour said. “I think it 
			could’ve been easy to go, ’Well, it’s 3-nothing, we’ve got two more 
			games we could play (to advance). But they didn’t.”
 
 “That's just not the way we are,” said the 21-year-old Blake, who 
			squeezed one shot between the left post and Markstrom's right 
			shoulder for his first career playoff goal. “I think it's really 
			cool the way we won tonight, so it was awesome.”
 
 [to top of second column]
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            Carolina Hurricanes' Sebastian Aho (20) celebrates his game-winning 
			goal with teammate Seth Jarvis (24) during the second overtime 
			period of Game 5 of an NHL hockey first-round playoff series against 
			the New Jersey Devils in Raleigh, N.C., Tuesday, April 29, 2025. (AP 
			Photo/Karl DeBlaker) 
             
 
			 It also marked the second time in three seasons 
			that the Hurricanes had eliminated the Devils in a five-game series 
			that ended with a sudden-death goal in Raleigh. The other came in 
			the second round in 2023.
 The Hurricanes had won the first two games of this series at home, 
			while the Devils punched through in two overtimes to win Game 3. But 
			Carolina put New Jersey on the brink with Sunday’s Game 4 win after 
			taking a 3-0 lead and losing starting goalie Frederik Andersen to an 
			injury on a skating-in hit by Timo Meier.
 
 The injury-riddled Devils gave Carolina fits on its home ice in Game 
			2 and again in Game 5, only to come up empty
 
 “We played two pretty good road games in Games 2 and 5 here, so to 
			not get one is tough," first-year Devils coach Sheldon Keefe said. 
			“But I thought our guys gave everything they had. We were on fumes 
			in overtime. But our guys just kept fighting, hanging on, Marky's 
			battling. So there's lots to like about it.”
 
 Mercer, Timo Meier and Stefan Noesen scored during New Jersey’s 
			game-opening flurry, then Nico Hischier added a second-period goal 
			for a 4-3 lead that provided a brief pause to Carolina's avalanche.
 
 Markstrom regrouped from that rough second period to finish with 49 
			saves for the Devils, operating as a one-man survival raft in the 
			first overtime as Carolina put shot after shot on the net with a 
			chance to advance riding on each one — including Carolina’s Seth 
			Jarvis ringing the left post with about 4 1/2 minutes left in the 
			first OT.
 
 Carolina finished with a 34-12 edge in shots after the second period 
			to put Markstrom under constant duress. He made 38 consecutive saves 
			between Aho’s tying and winning goals, the with the latter having 
			him bang his stick to break it against the pipes and then the ice as 
			Aho skated to the other end amid a roaring celebration.
 
 “That first overtime, man, we were under siege," Keefe said. "And he 
			was outstanding and gave us a chance to keep fighting.”
 
 Pyotr Kochetkov finished with 31 saves in his first start of the 
			postseason for Carolina.
 
			
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