NHL Morning Skate: Stanley Cup Final Edition – June 11, 2026

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NHL Morning Skate: Stanley Cup Final Edition – June 11, 2026

* If you were to sum up the 2026 Stanley Cup Final in six words, “It’s a wild ride, isn’t it?” might just be the perfect combination. Packed with emotional ups and downs and now a best-of-three, the Hurricanes and Golden Knights return to Raleigh for a pivotal Game 5 tonight to determine which club will be a win away from its second championship for the first potential Stanley Cup-clincher Sunday in Las Vegas.

* A Hurricane can join a Cyclone on an elite list as 37-year-old Jordan Staal looks to become the fourth player in NHL history with a five-game goal streak from the start of a Final – and first since “Le Gros Bill” 70 years ago.

* The playoff grind will continue at least through the weekend, with a spotlight today on Brandon Bussi and William Karlsson, key contributors so far in an already historic Stanley Cup Final.

Stanley Cup Final full of rallies returns to Raleigh for a pivotal Game 5
The high-octane 2026 Stanley Cup Final – which has featured the most goals in 45 years, fleeting multi-goal leads in every game and each contest going down to the wire – shifts back to Lenovo Center for a pivotal Game 5 with a 3-2 series lead on the line tonight.

* When a best-of-seven Final is tied 2-2, the Game 5 victor goes on to win the championship nearly 75% of the time (20-7; .741) including a 15-3 (.833) record when the home team pulls ahead and a 5-4 (.556) mark when the road club takes the lead. Sixteen of the 27 previous instances involved the victor clinching the Cup in Game 6, while four saw the winner do so in Game 7.

* The Final has featured 33 combined goals through the first four games for an average of 8.3 per contest. The only championship series in NHL history with 40 or more through five games were between the Black Hawks and Canadiens in 1973 (46), Islanders and Minnesota North Stars in 1981 (42), Flyers and Islanders in 1980 (42) as well as the Blackhawks and Flyers in 2010 (40).
 

* Every contest in this year’s Final has been a “close game” (1-goal margin of victory or 2+ with at least one empty-netter), with Game 4 sealed with an empty-netter in the final minute. The League’s only championship series which met that criteria through each of the first five contests involved the Blues and Bruins in 2019 (6 GP), Blackhawks and Flyers in 2010 (6 GP), Blackhawks and Lightning in 2015 (5 GP) as well as the Canadiens and Maple Leafs in 1951 (5 GP).

* All four Final contests so far have featured a multi-goal lead being erased, highlighted by the Hurricanes storming back from a 4-0 third-period hole to force overtime in Game 3. The seven combined tying goals trail only 1946 (11), 1982 (9), 2025 (8), 2018 (8), 2015 (8), 2010 (8), 1973 (8) and 1951 (8) for the NHL’s most through the first five contests in a championship series. Eleven is the most ever in an entire Final (1946, 1973 and 2010). 

* Vegas can improve to 8-3 as visitors in these playoffs and establish a single-postseason franchise record for road wins. Carolina can earn its eighth win as hosts, which would mark the second most home victories during a playoff year in club history behind 2006 (10-4 in 14 GP).

THE PLAYOFF GRIND WILL GO AT LEAST TWO MORE GAMES

A Stanley Cup Final packed with memorable moments is approaching the one that will ultimately define it, but hockey fans will have at least two more games to watch the likes of Jordan StaalBrandon BussiMitch MarnerBrett Howden and William Karlsson compete for the chance to be the ones posing with the Cup when it’s all said and done. From game-changing goals to finding a way to rise to the moment, players from both teams have delivered on the sport’s grandest stage, shaping the narrative of an historic series so far.

* Staal (7-4—11 in 17 GP) is amid his best postseason at 37 years old and takes a four-game goal streak into Game 5 – one shy of the NHL’s longest ever to start a Final. With at least two games remaining in the Final, the Hurricanes captain is three goals shy of tying the most by any player at age 37 or older in a single postseason: Corey Perry (10 in 2025) and Brett Hull (10 in 2002).

* A five-game goal streak would match the longest of Staal’s career (regular season or playoffs), with his only such run coming as an 18-year-old with the Penguins, two years before he won his first Stanley Cup (7-0—7 in 5 GP from Feb. 3-10, 2007). The Hurricanes captain can become the first player in NHL history to register a five-game goal streak at age 18 or younger and 35 or older (regular season and/or playoffs). The only other player to have recorded a four-game streak in that scenario is Sidney Crosby.
 

* Playing with “House Money,” Brandon Bussi could be behind Staal for a second straight start – and if he is, the 27-year-old first-year NHLers would be seeking to become the first goaltender in League history to make his first two career playoff starts in the Final and win both. Bussi signed as a free agent with the two-time Stanley Cup champion Panthers last summer but never played for the club as the Hurricanes claimed him off waivers before his soon-to-be record-setting season started. After winning his NHL debut in October, Bussi twice tied Cam Ward’s franchise record for longest winning streak and then came within one of the club mark for longest point streak – all part of a campaign in which he became the fastest goaltender in NHL history to 30 career wins (37 GP).

* Those historic performances helped the Western Michigan University alum secure a three-year contract and – after four seasons in the AHL with the Providence Bruins (plus a stint in the ECHL) – now an unheralded trip to the Stanley Cup Final. Bussi’s contract was accompanied by a $10,000 donation to the Autism Society of North Carolina, a cause he also supports through the art on his mask in tribute to his brother, Dylan, who has autism. The right-handed catching undrafted goaltender – whose first-ever shot against in the Stanley Cup Playoffs came off the stick of a player who moments earlier had a historic hat trick and four-point period (followed soon after by a penalty shot stop) – has stopped 36 of 40 shots against since entering in Game 3 and now has the most total wins by a goaltender (32) in his first NHL season since Roman Cechmanek with the 2000-01 Flyers (37; min. 1 W in regular season and playoffs).

* Marner (10-19—29 in 20 GP), the player who fired the first playoff puck at Bussi, has already set a single-postseason franchise record (points) and sits one assist from matching another. Only seven active players have hit 30 points in a playoff year, including multiple in each of the past two years. The NHL can feature at least one 30-point performer in the Stanley Cup Playoffs in three consecutive postseasons for the fourth time (8 years from 1987 to 1994; 3 years from 2020 to 2022 and 1983 to 1985).

* The first-year Golden Knights star can become the sixth different player since 1995 to register 10 or more goals and 20-plus assists in the same postseason. He would join Draisaitl (2025 & 2024), McDavid (2022), Evgeny Kuznetsov (2018), Logan Couture (2016) and Evgeni Malkin (2009).

* Another franchise record setter this year is Howden (14-4—18 in 20 GP), who returns to Carolina where he found the back of the net in each of the first two games of the series, bringing his road goal total to 10 this postseason – just three shy of the NHL record set last year. Howden beat Bussi for a tying goal in Game 4, pushing his Stanley Cup Final point streak to four games and moving within of becoming the fifth active player with 15 goals in a single postseason. He also can become the 12th player in NHL history to score in each of the first three road games of the Final – the only active players to do so achieved the feat last year (Sam Bennett and Brad Marchand, both 3 road GP). Of note, this excludes Brayden Point in 2020 when all games were contested in a neutral-site bubble.

* The man they call “Wild Bill” has been in the thick of the action throughout the Final despite playing only 24 games in 2025-26 leading up to it, sharing the series lead in plus-minus (+6) while averaging a point-per-game dating to the last round (3-3—6 in 6 GP). Karlsson missed nearly six months before returning to the Vegas lineup for Game 1 of the Second Round against the Ducks – the club that drafted him in the second round of the 2011 NHL Draft (53rd overall). After only 18 games with the Ducks, Karlsson was dealt to the Blue Jackets in 2014-15 where he spent the next two seasons before being selected by Vegas in the expansion draft and serving as a driving force in their run to the 2018 Final.

* With only 20 NHL goals to his name at the time (including playoffs), Karlsson broke out with an historic 2017-18 campaign in which he led the team with career highs in goals (43) and points (78) – both among the 10 highest totals by a player in any club’s inaugural season – including a breathtaking tally on the night Vegas clinched the Pacific Division title and retired the No. 58 to honor the victims of the mass shooting that preceded their first game. He won the 2017-18 Lady Byng Trophy to become the first player since Wayne Gretzky to secure an end-of-season award for a club in its inaugural season and, five years later was one of six original “Misfits” to lift the Stanley Cup. Injury trouble set in at the 2024 Winter Classic and later ended a run that saw him play in each of Vegas’ first 558 games (regular season and playoffs, alongside Jonathan Marchessault as the only ones to do so) but over the past two postseasons has 15 points in 25 playoff contests while ranking third among all NHL players in plus-minus (+16).

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