Hurricanes-Golden Knights Game 6 updates: Carolina leads Vegas by 2 in third
Can the Carolina Hurricanes take the final step?
Or will the Vegas Golden Knights force a Game 7 in Raleigh on Wednesday.
We’ll know more later. For now, the Golden Knights — without regular center William Karlsson — and Hurricanes will decide things on the ice, at T-Mobile Center.
Follow here and refresh for the latest updates from the game.
Vegas power play goes for naught
Vegas earned a power play when Eric Robinson was assessed a minor for high sticking, but multiple chances inside the Canes’ zne went for nothing. Their best chance was a quick 2-on-0 down low on Brandon Bussi, who dove out to make the stop and the puck flew past him and hit the crossbar, ricocheting out of play.
Carolina clamping down on defense
The Hurricanes have started the third period on lockdown, forcing Vegas into long dump=ins and pinning the Knights to the boards and in the corners. Brandon Bussi has been forced into one good save in the first 3:21 of the final frame.
Hurricanes lead by two
Jackson Blake was everywhere on that shift, first gaining the zone, then chasing the puck into the corner, then mucking in front of the net, and then finally settling at the top of the slot and one-timing home a pass from the corner by Logan Stankoven.
That goal, at 13:31 of the second period, has put the Hurricanes on top, 2-0.
It should also be noted, this is that line’s second goal of the game, with Taylor Hall getting the first.
Vegas, Carolina locking it down
The second period has been played more like most people thought a lot of this series would be played: tight, physical and void of high-danger scoring chances.
Brandon Bussi has made the stops he’s had to make, as has Carter Hart. Shots are just 3-3 in the second, and the Canes still lead, 1-0.
Canes, Knights kill penalties
The end of the first period sees Carolina leading 1-0, and both teams have had power play chances in this one. In fact, Vegas will start the second period with some power play time left on its second PP of the game. Taylor Hall is flying out there for the Canes, though his turnover nearly led to a Vegas goal in the latter part of the frame, and indirectly led to the Knights’ PP opportunity, which came as Logan Stankoven crosschecked a player as they finally cleared the zone following that turnover.
Brandon Bussi has also been huge, making a diving save on the PK in the dying seconds of the first period and stopping five shots in the final 40 seconds to preserve the Hurricanes 1-0 lead.
Close call for Vegas
Brandon Bussi made a pair of saves on the Knights’ second and third shots on goal, and the last was a bit funky. The puck bounced off the glass behind the cage, then off of a Knights player in front of Bussi and onto the top of the net. The net is tied tightly, though, and the puck bounced off of that and back toward the crease, where a seemingly calm Bussi snagged it with his glove.
Hurricanes in front early
Taylor Hall took a long outlet feed up the left wall from Jaccob Slavin, broke in up the left side over the blue line and fired a wrister past Carter Hart to put the Hurricanes ahead, 1-0. That set off a very loud roar from the thousands — no exaggeration — of Hurricanes fans in the building.
Early physicality
Playing the body is an obvious early focus for Vegas, which seems intent on finishing their checks at every turn. Each team has had a player or two involved in an early shoving match.
A sea of red
Carolina Hurricanes fans have traveled well ... very well.
Hundreds if not close to 1,000 red-clad hockey fans streamed down the steps and crowded the glass in front of the Hurricanes’ zone prior to warmups. Outside the rink, hundreds gathered in front of a bar along the plaza linking T-Mobile Arena to Las Vegas Blvd. In both locations, familiar, “Let’s go Hurricanes / Let’s go Canes!” chants broke out, irking the local fans into a cascade of boos.
If the Hurricanes are going to win the Stanley Cup in Game 6, there will be plenty of people in the stands celebrating along with them.
Reilly Smith in for Karlsson?
Karlsson, injured in Game 5, will not be in the lineup for the Golden Knights in Game 6.
His replacement? Vegas coach John Tortorella wasn’t saying Sunday morning at the Knights’ media availability.
It’s expected veteran forward Reilly Smith will get his chance. Smith is an original member of the expansion Knights, one of the “Golden Misfits” and won a Cup with Vegas in 2023, scoring the Cup-winning goal. He has been used in six playoff games this postseason and not played since the Utah Mammoth series.
Regardless of who draws in, Tortorella is expecting a winning effort from his team.
“For me to watch it, I get a front-row seat on how these guys handle themselves,” he said. “They have done it the right way. Great pros. They’ll be ready to play. What the result is, I have no idea, but they’ll be ready to play.”
Carolina misfits?
Taylor Hall said some of the Canes feel like “misfits” in a way, having come from other teams in various ways.
“You have the guys who have been drafted here and the guys who have been here for a long time,” Hall said Sunday before Game 6. “But there’s a few of us who played for multiple teams. We’ve come in and played a lot better, had big roles than we had other places. We take pride in that.”
A former No. 1 overall pick in the NHL draft, Hall was cast aside by the Chicago Blackhawks and has played for seven NHL teams in his 16-year career. He has not won a Stanley Cup.
Hall had 18 points in 18 playoff games before Game 6 and was tied with Blake for the team lead.
‘Best foot forward’
Are the Carolina Hurricanes poised to take the final step?
That was the question as the Canes practiced Saturday before their flight to Las Vegas and Game 6 of the Stanley Cup Final on Sunday against the Golden Knights.
The Canes, with a 3-2 lead in the series, want to end it quickly, win Game 6 and bring the Cup back to Raleigh. They also realize they can’t get ahead of themselves, that the season-long mission is not complete.
“We want to take advantage of it, and we’ve got to put our best foot forward,” Canes coach Rod Brind’Amour said Saturday after the practice session at Invisalign Arena. “That’s really the message.”
The Golden Knights will be at home at T-Mobile Arena, facing an end to their season and their quest for a Cup if they can’t find a way to turn back the Hurricanes in Game 6.
After the 4-2 loss to the Canes in Game 5 at Lenovo Center, Vegas coach John Tortorella tersely said, “We’ll be back. I’m leaving my clothes here. We’ll be back.”
Meaning for a Game 7. Maybe Tortorella left his luggage at the Umstead or not, but he has remained insistent his team would win at home, make the long trek back and decide it all in a Game 7 at Lenovo Center.
The Hurricanes had a full complement of players at the Saturday practice, including goaltender Frederik Andersen. Brind’Amour, in talking about the Game 6 lineup, again said “everybody’s available” and could play.
Andersen was pulled out of Game 3 in Las Vegas and has not suited up for a game as Brandon Bussi took over as the starter and Pyotr Kochetkov served as the backup in Games 4 & 5.
Asked Saturday about Andersen, Brind’Amour did not rule out Andersen being Bussi’s backup for Game 6.
The lines Saturday had Sebastian Aho centering Andrei Svechnikov and Jordan Martinook, and Jordan Staal between Nikolaj Ehlers and Seth Jarvis. Brind’Amour said after Game 4 that those combinations felt right and might stick with them, noting Martinook is the kind of player who always brings added energy to his line.
It was Martinook’s energy and hard forechecking in Game 5 that led to the game-winning goal by Aho, the center’s first of the Cup Final.
How much does he help the line?
“Ask them. I don’t think that I have,” Martinook said Saturday, smiling. “Those guys want it so bad, as do I, and I think you’re just doing everything you can.”
Canes forward Jackson Blake, at 22, is doing all he can. The winger has six goals and 18 points in the playoffs, tying linemate Taylor Hall for the team points lead.
Blake’s father, Jason, is a former NHL forward who has long critiqued all of his son’s games and has continued in the Cup Final, with a different twist.
“Obviously there’s always stuff that I can work on that stands out to him,” Blake said Saturday. “But he knows how tight it is out there and how good the other team is.
“He always says you’ve got to have fun with it and enjoy it. I think he’s just happy and proud to be along on the journey.”
This story was originally published June 14, 2026 at 8:00 AM with the headline "Hurricanes-Golden Knights Game 6 updates: Carolina leads Vegas by 2 in third."