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Carolina Hurricanes From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia 2008–09 Carolina Hurricanes season Carolina Hurricanes Conference Eastern Division Southeast Founded 1972 History New England Whalers 1972 - 1979 (WHA) Hartford Whalers 1979 - 1997 (NHL) Carolina Hurricanes 1997 - present (NHL) Home Arena RBC Center City Raleigh, North Carolina Colors Red, Black, White, Silver Media FSN South WCMC (99.9 FM) Owner(s) Peter Karmanos General Manager Jim Rutherford Head Coach Peter Laviolette Captain Rod Brind'Amour Minor League Affiliates Albany River Rats (AHL) Florida Everblades (ECHL) Stanley Cups 2005–06 Conference Championships 2001–02, 2005–06 Division Championships 1998–99, 2001–02, 2005–06 The Carolina Hurricanes are a professional ice hockey team based in Raleigh, North Carolina. They are members of the Southeast Division of the Eastern Conference of the National Hockey League (NHL), and play home games at the 18,680 capacity RBC Center. The team was formed in 1971 as the New England Whalers of the World Hockey Association, and moved into the NHL in 1979 as the Hartford Whalers, relocating to North Carolina in 1997. They won their first Stanley Cup during the 2005–06 season, beating the Edmonton Oilers four games to three. Contents [hide] 1 Franchise History 1.1 In New England 1.2 In Carolina 1.3 2005–06 Stanley Cup Champions 1.4 After the Cup 2 Season-by-season record 3 Notable players 3.1 Current roster 3.2 Team captains 3.3 Honored members 3.4 Broadcasters 3.5 First-round draft picks 3.6 Franchise scoring leaders 4 NHL awards and trophies 5 Franchise records 5.1 Individual 5.2 Team 6 References 7 See also 8 External links [edit] Franchise History [edit] In New England See also: Hartford Whalers The New England Whalers were born in November 1971 when the World Hockey Association awarded a franchise to begin play in Boston, Massachusetts. For the first two-and-a-half years of their existence, the club played their home games at the Boston Arena, Boston Garden, and The Big E Coliseum in West Springfield. However, sagging attendance forced the team to Hartford, Connecticut. On January 11, 1975, the team played its first game in front of a sellout crowd at the Hartford Civic Center Coliseum. With the exception of a period in the late 1970s when the Whalers played at the Springfield Civic Center while their Hartford home was being renovated (due to a portion of the roof collapsing after a blizzard), the franchise was largely located in Hartford. As one of the most stable WHA teams, the Whalers, along with the Edmonton Oilers, Quebec Nordiques, and Winnipeg Jets, were admitted to the NHL when the rival leagues merged in 1979. Because the NHL already had a team in the New England area, the Boston Bruins, the former WHA team was renamed the Hartford Whalers. Unfortunately, the team was never as successful in the NHL as they had been in the WHA, recording only three winning seasons. They peaked with their only playoff series victory in 1986 over the Quebec Nordiques and extended the Montreal Canadiens to overtime of the seventh game in the second round, followed by a regular season division title in 1986–87. 1992 was the last time the Hartford Whalers made the playoffs. [edit] In Carolina The Whalers found it increasingly difficult to compete in a changed financial environment during the 1990s, in part because Hartford was the smallest U.S.-based market in the league. In March 1997, Whalers owner Peter Karmanos announced that the team would move elsewhere after the 1996–97 season because of the team's inability to negotiate a satisfactory construction and lease package for a new arena in Hartford. In July, Karmanos announced that the Whalers would move to the Research Triangle area of North Carolina and the new Entertainment and Sports Arena in Raleigh, become the Carolina Hurricanes, and change their team colors to red and black. Due to the relatively short time frame for the move, Karmanos himself thought of and decided upon the new name for the club, rather than holding a contest as is sometimes done. Unfortunately, the ESA would not be complete for two more years, and the only other hockey building in the Triangle was Dorton Arena, a 5,100-seat, 45-year-old building which was totally unsuitable for NHL hockey. The Hurricanes were thus forced to play home games in Greensboro, ninety minutes away from Raleigh, for their first two seasons after the move. This choice was disastrous for the franchise's attendance and reputation. With a capacity of over 21,000 people for hockey, the Greensboro Coliseum became the highest-capacity arena in the NHL, but Triangle-area fans proved unwilling to make the drive down I-40 to Greensboro, and fans from the Piedmont Triad mostly refused to support a lame-duck team that had displaced the longtime Greensboro/Carolina Monarchs minor-league franchise. Furthermore, only 29 out of 82 games were televised, and radio play-by-play coverage on WPTF was often pre-empted by North Carolina State Wolfpack basketball (for whose broadcasts WPTF was the flagship station), leaving these games totally unavailable to those who did not have a ticket. With attendance routinely well below the league average, Sports Illustrated ran a story titled "Natural Disaster,"[1] and ESPN anchors mocked the "Green Acres" of empty seats; in a 2006 interview, Karmanos admitted that "as it turns out, Greensboro was probably a mistake." For 1998–99 the Hurricanes curtained off most of the upper deck, lowering the Coliseum's stated capacity to about 12,000, but attendance continued to lag. On the ice, however, the 'Canes were now out of the doldrums; led by the return of longtime Whalers captain Ron Francis, Keith Primeau's 30 goals, and Gary Roberts' 178 penalty minutes, they won the new Southeast Division by eight points and made the playoffs for the first time since 1992. Tragedy struck hours after their first-round loss to the Bruins when defenceman Steve Chiasson was thrown from his pickup truck and killed in a single-vehicle drunk-driving accident. Despite their move to the brand-new ESA, the Hurricanes played lackluster hockey in 1999–2000, failing to make the playoffs. In 2000–01, though, they claimed the eighth seed, which nosed out Boston, and landed a first-round date with the defending champs, the New Jersey Devils. Although the Hurricanes were bounced by the Devils in six games, the series is seen as the real "arrival" of hockey in the Triangle. Down 3–0 in the series, the 'Canes extended it to a sixth game, thereby becoming only the tenth team in NHL history to do so. Game 6 in Raleigh featured their best playoff crowd that year, as well as their noisiest. [2] Despite the 5–1 loss, Carolina was given a standing ovation by their home crowd as the game ended, erasing many of the doubts that the city would not warm up to the team.[3] The 'Canes made national waves for the first time in the 2002 playoffs. They survived a late charge from the Washington Capitals to win the division, but expectations were low entering the first round against the defending Eastern Conference champion Devils. However, Arturs Irbe and Kevin Weekes were solid in goal, and the Hurricanes won two games in overtime as they put away the Devils in six games. The second-round matchup was against the Montreal Canadiens, who were riding a wave of emotion after their captain Saku Koivu's return from cancer treatment. In the third
period of Game 4 in Montreal, down 2–1 in games and 3–0 in score, Carolina would tie the game and then win on Niclas Wallin's overtime goal. The game became known to Hurricanes fans as the "Miracle at Molson"; Carolina won the next two games by a combined 13–3 margin over a dejected Habs club to take the series. In the Eastern Conference finals, Carolina met the heavily-favored Toronto Maple Leafs. In Game 6 in Toronto, the Leafs' Mats Sundin tied the game with 22 seconds remaining to send it to overtime, where Carolina's Martin Gelinas would score to send the franchise to their first Stanley Cup finals. During this series, several Hurricanes fan traditions drew hockey-wide media attention for the first time: fans met the team at the airport on the return from every road trip, and echoed football-season habits honed for games across the parking lot by hosting massive tailgate parties before each home game, a relative novelty in the cold-weather-centric NHL. Inside the building, CBC's Don Cherry lauded the RBC Center as "the loudest building in the NHL"[citation needed], praise that would be echoed in 2006[4]. In the Stanley Cup finals, Carolina would face the Detroit Red Wings, thought to be the prohibitive favorite all year. Though the Canes stunned the Wings in Game 1, when Francis scored in the first minute of overtime, Detroit stormed back to win the next four games. Game 3 in Raleigh featured a triple-overtime thriller (won by Detroit's Igor Larionov, the eldest player to score a last-round goal), which sportscasters called one of the best finals games in history[citation needed]. Despite the 4–1 series loss, it had been by far the most successful season in franchise history. Carolina's alternate logo, a gale storm watch flag (rather than the dual flags indicating a hurricane). The black triangle represents the Triangle of North Carolina, and the flagpole is a hockey stick.The momentum from the Cup Finals appearance did not last, however, and the next two seasons saw the 'Canes drop into the cellar of the NHL rankings; many of the new fans attracted to the team (and to hockey itself) during the 2002 playoff run lost interest and attendance declined. One of the few positive results of these losing years was the team's drafting of future star Eric Staal in 2003. In December 2003, the team fired Paul Maurice, who had been their coach since their next-to-last season in Hartford, replacing him with former New York Islanders bench boss Peter Laviolette. Weekes remained tough, but the offense was suspect; center Josef Vasicek led the team with a mere 19 goals and 26 assists for 45 points. [edit] 2005–06 Stanley Cup Champions The outcome of the 2004–05 NHL lockout led to the shrinking of the payroll to $26 million. The 'Canes, however, turned out to be one of the NHL's biggest surprises, turning in the best season in the franchise's 34-year history. They finished with a 52–22–8 record and 112 points, shattering the previous franchise record set by the 1986–87 Whalers. It was the first time ever that the franchise had passed the 50-win and 100-point plateaus. The 112-point figure was one point behind the Ottawa Senators for the best record in the East, and tied with the Dallas Stars for the fourth-best record in the league (behind Detroit and Ottawa). However, the Stars had one more win, meaning the Hurricanes finished fifth overall (wins are the first tiebreaker for playoff seeding). Still, it was far and away the Hurricanes' best finish as an NHL team. They also ran away with their third Southeast Division title, finishing 20 points ahead of the Tampa Bay Lightning. Attendance increased from 2003–04, averaging just under 15,600 per game, and the team made a profit for the first time since the move from Hartford.[5] Main article: 2006 Stanley Cup Playoffs In the playoffs, after losing the first two games of the conference quarterfinal series against the Montreal Canadiens, Laviolette lifted goalkeeper Martin Gerber in favor of rookie Cam Ward. The Hurricanes went on to win both games in Montreal, tying up the playoff series and turning the momentum around, winning the series on a Game Six overtime goal by Cory Stillman. Carolina faced the New Jersey Devils in the conference semifinals, which proved surprisingly one-sided, as the Hurricanes beat the Devils in five games. Stillman struck again, once again scoring the series-winning goal. In the Eastern Conference finals, the Hurricanes faced the Buffalo Sabres, who had finished just one spot behind the Canes in the overall standings. The Sabres were devastated by injuries, at one point playing without their top four defensemen. The contentious series saw both coaches — Lindy Ruff and Laviolette — taking public verbal shots at each other's team, but in the deciding Game Seven, the Hurricanes rallied with three goals in the third to win by a score of 4–2. Rod Brind'Amour scored the game winner as the Hurricanes reached the Stanley Cup finals for the second time in team history. The Cup finals were against the Edmonton Oilers, the first time in NHL history that two former WHA franchises had played against one another in the finals. The Canes rallied from a 3–0 deficit in Game 1 to win 5–4 after Rod Brind'Amour scored with 30 seconds left. In Game 2, the 'Canes shelled the Oilers 5–0 to take a two-game lead. The Oilers won Game 3 in Edmonton, 2–1, as Ryan Smyth scored the game-winning goal with 2:47 left to play. Carolina rebounded in Game 4 with a 2–1 victory, and came home with a chance to win the Cup on home ice. However, game five saw the Oilers come back with a stunning 4–3 overtime win on a shorthanded breakaway by Fernando Pisani. Suddenly the momentum started to turn the Oilers' way. In Game 6 in Edmonton, Carolina was soundly defeated 4–0. In Game 7, before the second-largest home crowd in franchise history (18,978), the Hurricanes won 3-1, sealing the Hurricanes' first Stanley Cup championship in franchise history. Ward was honored with the
Conn Smythe Trophy for the playoffs' most valuable player, becoming just the fourth rookie to be honored with the award. Several Canes raised the Cup for the first time in long NHL careers; Rod Brind'Amour and Bret Hedican had both played over 15 years without winning the Cup, while Glen Wesley — the last remaining Hartford Whaler on the Hurricanes' roster — had waited 18 seasons. The Hurricanes' Stanley Cup championship marked the first professional major league sports title for a team from the Carolinas. As well, they were the only NHL team in history to lose nine or more games in a year's playoffs, yet still win the Stanley Cup. [edit] After the Cup The Hurricanes were not able to follow up their success. In 2006-07, the Hurricanes finished third in the Southeast and eleventh overall in the Eastern Conference. This finish made them the first champions since the 1938–39 Chicago Blackhawks to have failed to qualify for the playoffs both the seasons before and after their championship season. In 2007-08, Carolina again missed out as Washington stormed back to take the division title on the last day of the season, leaving the Hurricanes second in the division and ninth overall in the conference, and making the Canes only the second club in NHL history to miss the playoffs for two seasons running after a Cup triumph The last player remaining from the Hartford days, defenseman Glen Wesley, announced his retirement after the 2007-08 season. As of Wesley's retirement, the only remaining legacies of the Hurricanes' Hartford days are broadcasters Chuck Kaiton, John Forslund and Tripp Tracy, equipment managers Wally Tatomir, Skip Cunningham and Bob Gorman, and the goal horn sound from the Hartford Civic Center that remains in use at the RBC Center. [edit] Season-by-season record This is a partial list of the last five seasons completed by the Hurricanes. For the full season-by-season history, see Carolina Hurricanes seasons Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, OTL = Overtime Losses, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against, PIM = Penalties in minutes Records as of August 2008.[6] Season GP W L T OTL Pts GF GA PIM Finish Playoffs 2002–03 82 22 43 11 6 61 171 240 1208 5th, Southeast Did not qualify 2003–04 82 28 34 14 6 76 172 209 1102 3rd, Southeast Did not qualify 2004–05 Season cancelled due to 2004–05 NHL lockout 2005–061 82 52 22 — 8 112 294 260 1107 1st, Southeast Stanley Cup Champions, 4–3 (Oilers) 2006–07 82 40 34 — 8 88 241 253 1007 3rd, Southeast Did not qualify 2007–08 82 43 33 — 6 92 252 249 1183 2nd, Southeast Did not qualify Totals 820 362 330 86 42 852 2186 2290 11124 — 1 As of the 2005–06 NHL season, all games tied after overtime are decided in a shootout; shootout losses are recorded as OTL in the standings. [edit] Notable players [edit] Current roster view • talk • editUpdated November 16, 2008.[1] # Nat Player Pos S/G Age Acquired Birthplace 33 Russia Babchuk, AntonAnton Babchuk 2.0 D R 24 2006 Kiev, U.S.S.R. 18 Canada Bayda, RyanRyan Bayda 6.0 LW L 27 2006 Saskatoon, Saskatchewan 17 Canada Brind'Amour, RodRod Brind'Amour (C) 4.0 C L 38 2000 Ottawa, Ontario 28 Canada Brookbank, WadeWade Brookbank 6.0 LW L 31 2007 Lanigan, Saskatchewan 77 United States Corvo, JoeJoe Corvo 2.0 D R 31 2008 Oak Park, Illinois 8 United States Cullen, MattMatt Cullen 4.0 C L 32 2007 Virginia, Minnesota 39 United States Dwyer, PatrickPatrick Dwyer 7.0 RW R 25 2006 Great Falls, Montana 44 United States Eaves, PatrickPatrick Eaves 7.0 RW R 24 2008 Calgary, Alberta 6 United States Gleason, TimTim Gleason 2.0 D L 25 2006 Clawson, Michigan 5 Czech Republic Kaberle, FrantisekFrantisek Kaberle 2.0 D L 35 2004 Kladno, Czechoslovakia 59 United States LaRose, ChadChad LaRose 7.0 RW R 26 2003 Fraser, Michigan 49 Canada Leighton, MichaelMichael Leighton 1.0 G L 27 2007 Petrolia, Ontario 22 Czech Republic Melichar, JosefJosef Melichar 2.0 D L 29 2008 Ceske Budejovice, Czechoslovakia 25 Finland Pitkanen, JoniJoni Pitkanen 2.0 D L 25 2008 Oulu, Finland 15 Finland Ruutu, TuomoTuomo Ruutu 6.0 LW L 25 2008 Vantaa, Finland 14 Russia Samsonov, SergeiSergei Samsonov 6.0 LW R 30 2008 Moscow, U.S.S.R. 4 Germany Seidenberg, DennisDennis Seidenberg 2.0 D L 27 2007 Schwenningen, West Germany 12 Canada Staal, EricEric Staal (A) 4.0 C L 24 2003 Thunder Bay, Ontario 16 Canada Sutter, BrandonBrandon Sutter 4.0 C R 19 2007 Huntington, New York 24 Canada Walker, ScottScott Walker 7.0 RW R 35 2006 Cambridge, Ontario 7 Sweden Wallin, NiclasNiclas Wallin 2.0 D L 33 2000 Boden, Sweden 30 Canada Ward, CamCam Ward 1.0 G L 24 2002 Saskatoon, Saskatchewan 13 Canada Whitney, RayRay Whitney (A) 6.0 LW R 36 2005 Fort Saskatchewan, Alberta 11 Canada Williams, JustinJustin Williams 7.0 RW R 27 2004 Cobourg, Ontario [edit] Team captains Note: This list of team captains does not include captains from the Hartford Whalers (NHL) and New England Whalers (WHA). Kevin Dineen, 1997–98 Keith Primeau, 1998–99 Ron Francis, 1999–2004 No captain, 2004–05 (Lockout) Rod Brind'Amour, 2005 - present [edit] Honored members Retired numbers: 3 Steve Chiasson D, 1996–99, Unofficially retired following his 1999 death while a member of the team. 10 Ron Francis C, 1981–91 (Hartford), 1998–2004 (Carolina), Number retired January 28, 2006. 99 Wayne Gretzky Number retired league wide February 6, 2000. As the Hartford Whalers, the club had retired three additional numbers. After the move, the Hurricanes resumed issuing numbers 2 for Rick Ley (D, 1972–81) and 19 for John McKenzie (RW, 1977–79), but kept Gordie Howe's 9 out of circulation (though without a banner). The club has announced plans to re-retire 2 in honor of Glen Wesley, the only player to wear that jersey as a Hurricane, in February 2009.[7] Hall of Famers: Ron Francis, who captained the team in both Hartford and Carolina and spent fifteen years with the franchise overall, was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2007.
The only other Hall member to have played in a Hurricanes jersey is Paul Coffey, who spent one and a half seasons in Carolina near the end of his career (as well as, two seasons prior, twenty games in Hartford). In the franchise's history, WHA and NHL Whalers Gordie Howe and Dave Keon are both members. In addition, longtime franchise radio play-by-play announcer Chuck Kaiton received the Foster Hewitt Memorial Award in 2004, an honor granted by the Hall of Fame. [edit] Broadcasters John Forslund, TV play-by-play Tripp Tracy, TV color analyst Chuck Kaiton, radio play-by-play [edit] First-round draft picks Note: This list does not include selections of the Hartford Whalers. 1997: Nikos Tselios (22nd overall) 1998: Jeff Heerema (11th overall) 1999: David Tanabe (16th overall) 2000: none 2001: Igor Knyazev (15th overall) 2002: Cam Ward (25th overall) 2003: Eric Staal (2nd overall) 2004: Andrew Ladd (4th overall) 2005: Jack Johnson (3rd overall) 2006: none 2007: Brandon Sutter (11th overall) 2008: Zach Boychuk (14th overall) [edit] Franchise scoring leaders These are the top-ten point-scorers in franchise (Hartford & Carolina) history. Figures are updated after each completed NHL regular season. Note: Pos = Position; GP = Games Played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; P/G = Points per game; * = current Hurricanes player Points Goals Assists Player Pos GP G A Pts P/G Ron Francis C 1186 382 793 1175 0.99 Kevin Dineen RW 708 250 294 544 0.77 Jeff O'Neill RW 673 198 218 416 0.62 Rod Brind'Amour* C 534 149 254 403 0.75 Pat Verbeek RW 433 192 211 403 0.93 Blaine Stoughton RW 357 219 158 377 1.06 Geoff Sanderson LW 479 196 173 369 0.77 Ray Ferraro C 442 157 194 351 0.79 Andrew Cassels C 438 97 253 350 0.80 Sami Kapanen LW 520 145 203 348 0.67 Player Pos G Ron Francis C 382 Kevin Dineen RW 250 Blaine Stoughton RW 219 Jeff O'Neill C 198 Geoff Sanderson LW 196 Pat Verbeek RW 192 Ray Ferraro C 157 Rod Brind'Amour* C 149 Sami Kapanen LW 145 Eric Staal* RW 129 Player Pos A Ron Francis C 793 Kevin Dineen RW 294 Rod Brind'Amour* C 254 Andrew Cassels C 253 Jeff O'Neill C 218 Pat Verbeek RW 211 Sami Kapanen LW 203 Ray Ferraro C 194 Glen Wesley D 176 Geoff Sanderson LW 173 [edit] NHL awards and trophies Stanley Cup 2005–06 Prince of Wales Trophy 2001–02, 2005–06 Conn Smythe Trophy Cam Ward: 2005–06 Frank J. Selke Trophy Rod Brind'Amour: 2005–06, 2006–07 King Clancy Memorial Trophy Ron Francis: 2001–02 Lady Byng Memorial Trophy Ron Francis: 2001–02 Lester Patrick Trophy Peter Karmanos: 1997–98 [edit] Franchise records [edit] Individual Most goals in a season: Blaine Stoughton, 56 (1979–80) Most assists in a season: Ron Francis, 69 (1989–90) Most points in a season: Mike Rogers, 105 (1979–80 & 1980–81) Most penalty minutes in a season: Torrie Robertson, 358 (1985–86) Most points in a season, defenceman: Mark Howe, 80 (1979–80) Most points in a season, rookie: Sylvain Turgeon, 72 (1983–84) Most wins in a season: Martin Gerber, 38 (2005–06) Most shutouts in a season: Arturs Irbe; Kevin Weekes, 6 (1998–99 & 2000–01; 2003–04) Most points in one postseason: Eric Staal, 28 (2006) Most shutouts in one postseason: Kevin Weekes; Cam Ward, 2 (2002; 2006) Fastest hat trick: Ray Whitney, 1 minute 40 seconds, 8 February 2007 vs. Boston Bruins [edit] Team Most wins in a season: 52 (2005–06) Most points in a season: 112 (2005–06) [edit] References ^ Callaghan, Gerry. "Natural Disaster." Sports Illustrated, October 27, 1997; Web article retrieved November 19, 2008. ^ ESPN.com, New Jersey
Devils/Carolina Hurricanes NHL recap on ESPN ^ SportsIllustrated.com, SI's 2001-02 NHL Team Previews: Hurricanes ^ Fayetteville Online, Hurricanes fans bring the noise ^ ESPN.com, NHL Attendance ^ Hockeydb.com, Carolina Hurricanes season statistics and records ^ DeCock, Luke, News and Observer (Raleigh). Wesley to be honored Feb. 17. Accessed September 21, 2008. [edit] See also List of NHL players List of NHL seasons List of Stanley Cup champions [edit] External links The Official website of the Carolina Hurricanes [show]v • d • eCarolina Hurricanes Franchise • Players • Coaches • GMs • Seasons • Records • Draft picks • RBC Center • Albany River Rats • Florida Everblades • Hartford Whalers [show] Links to related articles Preceded by Tampa Bay Lightning Stanley Cup Champions 2005–06 Succeeded by Anaheim Ducks [show]v • d • eCarolina Hurricanes seasons Hartford • 1997–98 • 1998–99 • 1999–00 • 2000–01 • 2001–02 • 2002–03 • 2003–04 • 2004–05 • 2005–06 • 2006–07 • 2007–08 • 2008–09 Bold indicates Stanley Cup victory [show]v • d • eCarolina Hurricanes head coaches Maurice • Laviolette [show]v • d • eNational Hockey League Eastern Conference Western Conference Atlantic Northeast Southeast Central Northwest Pacific New Jersey Devils Boston Bruins Atlanta Thrashers Chicago Blackhawks Calgary Flames Anaheim Ducks New York Islanders Buffalo Sabres Carolina Hurricanes Columbus Blue Jackets Colorado Avalanche Dallas Stars New York Rangers Montreal Canadiens Florida Panthers Detroit Red Wings Edmonton Oilers Los Angeles Kings Philadelphia Flyers Ottawa Senators Tampa Bay Lightning Nashville Predators Minnesota Wild Phoenix Coyotes Pittsburgh Penguins Toronto Maple Leafs Washington Capitals St. Louis Blues Vancouver Canucks San Jose Sharks Seasons (structure) · Stanley Cup (Playoffs–Champions) · Presidents' Trophy · All-Star Game · Draft · Players (Association) · All-Star Teams · Awards History · Timeline · Defunct teams · NHA · Original Six · 1967 Expansion · WHA · Streaks · Droughts · Hall of Fame (members) · Rivalries · Arenas · Rules · Violence Category · Portal [show]v • d • eSports teams based in North Carolina Australian Rules Football USAFL/EAFL: North Carolina Tigers, WAFA: North Carolina Lady Tigers Baseball IL: Durham Bulls • Charlotte Knights, SL: Carolina Mudcats, CL: Kinston Indians • Winston-Salem Warthogs, SAL: Asheville Tourists • Greensboro Grasshoppers • Hickory Crawdads • Kannapolis Intimidators, ApL: Burlington Royals, CPL: Asheboro Copperheads • Edenton Steamers • Fayetteville Swampdogs • Forest City Owls • Gastonia Grizzlies • Outer Banks Daredevils • Thomasville Hi-Toms • Wilmington Sharks • Wilson Tobs Basketball NBA: Charlotte Bobcats, PBL: Wilmington Sea Dawgs, ABA: Winston-Salem Storm Football NFL: Carolina Panthers, AIFA: Carolina Speed • Fayetteville Guard, WPFL: Carolina Queens Hockey NHL: Carolina Hurricanes, ECHL: Charlotte Checkers, SPHL: Fayetteville FireAntz • Twin City Cyclones Rugby SL: Charlotte RFC Soccer USL-1: Carolina RailHawks, USL-2: Charlotte Eagles • Wilmington Hammerheads, PDL: Carolina Dynamo • Cary RailHawks U23's, WL: Carolina Dynamo • Carolina RailHawks Women • Charlotte Lady Eagles College Athletics (NCAA Division I) Appalachian State • Campbell • Charlotte • Davidson • Duke • East Carolina • Elon • Gardner-Webb • High Point • North Carolina • North Carolina A&T State • North Carolina Central • North Carolina State • UNC Asheville • UNC Greensboro • UNC Wilmington • Wake Forest • Western Carolina • Winston-Salem State Main Article: Sports in North Carolina Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carolina_Hurricanes" Categories: Carolina Hurricanes | Sports clubs established in 1972 | Ice hockey teams in North Carolina
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Atlantic 10 Conference Charlotte - Bobby Lutz Dayton - Brian Gregory Duquesne - Ron Everhart Fordham - Dereck Whittenburg George Washington - Karl Hobbs La Salle - John Giannini Rhode Island - Jim Baron Richmond - Chris Mooney St. Bonaventure - Mark Schmidt Saint Joseph's - Phil Martelli Saint Louis - Rick Majerus Temple - Fran Dunphy UMass - Derek Kellogg Xavier - Sean Miller 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! Atlantic 10 Conference
Atlantic Coast Conference Boston College - Al Skinner Clemson - Oliver Purnell Duke - Mike Krzyzewski Florida State - Leonard Hamilton Georgia Tech - Paul Hewitt Maryland - Gary Williams Miami (Florida) - Frank Haith North Carolina - Roy Williams North Carolina State - Sidney Lowe Virginia - Dave Leitao Virginia Tech - Seth Greenberg Wake Forest - Dino Gaudio 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! Atlantic Coast Conference
Atlantic Sun Conference Belmont - Rick Byrd Campbell - Robbie Laing East Tennessee State - Murry Bartow Florida Gulf Coast - Dave Balza Jacksonville - Cliff Warren Kennesaw State - Tony Ingle Lipscomb - Scott Sanderson Mercer - Bob Hoffman North Florida - Matt Kilcullen Stetson - Derek Waugh USC Upstate - Eddie Payne 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! Atlantic Sun Conference
Big 12 Conference Baylor - Scott Drew Colorado - Jeff Bzdelik Iowa State - Greg McDermott Kansas - Bill Self Kansas State - Frank Martin Missouri - Mike Anderson Nebraska - Doc Sadler Oklahoma - Jeff Capel III Oklahoma State - Travis Ford Texas - Rick Barnes Texas A&M - Mark Turgeon Texas Tech - Pat Knight 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! Big 12 Conference
Big East Conference Cincinnati - Mick Cronin Connecticut - Jim Calhoun DePaul - Jerry Wainwright Georgetown - John Thompson III Louisville - Rick Pitino Marquette - Buzz Williams Notre Dame - Mike Brey Pittsburgh - Jamie Dixon Providence - Keno Davis Rutgers - Fred Hill St. John's - Norm Roberts Seton Hall - Bobby Gonzalez South Florida - Stan Heath Syracuse - Jim Boeheim Villanova - Jay Wright West Virginia - Bobby Huggins 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! Big East Conference
Big Sky Conference Eastern Washington - Kirk Earlywine Idaho State - Joe O'Brien Montana - Wayne Tinkle Montana State - Brad Huse Northern Arizona - Mike Adras Northern Colorado - Tad Boyle Portland State - Ken Bone Sacramento State - Brian Katz Weber State - Randy Rahe 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! Big Sky Conference
Big South Conference Charleston Southern - Barclay Radebaugh Coastal Carolina - Cliff Ellis Gardner-Webb - Rick Scruggs High Point - Bart Lundy Liberty - Ritchie McKay Presbyterian - Gregg Nibert Radford - Brad Greenberg UNC-Asheville - Eddie Biedenbach VMI - Duggar Baucom Winthrop - Randy Peele 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! Big South Conference
Big Ten Conference Illinois - Bruce Weber Indiana - Tom Crean Iowa - Todd Lickliter Michigan - John Beilein Michigan State - Tom Izzo Minnesota - Tubby Smith Northwestern - Bill Carmody Ohio State - Thad Matta Penn State - Ed DeChellis Purdue - Matt Painter Wisconsin - Bo Ryan 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! Big Ten Conference
Big West Conference Cal Poly - Kevin Bromley Cal State Fullerton - Bob Burton Cal State Northridge - Bobby Braswell Long Beach State - Dan Monson Pacific - Bob Thomason UC Davis - Gary Stewart UC Irvine - Pat Douglass UC Riverside - Jim Wooldridge UC Santa Barbara - Bob Williams 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! Big West Conference
Colonial Athletic Association Delaware - Monte Ross Drexel - Bruiser Flint George Mason - Jim Larranaga Georgia State - Rod Barnes Hofstra - Tom Pecora James Madison - Matt Brady Northeastern - Bill Coen Old Dominion - Blaine Taylor Towson - Pat Kennedy UNC-Wilmington - Benny Moss Virginia Commonwealth - Anthony Grant William & Mary - Tony Shaver 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! Colonial Athletic Association
Conference USA East Carolina - Mack McCarthy Houston - Tom Penders Marshall - Donnie Jones Memphis - John Calipari Rice - Ben Braun Southern Methodist - Matt Doherty Southern Mississippi - Larry Eustachy Tulane - Dave Dickerson Tulsa - Doug Wojcik UAB - Mike Davis UCF - Kirk Speraw UTEP - Tony Barbee 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! Conference USA
Horizon League - Butler - Brad Stevens Cleveland State - Gary Waters Detroit - Ray McCallum Loyola (Chicago) - Jim Whitesell UIC - Jimmy Collins UW-Green Bay - Tod Kowalczyk UW-Milwaukee - Rob Jeter Valparaiso - Homer Drew Wright State - Brad Brownell Youngstown State - Jerry Slocum 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! Horizon League
Independents Bryant - Tim O'Shea Cal State Bakersfield - Keith Brown Chicago State - Benjy Taylor Houston Baptist - Ron Cottrell Longwood - Mike Gillian New Jersey Institute of Technology - Jim Engles North Carolina Central - Henry Dickerson Savannah State - Horace Broadnax SIU-Edwardsville - Lennox Forrester Texas-Pan American - Tom Schuberth Utah Valley - Dick Hunsaker 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! NCAA Division I independent schools (basketball)
Ivy League Brown - Jesse Agel Columbia - Joe Jones Cornell - Steve Donahue Dartmouth - Terry Dunn Harvard - Tommy Amaker Penn - Glen Miller Princeton - Sydney Johnson Yale - James Jones 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! Ivy League
Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Canisius - Tom Parrotta Fairfield - Ed Cooley Iona - Kevin Willard Loyola (Maryland) - Jimmy Patsos Manhattan - Barry Rohrssen Marist - Chuck Martin Niagara - Joe Mihalich Rider - Tommy Dempsey St. Peter's - John Dunne Siena - Fran McCaffery 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! Mid-American Conference
Mid-American Conference Akron – Keith Dambrot Ball State – Billy Taylor Bowling Green – Louis Orr Buffalo – Reggie Witherspoon Central Michigan – Ernie Ziegler Eastern Michigan – Charles Ramsey Kent State – Geno Ford Miami – Charlie Coles Northern Illinois – Ricardo Patton Ohio – John Groce Toledo – Gene Cross Western Michigan – Steve Hawkins 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! Mid-American Conference
Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Bethune-Cookman - Clifford Reed Coppin State - Ron Mitchell Delaware State - Greg Jackson Florida A&M - Mike Gillespie Hampton - Kevin Nickelberry Howard - Gil Jackson Maryland-Eastern Shore - Meredith Smith Morgan State - Todd Bozeman Norfolk State - Anthony Evans North Carolina A&T - Jerry Eaves South Carolina State - Tim Carter Winston-Salem State - Bobby Collins 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference
Missouri Valley Conference Bradley - Jim Les Creighton - Dana Altman Drake - Mark Phelps Evansville - Marty Simmons Illinois State - Tim Jankovich Indiana State - Kevin McKenna Missouri State - Cuonzo Martin Northern Iowa - Ben Jacobson Southern Illinois - Chris Lowery Wichita State - Gregg Marshall 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! Missouri Valley Conference
Mountain West Conference Air Force - Jeff Reynolds Brigham Young - Dave Rose Colorado State - Tim Miles New Mexico - Steve Alford San Diego State - Steve Fisher Texas Christian - Neil Dougherty UNLV - Lon Kruger Utah - Jim Boylen Wyoming - Heath Schroyer 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! Mountain West Conference
Northeast Conference Central Connecticut State - Howie Dickenman Fairleigh Dickinson - Tom Green LIU-Brooklyn - Jim Ferry Monmouth - Dave Calloway Mount St. Mary's - Milan Brown Quinnipiac - Tom Moore Robert Morris - Mike Rice Jr. Sacred Heart - Dave Bike St. Francis (PA) - Don Friday St. Francis (NY) - Brian Nash Wagner - Mike Deane 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! Northeast Conference
Ohio Valley Conference Austin Peay - Dave Loos Eastern Illinois - Mike Miller Eastern Kentucky - Jeff Neubauer Jacksonville State - James Green Morehead State - Donnie Tyndall Murray State - Billy Kennedy Southeast Missouri - Zac Roman Tennessee-Martin - Bret Campbell Tennessee State - Cy Alexander Tennessee Tech - Mike Sutton 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! Ohio Valley Conference
Pacific-10 Conference Arizona - Russ Pennell Arizona State - Herb Sendek California - Mike Montgomery Oregon - Ernie Kent Oregon State - Craig Robinson Stanford - Johnny Dawkins UCLA - Ben Howland USC - Tim Floyd Washington - Lorenzo Romar Washington State - Tony Bennett 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! Pacific-10 Conference
Patriot League American - Jeff Jones Army - Jim Crews Bucknell - Dave Paulsen Colgate - Emmett Davis Holy Cross - Ralph Willard Lafayette - Fran O'Hanlon Lehigh - Brett Reed Navy - Billy Lange 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! Patriot League
Southeastern Conference Alabama - Philip Pearson Arkansas - John Pelphrey Auburn - Jeff Lebo Florida - Billy Donovan Georgia - Pete Herrmann Kentucky - Billy Gillispie LSU - Trent Johnson Mississippi - Andy Kennedy Mississippi State - Rick Stansbury South Carolina - Darrin Horn Tennessee - Bruce Pearl Vanderbilt - Kevin Stallings 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! Southeastern Conference
Southern Conference Appalachian State - Houston Fancher Chattanooga - John Shulman The Citadel - Ed Conroy College of Charleston - Bobby Cremins Davidson - Bob McKillop Elon - Ernie Nestor Furman - Jeff Jackson Georgia Southern - Jeff Price Samford - Jimmy Tillette UNC-Greensboro - Mike Dement Western Carolina - Larry Hunter Wofford - Mike Young 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! Southern Conference
Southland Conference Central Arkansas - Rand Chappell Lamar - Steve Roccaforte McNeese State - Dave Simmons Nicholls State - J. P. Piper Northwestern State - Mike McConathy Sam Houston State - Bob Marlin Southeastern Louisiana - Jim Yarbrough Stephen F. Austin - Danny Kaspar Texas A&M-Corpus Christi - Perry Clark Texas-Arlington - Scott Cross Texas-San Antonio - Brooks Thompson Texas State - Doug Davalos 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! Southland Conference
Southwestern Athletic Conference Alabama A&M - L. Vann Pettaway Alabama State - Lewis Jackson Alcorn State - Samuel West Arkansas-Pine Bluff - George Ivory Grambling State - Larry Wright Jackson State - Tevester Anderson Mississippi Valley State - Sean Woods Prairie View A&M - Byron Rimm II Southern - Rob Spivery Texas Southern - Tony Harvey 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! Southwestern Athletic Conference
The Summit League Centenary - Greg Gary IPFW - Dane Fife IUPUI - Ron Hunter North Dakota State - Saul Phillips Oakland - Greg Kampe Oral Roberts - Scott Sutton South Dakota State - Scott Nagy Southern Utah - Roger Reid UMKC - Matt Brown Western Illinois - Derek Thomas 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! The Summit League
Sun Belt Conference Arkansas-Little Rock - Steve Shields Arkansas State - Dickey Nutt Denver - Joe Scott Florida Atlantic - Mike Jarvis Florida International - Sergio Rouco Louisiana-Lafayette - Robert Lee Louisiana-Monroe - Orlando Early Middle Tennessee - Kermit Davis New Orleans - Joe Pasternack North Texas - Johnny Jones South Alabama - Ronnie Arrow Troy - Don Maestri Western Kentucky - Ken McDonald 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! Sun Belt Conference
West Coast Conference Gonzaga - Mark Few Loyola Marymount - Rodney Tention Pepperdine - Vance Walberg Portland - Eric Reveno Saint Mary's - Randy Bennett San Diego - Bill Grier San Francisco - Rex Walters Santa Clara - Kerry Keating 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! West Coast Conference
Western Athletic Conference Boise State - Greg Graham Fresno State - Steve Cleveland Hawai?i - Bob Nash Idaho - Don Verlin Louisiana Tech - Kerry Rupp Nevada - Mark Fox New Mexico State - Marvin Menzies San Jose State - George Nessman Utah State - Stew Morrill 227's NCAA Basketball Tournament! Western Athletic Conference
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Annie Lennox B'z Britney Spears Carlos Santana Dalida Earth, Wind & Fire Eddy Arnold Eminem Eurythmics Gloria Estefan Hibari Misora Journey Scorpions Van Halen Ace of Base Alan Jackson Country Alice Cooper Hard rock Andrea Bocelli Opera The Andrews Sisters Swing Ayumi Hamasaki Pop Black Sabbath Heavy metal Barbra Streisand Pop / Adult contemporary Beach Boys Rock Pop Bob Dylan Folk / Rock Bob Seger Rock Boston Arena rock Boyz II Men R&B Bruce Springsteen Rock Bryan Adams Def Leppard Destiny's Child R&B / Pop Dreams Come True Pop / Jazz Duran Duran Enya Ireland Four Tops George Strait Glay Iron Maiden Jay-Z Hip hop Jean Michel Jarre Jethro Tull Johnny Cash Kazuhiro Moriuchi Kiss Hard rock Kenny G Kylie Minogue Luis Miguel Linkin Park Meat Loaf Michael Bolton Mills Brothers Mötley Crüe Mr.Children Nat King Cole New Kids on the Block Nirvana 'N Sync Oasis Orhan Gencebay Pearl Jam Petula Clark Red Hot Chili Peppers The Police Ray Conniff Reba McEntire R.E.M. Richard Clayderman Ricky Martin Robbie Williams Roxette Sweden Shakira Colombia
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