logo
Hurricanes go back to Frederik Andersen in net for Game 4 of East finals against Panthers

Hurricanes go back to Frederik Andersen in net for Game 4 of East finals against Panthers

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — The Carolina Hurricanes switched starting goalies again for Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals, going back to Frederik Andersen for Monday night's win-or-else game against the Stanley Cup champion Florida Panthers.
Andersen started Games 1 and 2, getting pulled after the second period of Game 2. He stopped only 27 of 36 shots in those five periods, and the Hurricanes went to Pyotr Kochetkov to finish Game 2 and then play Game 3.
Kochetkov helped Carolina get into the third period of Game 3 with the score tied at 1-1 — then gave up five goals in a nine-minute span of the third, as Florida pulled away for a 6-2 win and a 3-0 lead in the East title series.
'He's been great for us all year,' Hurricanes coach Rod Brind'Amour said Monday. 'He's had a nice couple of days off, so it makes sense to chuck him in there.'
Brind'Amour didn't blame Kochetkov for the Game 3 loss, noting that he had kept Carolina in the game for 40 minutes. But with the season at stake, Andersen's 82 career postseason starts coming into Monday probably rated him the edge over Kochetkov — who made his fourth career postseason start Saturday.
'He's been through some trials and tribulations in his career, he's taken months off and then walks into the net and looks like hasn't missed a beat,' Brind'Amour said. 'I don't know how that is, but it's certainly a unique skill set he's bringing and we need it tonight.'
___
AP NHL playoffs:
https://apnews.com/hub/stanley-cup
and
https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Jarace Walker injury update: Will Pacers forward play vs OKC Thunder in NBA Finals?
Jarace Walker injury update: Will Pacers forward play vs OKC Thunder in NBA Finals?

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Jarace Walker injury update: Will Pacers forward play vs OKC Thunder in NBA Finals?

The Indiana Pacers have never won an NBA title. They've won three ABA titles (1970, 1972, 1973), but the team has no Larry O'Brien Trophies and only one Finals appearance (2000). They are a franchise starved for significance, dying to etch its name in history, and in 2025, they finally have a shot. After taking down the New York Knicks in six games in the Eastern Conference finals, the Pacers are just four wins away from achieving their first NBA championship. With young stars such as Pascal Siakam and Tyrese Haliburton, the Pacers certainly have the talent to put up a fight, but they may be going into the Finals against the Oklahoma City Thunder shorthanded. Advertisement In their conference-clinching Game 6 victory, second-year forward Jarace Walker suffered what looked like a serious ankle injury in the fourth quarter. Walker was unable to leave the court on his own and needed to be helped off by trainers. Walker has played a sizable role in the Pacers' trek through the East, contributing decent minutes in Games 5 and 6 of the Eastern Conference finals. Here's the latest news on Walker's availability for the start of the NBA Finals. More: OKC Thunder among biggest betting favorites in NBA Finals history: What does history say? Cleveland Cavaliers forward Emoni Bates defends Indiana Pacers forward Jarace Walker in the fourth quarter at Rocket Arena. Jarace Walker injury update Per Dustin Dopriak of the Indianapolis Star, part of the USA TODAY Network, Walker is "going to be out for a while" and is officially ruled out for Games 1 and 2 of the Finals, meaning his earliest possible return would be for Game 3 on June 11 in Indianapolis. Advertisement Carlisle noted that Walker's ankle was still swollen. He claimed the forward is still using crutches today as part of his recovery. Carlisle ended his statement by emphasizing that Walker's return date will rely heavily on his progress in rehab. More: NBA Finals 2025: From Loud City to Pacers Nation, get to know OKC and Indianapolis How does Jarace Walker's injury impact Pacers? Although Walker has not been a central figure in the Pacers' gameplan, he has provided clutch minutes and solid defense off the bench. His absence certainly throws the Pacers' rotation for a loop just days before the Pacers' most important games in a quarter century. Advertisement Walker was one of the best defensive options the Pacers had on their bench. Given Oklahoma City's offensive versatility, the Pacers could be in serious trouble if another bench player does not step up and fill Walker's shoes. More: How original Paul George trade between OKC Thunder, Pacers created unlikely NBA Finals Thunder vs. Pacers NBA Finals schedule All times are Central This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Jarace Walker injury update: Will Pacers forward play in NBA Finals?

Thunder home-court advantage is real. Another reason why OKC is NBA Finals favorite.
Thunder home-court advantage is real. Another reason why OKC is NBA Finals favorite.

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Thunder home-court advantage is real. Another reason why OKC is NBA Finals favorite.

As the Eastern Conference finals shift from New York's Madison Square Garden to Indiana's Gainbridge Fieldhouse, Paycom Center in downtown Oklahoma City lies in simmering wait, building to a boil ahead of a forecasted eruption Thursday in Game 1 of the NBA Finals. The Thunder's cozy home has been a cauldron of doom for visitors this season. Especially in these playoffs. While home-court advantage might be subsiding elsewhere, in Oklahoma City it's still very much a thing. Advertisement 'We obviously have the best fans in the world, so that helps,' said Jalen Williams, prompting a chorus of barks, after the Thunder won the West. The Thunder went 35-6 at home in the regular season. OKC is 8-1 at home in the playoffs — compared to 4-3 on the road — with the only home loss coming on Aaron Gordon's 3-pointer in Game 1 of the Denver series. Seven times the Thunder has lost at home in a season that started seven months ago. That home-court advantage is just another reason why the Thunder will enter the Finals as the prohibitive favorite over either the Pacers or Knicks. Pre-order book on Thunder's journey to NBA Finals Advertisement More: OKC Thunder might be 'idiots' but strength is their youth entering 2025 NBA Finals The Thunder's net rating in nine playoff home games is 24.7 — meaning OKC has outscored opponents by 24.7 points per 100 possessions. In seven playoff road games, the Thunder has a -6.2 net rating. That 30.9-point difference between the Thunder's postseason home and road net ratings is the largest of any of the 16 playoff teams. The Pacers have been almost as good on the road (+2.4 net rating) as they've been at home (+4.1) in these playoffs. The Knicks have a 3.5 net rating at home and a -2.9 net rating on the road — a 6.4 points-per-100 possessions home/road difference that doesn't even come close to the Thunder's polar splits. The Thunder plays faster at home, shoots better at home and defends better at home. OKC Thunder stats for home/road splits Thunder home offensive rating: 121.8 points per 100 possessions Advertisement Thunder away offensive rating: 108.2 points per 100 possessions Thunder home defensive rating: 97.2 points allowed per 100 possessions Thunder away defensive rating: 114.4 points allowed per 100 possessions OKC's home/road 3-point shooting splits are especially severe. The Thunder has shot 36.8% from three in home playoff games. On the road? A ghastly 29.6%. More: Former OKC Thunder star Kendrick Perkins says SGA will be best player in franchise history Streamers fall from the rafters after game 5 of the Western Conference Finals between the Oklahoma City Thunder and the Minnesota Timberwolves at Paycom Center in Oklahoma City, on Wednesday, May 28, 2025. Isaiah Joe: 12-of-25 (48%) home/6-of-22 (27%) road Lu Dort: 24-of-66 (36%) home/7-of-36 (19%) road Aaron Wiggins: 10-of-26 (39%) home/5-of-21 (24%) road Alex Caruso: 16-of-35 (46%) home/11-of-30 (37%) road Chet Holmgren: 13-of-34 (38%) home/11-of-38 (29%) road Shai Gilgeous-Alexander: 14-of-42 (33%) home/10-of-38 (26%) road Jalen Williams is the outlier. He's shooting threes at a 37% clip on the road compared to 27% at home. In the 2-2-1-1-1 playoff format, having home court advantage basically comes down to the privilege of hosting a Game 7. In the NBA Finals, home teams are 15-4 (.789) in Game 7s. Advertisement Game 1 carries more weight than you might think, though. Teams that win Game 1 of the NBA Finals at home go on to win the Finals 78% of the time (47-13). 'Rest up this week,' Thunder coach Mark Daigneault told fans, 'because we need you Thursday.' More: How Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Thunder 'put it all together' to punch ticket for NBA Finals Joe Mussatto is a sports columnist for The Oklahoman. Have a story idea for Joe? Email him at jmussatto@ . Support Joe's work and that of other Oklahoman journalists by purchasing a digital subscription today at . This article originally appeared on Oklahoman: OKC Thunder home-court advantage is real: 'Best fans in the world'

How original Paul George trade between OKC Thunder, Pacers created unlikely NBA Finals
How original Paul George trade between OKC Thunder, Pacers created unlikely NBA Finals

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

How original Paul George trade between OKC Thunder, Pacers created unlikely NBA Finals

The Paul George Invitational, also known as the 2025 NBA Finals, is set. Thunder vs. Pacers — two teams that wouldn't be here if it weren't for Playoff P and his westward ambitions. George ultimately got his wish, landing in Los Angeles after asking out of Indiana and then Oklahoma City, and in the wake of his exits, the Thunder and Pacers chartered unique courses in becoming unlikely Finals foes. Advertisement How did we get here? Let's rewind 15 years to draft night 2010. John Wall, Evan Turner and Derrick Favors were the top-three picks. Edmond Santa Fe's Ekpe Udoh went sixth. Putnam City's Xavier Henry went 12th. The Thunder traded up to the 11th pick, which it used to select Kansas big man Cole Aldrich. The pick before Aldrich? The Pacers drafted Paul George, the forward out of Fresno State. Among the 60 players selected that night, George, now a 76er, is the only one still playing. In a redraft, George would be the easy No. 1 pick. More: How did OKC Thunder get back to NBA Finals? Timeline from Paul George trade to now Advertisement In 2012, when Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook and James Harden led the Thunder to the NBA Finals, George was a second-year player on a Pacers team that lost to the Heat in the Eastern Conference semifinals — the Heat team that would then top the Thunder. George was an All-Star by Year 3. He led the Pacers to back-to-back East finals appearances in 2013 and 2014. In the summer of 2017, after his seventh season in Indiana, George told the Pacers that he would not re-sign with the team as a free agent in the summer of 2018. That his preference was to sign with the Lakers the following summer. Less than two weeks later, George was on the move … to Oklahoma City. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was amid summer workouts at Kentucky. Tyrese Haliburton was a rising senior at Oshkosh (Wisconsin) North High School. The ripples of the trade had not yet reached them. Advertisement To Indiana, the Thunder sent fourth-year guard Victor Oladipo and center Domantas Sabonis, the 11th pick in the 2016 draft who had just finished his rookie season in OKC. The Thunder, a year earlier, had acquired Oladipo and the pick that became Sabonis from the Magic in exchange for Serge Ibaka. Thunder general manager Sam Presti had essentially swapped Ibaka for a four-time All-Star in George. One year after Kevin Durant bolted from Bricktown to The Bay, Presti had brought in another star to pair with Russell Westbrook, the reigning MVP. There was risk in acquiring George, who had one year left on his contract, but if all went according to plan, the reward was far greater. Ideally, George's arrival would convince Westbrook to re-up with the Thunder, with Westbrook in turn persuading George to do the same. And that's exactly what happened. A year after the Thunder traded for him, George agreed to a four-year deal with the Thunder, leaving the Lakers hanging. George was an All-Star in two seasons with the Thunder — both of which ended in disappointing first-round playoff exits. 'That's a bad shot.' George finished third in MVP voting in 2018-19. Advertisement Oladipo was a breakout star in Indianapolis. He made third-team All-NBA in 2017-18 and was named the league's Most Improved Player. He repeated as an All-Star the next season — his two All-Star appearances coinciding with his first two seasons as a Pacer. Sabonis finished second in Sixth Man of the Year voting in 2018-19, his second season with the Pacers. By 2019-20, Sabonis was an All-Star. NBA Finals 2025: OKC Thunder vs Indiana Pacers matchup breakdown. Who has the edge? The Thunder's Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (2) watches his basket fall as the Clippers' Paul George (13) defends at Paycom Center on Dec. 21, 2023. George was traded to Los Angeles after two seasons with the Thunder, landing SGA in Oklahoma City. Like the Thunder, the Pacers were bounced in the first round of the playoffs in the first two years post-Paul George trade. Advertisement Then came the seismic summer of 2019. George was on the move again — a trade out of Oklahoma City that was just as stunning, maybe more so, than the one that brought him in. The Thunder, with the leverage of a brewing George-Kawhi Leonard dalliance, received five first-round picks, two pick swaps, Danilo Gallinari and a promising young guard named Shai Gilgeous-Alexander from the Clippers. Trading for George, and then trading him away, had netted the Thunder a future MVP. Meanwhile, after parts of five seasons in Indiana, the Pacers flipped Sabonis to the Kings for Haliburton. For Indiana, George led to Oladipo and Sabonis, and Sabonis to Haliburton. Advertisement For OKC, Oladipo and Sabonis led to George, and George to Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and a pick that produced another All-Star in Jalen Williams and who knows what else to come. Trading away George — and Sabonis, for that matter — is the throughline that connects Oklahoma City and Indiana. A line that can be traced from a 2018 trade to the 2025 NBA Finals. Joe Mussatto is a sports columnist for The Oklahoman. Have a story idea for Joe? Email him at jmussatto@ . Support Joe's work and that of other Oklahoman journalists by purchasing a digital subscription today at . Advertisement More: How Mark Daigneault, OKC Thunder are managing another lengthy break during NBA Playoffs OKC Thunder vs. Indiana Pacers NBA Finals schedule All times are Central This article originally appeared on Oklahoman: Paul George trade between Thunder, Pacers created unlikely NBA Finals

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store