NHL Morning Coffee Headlines – June 15, 2026

by | Jun 15, 2026 | News, NHL | 23 comments

The Carolina Hurricanes are the 2025-26 Stanley Cup Champions. Details and more in today’s NHL Morning Coffee Headlines.

The Carolina Hurricanes blanked the Vegas Golden Knights 3-0 in Game 6 of the Stanley Cup Final to win the series and hockey’s holy grail four games to two. It’s their first championship since 2006.

2026 Stanley Cup champion Carolina Hurricanes (NHL.com).

Taylor Hall opened the scoring with what proved to be the game-winning goal just 3:47 into the first period. Jackson Blake made it 2-0 in the second period, and Nikolaj Ehlers’ empty-netter with 1:08 remaining in the third period put the game out of reach. Goaltender Brandon Bussi turned in a 22-save shutout.

Hurricanes captain Jordan Staal was voted the winner of the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP. He had eight goals and four assists for 12 points in 19 games, with six of those goals coming in the first five games of the Cup Final, becoming the first player to score five goals to start a Cup Final since Jean Beliveau in 1956.

The 37-year-old Staal is the oldest player to win the Conn Smythe Trophy. He also set a record for the longest time between Stanley Cup Championships (17 years). The first time he won the Cup was in 2009 with the Pittsburgh Penguins.

Speaking of Taylor Hall, he became the first player in NHL history to be selected first overall in the draft, win the Hart Memorial Trophy as league MVP, and win the Stanley Cup with three different teams. Hall was chosen first overall by the Edmonton Oilers in 2010, and won the Hart Trophy with the New Jersey Devils in 2017-18.

For Brandon Bussi, his Game 6 shutout capped a whirlwind season that began when he was claimed off waivers from the Florida Panthers. He had a record of 31-6-2 in 39 regular-season games, but didn’t make his postseason debut until the third period of Game 3, when he relieved starter Frederik Andersen. Bussi subsequently started the remaining games of this series, winning all three.

As for Andersen, he was surprised to be the first player Staal handed the Stanley Cup to after receiving it from league commissioner Gary Bettman. Andersen started every game in this postseason until Bussi relieved him in Game 3. He revealed that he suffered a knee injury in Game 2 and struggled to play through it in the following game.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: Andersen’s solid play was a big reason why the Hurricanes reached the Final. He finished with a record of 13-2 with a 1.89 goals-against average, a save percentage of .910, and three shutouts.

Hurricanes defenseman Jaccob Slavin became the second American to win the Stanley Cup in the same year that he won Olympic gold with Team USA. Ken Morrow was the first, winning a gold medal in the 1980 Olympics and the Stanley Cup later that year with the New York Islanders.

The additions of Hall, Bussi and Ehlers last year, along with the rise of Blake and Logan Stankoven, gave the Hurricanes the depth they previously lacked to march to the Stanley Cup.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: Blake (20 points), Hall (19 points), Ehlers (18 points) and Stankoven (16 points) finished as the Hurricanes’ leading scorers in this postseason. The second line of Stankoven, Hall, and Blake was their most consistent throughout this postseason.

This is the second Stanley Cup championship for Rod Brind’Amour, and his first as head coach. He won his first Cup with Carolina as team captain in 2006.

As for the Vegas Golden Knights, their march to the Stanley Cup Final capped a roller-coaster season that saw them in danger of missing the playoffs until they replaced Bruce Cassidy as head coach with John Tortorella in late March.

Speaking of Tortorella, he’s unsure of his future with the Golden Knights. The club hired him for the remainder of this season. He thanked team owner Bill Foley, team president George McPhee, and general manager Kelly McCrimmon for giving him the chance to coach the team.

SPECTOR’S NOTE: It’ll likely be a few days before we learn of Tortorella’s fate. After the job he did in reversing the Golden Knights’ fortunes, it wouldn’t be shocking if they sign him to a contract extension.







23 Comments

  1. So, a goalie who was never drafted, signed his first contract with Boston as a free agent, who then let him get away as a UFA to Florida, who then exposed him to waivers and was grabbed by Carolina after 27 other teams passed on him – at a time when half the bloody league were seeking goaltending help of some sort – wins the Stanley Cup with a SO in a building where even wins can be tough to come by.

    Congratulations to Brandon Bussi, Jordan Staal and the rest of the Carolina Hurricanes in extending the Eastern Conference’s domination to 3 straight. And for keeping it away from Vegas! 🙂

    Reply
    • I read your comments about Bussi and agree with
      all of them.
      The Oilers traded for Tristan Jarry

      Reply
      • Alan, the fact many of the 27 teams that passed on Bussi before it got to Carolina, despite needing a goalie infusion of some sort, speaks volumes about the quality (or lack thereof) of their scouting department, not to mention their GMs.

    • A Hurricanes championship. A Vegas lack-of-a-championship. And Tortorella losing.

      A hat trick of sorts of me.

      Reply
      • Can’t argue with that, Whalercane.

  2. It would not surprise me to see Staal retire. Heck even Hall could retire. Torts could retire. Marc Stone could (should) retire.

    this was a grind of a play offs for these two teams

    Reply
  3. Carolina winning (Congratulations) gives me hope for the Blue Jackets since Don Waddell was the architect of the Hurricanes team.

    Reply
  4. Canes have been close for several seasons. Glad to see them get over the hump. Well deserved

    Reply
  5. Congratulations to the Carolina Hurricanes.
    That was an impressive playoff run.
    Happy for Rod and the boys.
    Way to go, Canes.

    Reply
  6. Hats off to Carolina especially Eric Staal and Jacob Slavin who was the second US player to win the Gold Medal and Stanley Cup the same year. All these other defensemen that are being talked about and their contract demands are ridiculous. Slavin is making 6.4 million until his contract runs out in 2031! After watching Magnus Andersen last night I would be careful spending a bundle on him.

    Reply
  7. Congratulations Carolina happy for Rod and yes the Bruins have developed some goaltenders lately Vladar in Philly the Bus and Mike down in Providence all three playing well.

    Reply
  8. Fantastic games by the Canes all playoffs long! 16-3!!!!!! The perineal bridesmaid finally made it to the big reception and danced our hearts away!

    I think Freddie could be a goner, that is why he was so pensive during the celebration. Another Toronto refugee that made out!

    Reply
  9. Glad for Bussi but not happy with the bruins for letting this guy go. Hopefully they don’t do the same with Dipietro who could be as good as Bussi.

    Reply
    • Johnny
      They didn’t let him go they chose to keep Dipietro instead. Looks like the right call but time will tell

      Reply
      • According to the Web, the Bruins didn’t even attempt to trade Bussi before letting him walk as a UFA.

  10. It is hard to root against Brindamour which is saying alot for me who grew up hardcore Whaler fan and is now a Rangers fan.

    Reply
  11. And somewhere Raants was cursing his agent and the greed that sent him to Dallas and the front nine earlier than Stank.

    Reply
  12. Also congratulations to the NY Knickerbockers for ending their 72 year title drought.

    That leaves

    NBA: Sacramento Kings 75 years; Atlanta Hawks 68 years; Phoenix Suns 57 years; Utah (New Orleans) Jazz 51 years; L.A. Clippers 55 years;

    MLB: Cleveland (Indians) Guardians: 77 years; Milwaukee Brewers 57 years; San Diego Padres 57 years;

    NFL: (Chicago, St. Louis) Arizona Cardinals 78 years; Detroit Lions 68 years; (Houston Oilers) Tennessee Titans 64 years; (San Diego) Los Angeles Chargers 62 years; Cleveland Browns 61 years; Buffalo Bills 60 years; Atlanta Falcons (60 years); Cincinnati Bengals 58 years; NY Jets 57 years; Minnesota Vikings 57 years; Miami Dolphins 52 years;

    NHL: Toronto Maple Leafs 59 years; Buffalo Sabres 56 years; Vancouver Canucks 56 years; Philadelphia Flyers 51 years.

    Reply
    • Hey George, Bears won the Super Bowl for the 1985 season.

      Only reason I know is that I’m a Bears fan.

      Reply
      • Umm, not sure what you’re getting at, Ray. The Bears aren’t mentioned above.

  13. Didn’t Shaky Graves Bettman state that the Canes have won the most games over the last 8 years .
    Well deserved and congratulations
    Buyout starts Wednesday and the draft in 11 days , maybe some trades , followed by free agent frenzy . Followed by the sound of crickets
    Enjoy the next three weeks before the dog days

    Reply
  14. Congrats to Carolina who stuck to a very disciplined plan. Vegas played a chippy series, the ‘Canes kept their composure…now that’s Class A coaching, something the Leaf organisation DOES NOT UNDERSTAND!
    Good too on Raants…didn’t get what he wanted, got what he earned.
    Pretty sure the Hockey World is very happy for Rod Brind’Amour – a great coach, mentor and just a classy guy!! Cheers!!

    Reply
  15. Congratulations to Carolina; well deserved. I thought vegas would beat them but Carolina just outworked and out skated it seemed like. Staal incredible. Well coached and emotionally focused on the task @ hand. Great SC . seems like hurricanes just wore them out in the end

    Reply

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *