SUNRISE, Fla. (AP)—Florida goalie Tomas Vokoun(notes) simply wouldn’t let the Carolina Hurricanes end their losing streak.
Vokoun made 32 saves, including 21 in the first period, for his second straight shutout and the Panthers extended Carolina’s winless streak to 10 games with a 3-0 victory Wednesday night.
“Tomas allowed us to survive the first period,” Florida coach Pete DeBoer said. “It wasn’t exactly the way we drew it up. We knew we were facing a desperate team. Carolina was very good right off the bat.”
Vokoun, who beat St. Louis 4-0 on Saturday, got a measure of revenge against the Hurricanes. On Oct. 9 in a 7-2 loss at Carolina, he was pulled early in the third period after giving up five goals on 26 shots.
That was the last time the Hurricanes won a game.
“We were a little bit sluggish out of the gate but we survived it and took the game over from the second period and I think we outplayed them,” Vokoun said.
Steven Reinprecht(notes) broke a scoreless tie at 5:09 of the third period and also had an assist. Cory Stillman(notes) added a power-play goal and an assist, and defenseman Bryan Allen(notes) scored an empty-net goal with 2:01 left.
Cam Ward(notes) stopped 22 shots for Carolina, 0-6-2 in the road.
“I thought we played well,” Ward said. “Obviously, it’s no secret we’re having a tough time. It’s not easy when you’re on a losing streak, but you’ve got to take the positives away from tonight.”
The Panthers have won three straight after opening 2-7-1.
“I’m glad we’re on the other end of it now,” DeBoer said. “They’re a better team than their record indicates and they’re playing better than their record indicates. We found a way to get a win tonight. It wasn’t picture perfect, but it was a good two points.”
Carolina, 0-7-3 during its losing streak, was shut out for the third time this season. The Hurricanes have scored two goals or less in 11 of their 14 games.
“We looked so much more like our selves through a big part of that game,” Hurricanes coach Paul Maurice said. “It’s just got to find its way to the back of the net. We keep doing it the way we did it tonight, it will.”
Reinprecht scored his ninth goal of the season when Stillman’s wrist shot bounced off his leg and through Ward’s pads. Stillman made it 2-0 at 13:46 when he tipped Bryan McCabe’s(notes) slap shot from the point.
“We’ve been crashing the net, getting pucks there, things have been bouncing around and getting lucky,” said Reinprecht, whose goals have all come in Florida’s last eight games. “When you go to the net, sometimes you get bounces.”
Carolina dominated the first period, outshooting Florida 21-4. It was the Hurricanes’ most shots in any period this season.
Carolina had three power plays in a span of 7:56 in the period, but failed to score. The Hurricanes’ best chance came when Sergei Samsonov(notes) hit the right post with a shot from close range.
“We played a very, very good game,” Maurice said. “We didn’t win, so we don’t get the good feeling we deserved, but we did so many good things in that game.”
Florida controlled play in the second period, thanks in part to four Carolina penalties in a span of 8:55. Stephen Weiss(notes) hit the post on a backhand off a rebound.
In all, Florida had six power plays in the second and third periods.
“I don’t think we took a step back,” Maurice said. “I think we just had to kill too many.”
NOTES: Carolina C Eric Staal(notes) sat out the game because of an upper- body injury, snapping his streak of consecutive games at 349. It was the second-longest active streak in the NHL behind Calgary D Jay Bouwmeester’s(notes) 355-game run. … Carolina’s previous high for shots in a period this season was 20 in the second period Saturday in a 5-1 loss at Philadelphia. … Carolina has seven points through 14 games, matching the worst start in franchise history, set in 1992-93 and 1993-94. … Florida recalled C Jeff Taffe(notes) from Rochester of the AHL.

Canes Country
Litter Box Cats
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think i might trade Coburn for him in my NHL10 season...lol
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Ah, the leafs are always there for a good laugh.
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Don't you have your own goddamn team you should be paying attention to?
Again, it seems like the Bruins fans (Hockeyguru) and Buffalo fans (christopher p) and jersey fans always piss themselves because whenever we actually make playoffs we go ape-sh1t and ruin their "amazing season". Sorry.
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1. Why do so many hockey fans wish for their league/sport/passion to fail? If you're answer fits the "purist" mold (i.e. let's have old-time hockey in markets that care about it and stop diluting the sport for the good of a chimeric US television market), then watch the CHL. I'd prefer to have the best athletes in the world on ice, and that won't happen without a national US presence. If you think that the league is too big and that talent is diluted, you're kidding yourself. With year-round ice, more players, more intensive training, kids in camps all summer, access to Europe's elite players, etc., the talent level in the league has never been higher. Some people claim that there are players in the 30-team league that would have never had a roster spot in the old NHL. I think it's just as likely that some of our cherished heroes from the "golden age" of hockey would be on the 4th line or the AHL today.
2. Which brings me to my second (still sincere) question: why do self-identified "purists" (the Fishler school, if you will) feel compelled to bash the league of today in favor of the "golden age"? I understand sentimentality, and old curmudgeons (my apologies, Stan) are by definition inclined to do this. But you don't see it in other sports. No one in football seriously questions that the 2009 Redskins would probably rout the 1967 Packers. The athletes and fitness levels are just that much better. Yet hockey purists remain convinced that the '59-'60 Habs could skate circles around the '06-'07 Ducks--and spite the Ducks for existing.
Why? Oh, why?
I love this game, but it has the most reactionary fan base in the sporting world.
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This first article is based on opinion so it doesn't have as much credence as the other ones.
http://mvn.com/thestateofhockeynews/2009/08/2009-10-nhl-fan-rankings-part-i-30th-to-21st.html
This next one is about how terrible their attendance was the season following their run to the Cup in 2002.
http://www.accessmylibrary.com/coms2/summary_0286-8983381_ITM
Here's a good one about how this pathetic franchise couldn't sell out games 3 and 4 against the Devils in the 09 playoffs. Hahahahahahahaha!
http://sports.yahoo.com/nhl/blog/puck_daddy/post/Playoff-non-sellouts-Signs-of-larger-trouble-or?urn=nhl,158865
Here's another pathetic article about the Canes. It describes their entire history. Scroll down to the miscellaneous section and you'll see that they failed to sell out their arena deep into the playoffs.
http://icehockey.wikia.com/wiki/Carolina_Hurricanes
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