Terry extended his streak to 16 games with a first-period goal, keeping pace with Connor McDavid for the longest run in the NHL this season. Over the last 10+ NHL campaigns (since 2011), Terry, McDavid and Jack Eichel (17 games in 2019-20) are the only three players under 25 years of age to have point streaks of 16-or-more games.
Terry's streak is the third-longest in Ducks history and the longest since Corey Perry's club-record 19 game run, Oct. 21-Dec. 1, 2009 (10-16=26). The 24-year-old winger anks tied for second among league leaders in goals (12) and fourth in scoring (12-10=22). He paces the Ducks in both categories.
John Gibson made 29 saves but the Carolina victory snapped his personal seven-game winning streak. Gibson leads NHL netminders in time on ice (757:58) and ranks tied second in wins (nine) and saves (410).
"To be honest with you, it was a fun hockey game to play in," Terry said. "It was two good teams. I thought we had all the chances in the world to win that game...we're not happy with that and we're not happy just chalking it up to not getting the bounces. We know that we had chances to win that game, and that's the next step we need to take."
Carolina went ahead first just five minutes into the opening period as Martin Necas delivered a perfect backdoor pass to Ethan Bear, who beat Gibson with a quick shot just inside the near post to give the Hurricanes an early edge.
"I thought it was extremely tight, and we made two mental mistakes," head coach Dallas Eakins said. "Unfortunately, they ended up in our net. I think we're gonna learn great lessons from that."
Terry brought the Ducks even later in the period, extending his streak to 16 games. The Ducks attacked the Carolina zone, with Terry feeding a pass to Henrique cutting towards the net. Hurricane netminder, and former Duck, Frederik Andersen made the initial save, but Henrique poked the rebound back towards the crease and Terry got their first, tapping it home to tie the game.