The goal was Aho's 27th career playoff point, and he has now surpassed Cory Stillman, Justin Williams and Ray Whitney for sole possession of fifth place in franchise postseason scoring history.
1: Max Lajoie made his Stanley Cup Playoffs and Hurricanes debut in Game 3. He paired with Jani Hakanpää on defense and, in his first NHL action since Dec. 2019, he logged three shots on goal, one additional attempt, a hit and a blocked shot in 16:54 of ice time.
"He did great. He didn't look out of place," Brind'Amour said. "He looked great. That's a tough spot to throw him in, but I thought he was good."
"The kid played really well. I thought he skated well and made the right decisions when he had the puck. He just played steady, and that's what you want," Staal said. "He showed great poise and good skating ability."
67:28: Pesce has been on the ice for 67:28 of the last 154:54 played in this series.
6-for-7: For the second game in a row, the Canes found themselves on the man disadvantage seven times. They killed six of them to improve to 16-for-17 in the series. Meanwhile, the power play converted one of its three chances.
If those numbers sound familiar - seven power plays for Nashville versus three for Carolina - that's because they are. Game 2, a regulation finish, was the exact same. That the Predators have been on the power play 14 times to the Canes six over the last two games did not sit well with Brind'Amour.
"We're in a battle. Nashville is a phenomenal team, but we're also fighting the refs. That's plain and simple," he said. "You can't tell me two games in a row we get 7-8 penalties and they get three when the game is this even. It's not right."