Plus: Alex Nedeljkovic and the penalty kill
Special teams was a difference maker in the game, and the Canes' penalty kill was dynamite. The Canes killed off eight of the Panthers' nine power-play opportunities, and Aho tallied two shorthanded goals, including an empty-netter in the final minute of the game.
"Our PK was definitely terrific," Niederreiter said. "We battled through that game. It wasn't pretty, and we found a way."
The Canes had to kill five penalties alone in the third period, including two when it was a one-goal game. They were already without Brady Skjei, who did not play after entering into the concussion protocol, and then they went down Martinook, as well. That meant heavy minutes for some of the Canes' horses. Brett Pesce played a game high 28:18, including 9:42 shorthanded. Of Jaccob Slavin's 27:05 of ice time, 11:56 came on the kill - more than five players logged total in the game.
"Those guys are warriors," head coach Rod Brind'Amour said. "The minutes they logged - those are hard, heavy minutes. The penalty kill is the hard work time of the game. Those guys were great tonight."
As a penalty killing unit, the Canes were solid, and behind them, Nedeljkovic might have been even better. His glove save on a Jonathan Huberdeau rebound chance in the third saved the game and is one of his best and most timely of the season.