The Carolina Hurricanes believe they are ready to take the next step after qualifying for the Stanley Cup Playoffs in consecutive seasons for the first time since 2000-01 and 2001-02.
"We've been through two years of it now and we don't want to talk about the playoffs anymore," Carolina general manager Don Waddell said. "We talk about how we're going to compete and win a Stanley Cup."
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The Hurricanes didn't think they needed to change much to do that. Their most notable offseason addition was forward Jesper Fast, who signed a three-year contract Oct. 10 and will try to replace Justin Williams, who announced his retirement two days prior.
Other than that, Carolina is happy to let its young core grow from its experiences the past two seasons. And although the Hurricanes lost to the Boston Bruins in five games in the Eastern Conference First Round last season after being swept by the Bruins in the 2019 Eastern Conference Final, they think they made progress.
"Last year, guys were kind of feeling the accomplishment of getting to the conference finals and this year, it really hurt," Waddell said. "I think that's the old saying that you've got to learn how to lose before you win. .... We went into the offseason knowing that we liked what we had, and we wanted to just continue to build off it, that we didn't need to make major changes."
It helps that forwards Sebastian Aho, 23, and Andrei Svechnikov, 20, have yet to reach their primes and should continue to improve. Aho scored an NHL career-high 38 goals last season and led the Hurricanes in points (66) for a third straight season.
Svechnikov scored 61 points (24 goals, 37 assists) last season after scoring 37 points (20 goals, 17 assists) as a rookie.
"Obviously, the talent's there with those two guys," said coach Rod Brind'Amour, who is entering his third season with Carolina. "But I think what excites me, and you've heard me say this all the time, is their will to get better. These guys are not satisfied with where they are individually and certainly not teamwise."
Aho led the Hurricanes with 12 points (three goals, nine assists) in eight postseason games.
"The next step for me is to be the best team in the League and, obviously, win the Stanley Cup," Aho said. "We showed everyone that can play good hockey and we are a competitive team, but this is not good enough to just get to the playoffs or have good runs. Everyone on our team feels the same way that we can really raise the bar."