The Hurricanes haven't made the Stanley Cup Playoffs since 2008-09, but could be a surprise team in the Eastern Conference. They had one of the busiest offseasons in the NHL, hiring Rod Brind'Amour as coach May 8 and acquiring defenseman Dougie Hamilton (12th among defensemen; 78th overall, according to NHL.com) and forward Micheal Ferland in a trade with the Calgary Flames for defenseman Noah Hanifin and forward Elias Lindholm on June 23. Carolina also signed goalie Petr Mrazek and defenseman Calvin de Haan in free agency.
Last season, Hamilton tied for the NHL lead in goals among defensemen (17) with Victor Hedman (Tampa Bay Lightning) and Ivan Provorov (Philadelphia Flyers). He ranks seventh among defensemen in even-strength points over the past three seasons (94), and instantly becomes Carolina's best offensive defenseman and could cut into Justin Faulk's minutes on the first power-play unit. Ferland had NHL career highs in goals (21), assists (20) and points (41) and led the Flames with 171 hits.
Along with Hamilton, the Hurricanes have two other top 100 fantasy players in forwards Sebastian Aho (64th) and Teuvo Teravainen (90th). They developed chemistry on the first line last season, finishing first and second respectively on the Hurricanes in scoring, but it remains unclear who the third forward on that line will be.
If the Hurricanes can get decent goaltending out of Mrazek and Scott Darling, who went 13-21-7 with a 3.18 goals-against average and .888 save percentage in his first season in Carolina, and young players such as forwards Andrei Svechnikov (No. 2 pick, 2018 NHL Draft), Valentin Zykov (seven points in 10 games on a line with Aho, Teravainen) and/or Martin Necas step up, they could finally break through.