1. Face-off Difference
The Red Wings were much better in the face-off circle on Saturday than they were in Thursday's loss. On Thursday, Detroit lost the face-off battle by 20 percent, but in Saturday's win, the Wings earned the edge in face-offs, 33-29, for a 53.2-percent clip.
The wins in the face-off circle allowed the Wings to possess the puck much more than they did two nights ago and limited the chances for the Hurricanes, turning the game in Detroit's favor.
2. Increased Physicality
The Red Wings weren't happy with Thursday's result, getting shut out in their own building on opening night, and they showed it. Detroit came out of the gate in a foul mood, laying several huge hits on the Hurricanes in the first period.
Adam Erne dropped the hammer on Hurricanes forward Martin Necas early in the first which drew a big reaction from Detroit's bench, and Vladislav Namestnikov followed it up shortly after with a huge hit of his own. Ryan capped off the Red Wings' aggressive first period with a jarring hit on Necas that knocked his helmet off and drew another huge reaction from the Wings' bench.