Senators vs. Hurricanes Prediction: Can Ottawa Silence the Storm in Raleigh?

Carolina shut out Ottawa in Game 1. Can the Senators bounce back in Game 2 against one of the NHL's elite teams?
Linus Ullmark

The Ottawa Senators came to Raleigh with playoff energy and a legitimate case as a competitive team, and they got blanked 2-0. Game 1 of this first-round series between two Atlantic Division rivals was a statement from the Carolina Hurricanes: their defensive structure is suffocating, their goaltending is sharp, and they are every bit the 113-point powerhouse their regular season record suggested. Game 2 at Lenovo Center on Monday night will reveal whether Ottawa can adjust and claw back into this series, or whether Carolina is simply too good for the Senators to handle.

This is the first-ever playoff meeting between these two franchises, which adds a layer of intrigue to a matchup that could easily be a sweep if Ottawa does not find answers quickly. The Senators finished the regular season 44-27-11 with 99 points — genuinely good, not just sneaking in — while Carolina went 53-22-7 and posted 113 points, one of the best records in the entire NHL.

Carolina Is a Significant Home Favorite — And Earned Every Bit of That Price

The Hurricanes open Game 2 as -148 favorites, with the Senators available at +124. The over/under sits at 5.5. Carolina opened at -141 before the line moved slightly, reflecting the sharp money coming in on the Hurricanes. After a 2-0 shutout in Game 1 — which was arguably not even that close — the oddsmakers have it right. This is a team that went 4-2 in their last six head-to-head meetings with Ottawa and ranked second in the NHL in shots attempted with 2,637 on the season.

Mon, Apr 20 • 7:40 PM ET
Spread
Money
Total
Ottawa Senators
+1.5 (-195)
+130 (+130)
O 6 (+100)
Carolina Hurricanes
-1.5 (+170)
-148 (-148)
U 5.5 (+115)

Ottawa Needs a Better Power Play and More Finishing

The Ottawa Senators are not a team without weapons. Linus Ullmark, their starting goaltender, carries a .914 career save percentage and a 191-99-34 career record. He is a former Vezina Trophy winner who has shown he can steal games when the team in front of him is outmatched. Ottawa scored 275 goals during the regular season — eighth in the NHL — and their power play came in at 23.95 percent. They had the talent to compete in Game 1. They just did not.

The problem was threefold. Ottawa went 0-for-4 on the power play in Game 1, failing to capitalize on their best chances to tilt the ice. They put just 22 shots on goal despite the Hurricanes not playing their most dominant game. And their offense went completely silent in the second half of the game. In the regular season, Ottawa attempted 2,369 shots — solid but well behind Carolina’s 2,637. That shot differential tells the story of the series so far: the Hurricanes generate more, and they convert more efficiently.

Carolina’s goaltender, Frederik Andersen, brings a 2.57 GAA at 5-on-5 and a .913 career save percentage. He was largely untested in Game 1 because the Senators did not get quality looks. If Ottawa’s power play remains as inefficient as it was in the opener, this series could spiral quickly. The Senators’ last five games went L-W-L-W-W entering the playoffs — an encouraging trend heading in, but Game 1 erased that momentum in about 60 minutes of hockey.

Carolina’s penalty kill sits at 80.52 percent, and their 5-on-5 structure is one of the best in the league. They led the NHL in shot attempts and their defense funnels traffic away from Andersen with remarkable consistency. The Hurricanes’ 24.90 percent power play also gives them the ability to add to a lead in a hurry the moment Ottawa takes a penalty.

Prediction and Best Bet

The Senators will not be shut out again. Ullmark will be better, and Ottawa’s offense — led by players who put up 275 goals this season — will find at least some level of engagement. But Carolina is the superior team at home, and the Hurricanes are fully capable of taking a commanding 2-0 series lead on Monday.

The real question is whether this game opens up at all. Both of these teams played a low-event Game 1, and the playoff atmosphere tends to keep things tight. With the Senators needing a response and the Hurricanes fully in control of their systems, this could easily be another sub-5 game.

  • Prediction: Hurricanes 3, Senators 1
  • Best Bet: Carolina Hurricanes moneyline (-148)

Carolina is the better team at every position and they have home ice. The -148 price is fair for a team that just posted a shutout in Game 1 and ranks among the NHL’s elite. Until Ottawa proves they can generate quality opportunities against this defense and convert on the power play, the Hurricanes are the play every night of this series.

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Adam Hutchinson


Sports Betting Contributor

Adam Hutchinson was one of Hello Rookie’s first staff hires, and he still fills many roles for the company. He’s a loving husband, father, and a diehard fan of the Cubs and Bears.