Hurricanes Get Final Word On Frederik Andersen Before Free Agency

As Frederik Andersen faces free agency, the Carolina Hurricanes must decide whether to move forward without the key goaltender who anchored their playoff run.

Frederik Andersen’s run with the Carolina Hurricanes appears to be ending just as free agency arrives.

Andersen helped carry Carolina all the way to the Stanley Cup Final, but he didn’t get to finish the job. He left in Game 3 and never came back, and at 36 years old, his future with the Hurricanes looks increasingly uncertain.

The situation is crowded in Carolina’s crease. Brandon Bussi finished out the championship, and the Hurricanes already have Pyotr Kochetkov signed through next season. That leaves Andersen in a tough spot if the team decides it doesn’t want to carry three goaltenders again.

After the Stanley Cup Final, ESPN’s Ryan S. Clark and Kristin Shelton summed up the decision facing Carolina: "The only question is what becomes of Andersen," ESPN's Ryan S.

Clark and Kristin Shelton wrote in a blurb after the conclusion of the Stanley Cup Final. "The 36-year-old is an unrestricted free agent, and carried Carolina most of the way through its postseason run.

It's not hyperbole to suggest that the Canes wouldn't have reached the Cup Final without his string of strong performances throughout the first three rounds. However, Bussi and Pyotr Kochetkov are signed through next season, and unless Carolina wants to carry three goaltenders again, Andersen might be the odd man out."

That idea picked up even more steam on Tuesday, the day before free agency opens, when The Athletic’s Dom Luszczyszyn wrote: "The team looks set with everyone but Frederik Andersen returning."

That’s where things stand now: Andersen seems headed elsewhere, even after playing such a major role in Carolina’s playoff run.

It leaves the Hurricanes in a familiar place - strong in goal, but likely without the veteran who steadied them through the early rounds. And it gives Andersen a chance to land somewhere else, since plenty of teams are in need of goaltending.

Still, for Carolina, it’s a rough way for things to shake out. The Hurricanes were rolling early in the playoffs in large part because Andersen wasn’t allowing much of anything.

Instead of being the hero in the Final, he was forced to watch. And now it looks like he may not even be part of the opening night ring ceremony next season.

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