Hurricanes Made One Painful Roster Call Fans Wont Ignore

The Carolina Hurricanes made strategic yet surprising roster decisions as they issued qualifying offers to select restricted free agents, prompting speculation on the future of some notable players.

The Carolina Hurricanes made one of their key pre-free-agency moves on Monday, issuing qualifying offers to seven restricted free agents while letting four others reach the market when free agency opens Wednesday.

The group that got offers includes forwards Viktor Neuchev, Noel Gunler and Justin Robidas; defensemen Alexander Nikishin, Aleksi Heimosalmi and Ronan Seeley; and goaltender Cayden Primeau. By qualifying them, the Hurricanes retain their rights, and those seven players have the first 15 days of free agency to accept the offers. Carolina can still keep negotiating new contracts after that window closes.

The tougher decisions came with the players who did not get offers. That list includes forward Skyler Brind'Amour, the son of Hurricanes head coach Rod Brind'Amour, and defenseman Domenick Fensore. Skyler Brind'Amour made his NHL debut at the end of the 2024-25 season and scored a goal, while Fensore has appeared in three NHL games over the last two seasons and has been a major piece for the Chicago Wolves.

Goalies Amir Miftakhov and Nikita Quapp were also left unqualified. None of the four are completely shut out from returning to Carolina, since they can still come back as free agents, but that seems unlikely for now.

The move underscores how unforgiving this part of the business can be. In Brind'Amour’s case, it adds an extra layer of awkwardness because of the family connection, but the Hurricanes are clearly making the choices they believe best fit their future. The next focus will be on sorting out new deals for the seven players who were qualified, with those situations likely to be settled by the start of training camp.

In Other News...

Laviolette Is Bringing A Familiar 2006 Hurricanes Figure Back Into Focus

Peter Laviolettes next move in Los Angeles is already putting a familiar Carolina name back in the conversation. After the Kings turned to the veteran coach to replace interim D.J. Smith, the focus has been on how he will reshape a roster that needs a new identity following recent playoff frustrations and the retirement of captain Anze Kopitar. The direction is clear enough: Los Angeles wants to play faster and more up-tempo after years of a defense-first approach.

For Hurricanes fans, the interesting thread is the staff Laviolette may build around him. One of the names tied to the job is Ray Whitney, a winger who was part of Carolinas 2006 Stanley Cup team with Laviolette. Whitney has long been remembered in Raleigh as one of the smartest offensive players of that era, and seeing him surface again alongside the coach who helped guide that championship run adds another layer to what is becoming a major retool in Southern California. [Read more 🡒]

Hurricanes Suddenly Face A Massive Blue Line Gamble This Offseason

The Hurricanes blue line picture got a lot more complicated this offseason, and not just because of the usual churn that comes with a busy summer. Eric Tulsky said the team has not opened contract talks yet with pending RFA defenseman Alexander Nikishin, and Carolina is content to wait until after the draft and the start of free agency before turning that conversation into a priority.

John Carlson adds another layer to the equation. Carolina acquired the defenseman without an extension in place, and the plan is to negotiate with him before other teams can get involved if he reaches free agency. Carlson is expected to be a pricey target, which only raises the stakes for a team trying to balance immediate needs on defense with the longer view of how this roster is built. [Read more 🡒]