The NHL has already started drumming up interest for the 2026-27 schedule, and that means one thing for the Carolina Hurricanes: it’s time to start guessing who gets the first crack at the defending champs.
The league teased the schedule on Tuesday morning, and according to the announcement, the Opening Night matchups will be revealed shortly before 8 pm next Wednesday. The full schedule follows at 1 pm on Thursday. That leaves about a week to wonder which team will be in Raleigh when the Hurricanes lift their banner to the rafters.
The smart money says Carolina opens at home. You have to go back to the Chicago Blackhawks in 2010-11 to find the last reigning champion that started its season on the road. Since then, the last 15 Cup winners have begun their title defense in their own building, and that feels like the likeliest setup here too, especially with the State Fair trip coming soon after.
So who makes the most sense for Opening Night? Nothing here is based on rumors. These are just the matchups that stand out the most, along with the reasons each one could work - and the reasons it might not.
Tampa Bay is the obvious soap opera pick. The offseason storyline around John Carlson landing with the Lightning after the Hurricanes traded for his signing rights at the draft has already given this one extra juice.
Carolina couldn’t get a deal done, Carlson hit free agency, and Tampa got him. It’s the kind of twist the league loves to lean into.
But there’s a catch: the Hurricanes and Lightning already opened the 2024-25 season against each other in Raleigh on October 11, 2024, when Jake Guentzel made his Lightning debut. Tampa won that game 4-1 behind Nikita Kucherov’s hat trick. As tempting as the rematch angle is, that recent history makes it harder to see the league going back there so soon.
Washington brings a different kind of intrigue. There’s a real appeal to Alex Ovechkin starting what looks like his final season in the arena where he was drafted more than 20 years ago. The Capitals also made a loud offseason push, adding Jordan Kyrou and Alex Tuch, which gives this matchup even more weight if the league wants to spotlight what could be one of the Metropolitan Division’s best teams.
The counterpoint is just as strong: if Ovechkin is going to have a dramatic finish, the better setup might be for him to close the season in Raleigh instead. If it isn’t Washington’s final game of the year at Lenovo Center, that would still feel like the more fitting stage for what could be his last road trip there. That’s something to keep an eye on when the schedule drops Thursday.
The Islanders make sense for a different reason: the league loves putting its newest young star in the spotlight. Matthew Schaefer, the reigning Calder Trophy winner, fits that bill. Opening Night is exactly the kind of stage the NHL uses to showcase players like that, even if it means doing it against the reigning champions.
Still, this would not be a fresh pairing for Carolina. Since 2010, the Hurricanes have opened at home against the Islanders three times, more than any other opponent. They haven’t done it since 2021, so it’s not exactly recent, but there are probably cleaner options if the league wants something that feels new.
Montreal would bring the most energy of the Hurricanes’ postseason opponents on this list. A division matchup like Philadelphia might make more sense on paper, but the Canadiens would probably create the bigger buzz. They’re young, they’re exciting, and they’d give the night a little more edge than a standard opener.
The hesitation there has less to do with hockey and more to do with TV. The Hurricanes have opened against Montreal before, but a North American team starting the season against a Canadian team may not be the kind of setup ESPN wants if it’s planning an Opening Night tripleheader. The network passed on airing the Eastern Conference Finals in May, and money usually wins those decisions.
Then there’s Florida, the matchup that almost feels too perfect. Depending on which Panthers fan you ask, Carolina’s Stanley Cup still comes with an asterisk because the Hurricanes didn’t have to go through a Florida team that was healthy enough to even make the postseason. Now the Panthers are back, and the league has its team again, with the Tkachuk brothers reunited in Sunrise.
That’s the kind of storyline that could carry all the way through the fall. It also feels like exactly the sort of thing the NHL might overthink and pass on anyway. A Florida-Carolina opener would make a lot of sense and would have plenty of fans ready for puck drop, which is often the best argument against it.
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