According to Luke DeCock of The News & Observer, the Carolina Hurricanes will be without one of their better defensemen for the rest of their first-round series against the New York Islanders. DeCoxk reports that Brett Pesce suffered a non-contact injury in Game 2 of the series, and will likely miss the rest of the first round as he’s considered week-to-week.
Since Pesce is only considered week-to-week and could jump back into the lineup as soon as the second round if Carolina can advance, it is more than likely that Pesce did not endure any sort of tear. As one of the more steady defensemen on the roster, it is still a tough blow to the Hurricanes as they look to take a commanding lead in the series tomorrow night.
Playing in all 82 games last season for Carolina as well as 15 games in last year’s playoffs, Pesce suffered a lower-body injury earlier in the season that kept him out of the lineup for nearly a month. Still managing to suit up in 70 games this season, Pesce scored three goals and 13 points, only on the ice for 65 goals against in 1,420 minutes of action.
Fortunately for the Hurricanes, they have built one of the best defensive cores in the league over the last several years, which should give them ample opportunity to withstand the Islanders in the first round. Given that Pesce was playing on the second-paring with Brady Skjei to start the playoffs, the team will have the chance to plug in Scott Morrow, Jalen Chatfield, Dylan Coghlan, or Tony DeAngelo to fill the void.
User 517680827
My boy Tony D may get a shot!
mikedickinson
Hope not. They need a defensive guy to play with Brady. TDA can’t play with Chatty or Orlov. That was proven earlier this season.
MacJablonski--NotVegasLegend
@Brennan — That link to Scott Morrow is going to the 54-year-old guy. Maybe this one should be used — link to hockey-reference.com
Also, Luke’s last name is spelled “DeCock” (It’s 2-for-1 day today!) :)
User 1323105297
Hopefully Luke was home-schooled. Going through life as a ‘DeCock’ probably means overcoming some extra adversity and name-calling as a youth.
MacJablonski--NotVegasLegend
@Brennan — Thanks for the corrections.