Islanders’ playoff hopes take another crushing blow with loss to Hurricanes

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RALEIGH, N.C. — Forget collapse. This is what capitulation looks like.

In a game the Islanders absolutely needed to have, on a night when a response was necessary after getting dominated at home 24 hours prior, with two points nothing short of critical to their playoff hopes, they flatlined.

Outside of Ilya Sorokin, who single-handedly kept them in the game, the Islanders were barely competitive. All 20 skaters were passengers in this woeful performance that was bad enough to warrant firings and severe changes to the roster if indeed the Islanders fail to make the playoffs, as now seems likely.

They were played off the ice at the Lenovo Center in a 4-3 loss to the Hurricanes that handed the Isles a season-long four-game losing streak at the exact moment they could afford it least.

“We’ve been knocked down, there’s no doubt about it,” captain Anders Lee said. “But this thing’s not over. This race isn’t over. I believe in this group, the guys in this room believe in it. We’re hitting a tough patch at just a really bad time of the year.”

Nominally speaking, the Islanders still held a playoff spot at the close of business Saturday. In reality, they are like a prisoner waiting on a death sentence.

By the next time they play, Thursday at home against the Maple Leafs, the Blue Jackets, Flyers, Red Wings and Senators all will have had the chance to pass them in the standings, and it is a step too far to hope that none of the four do so.

The Isles are now 3-7-0 in their past 10, an astonishing stretch that seemed to come out of nowhere and which is now likely to keep them out of the playoffs a second straight season.

Sebastian Aho celebrates after scoring during the Islanders’ April 4 game against the Hurricanes. Imagn Images

There are four games left, all of which are at UBS and the Islanders may need to run the table or come close in order to save their season.

Just like 24 hours prior on Long Island, though, the Islanders performance did not even come close to meeting the moment. They had four shots in the first period, just two in the second and barely touched the puck until they were skating 6-on-5 late in the third.

The Hurricanes were faster, way more physical, less prone to error, generated more of a forecheck and, damningly, played with more urgency than the Islanders could muster. There was defensive breakdown after defensive breakdown — too many to count and too many responsible parties to try to dole out blame. It was one of their worst efforts of the season, in one of their biggest games of the season.

“I think the mind was right, the energy was right. They were suffocating us,” Ryan Pulock said. “I thought they controlled most of the game.”

Emil Heineman defends during the Islanders’ April 4 game against the Hurricanes. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

It was only because of Sorokin, who for the umpteenth time was hung out to dry by his teammates, and because ’Canes netminder Brandon Bussi put in a rare shaky outing that the Islanders hung onto a 3-2 deficit entering the final 20 minutes.

Nothing about the way the game had gone, though, indicated that they could do anything with it.



Even when they finally seemed to get a break in the form of an offensive-zone slash by Alexander Nikishin late in the second with the game tied at 2, the Islanders immediately bled a 2-on-1 rush and a short-handed Sebastian Aho goal.

The ’Canes ended any hopes of a comeback just 24 seconds into the third as Andrei Svechnikov’s cross-ice feed to Seth Jarvis was buried off the crossbar and in to make it 4-2.

Ilya Sorokin makes a save during the Islanders’ April 4 loss. NHLI via Getty Images

Anders Lee’s 6-on-5 goal saved some face for the Islanders on the scoreboard, but did little to hide their performance for most of the night.

Mat Barzal turned over puck after puck, Matthew Schaefer looked like his ever-increasing workload was getting to him, Bo Horvat was hardly noticeable. There was no spark in the bottom six from which Kyle MacLean was bizarrely omitted as a healthy scratch, and the defense corps could not so much as execute a breakout.

In just a few weeks, the season has done a total 180. The Islanders played Saturday like they are already doomed to the consequences.

“100 percent,” Pulock said, asked whether coach Patrick Roy’s message is getting through. “He believes in us and we believe in him. It’s just up to us right now to bear down.”

Roy, who might be coaching for his job over the next 10 days, tried his best to put a happy face on things.

“We’re right there, isn’t it? We’re right there in the standings,” he said. “I know they [all] have a game in hand on us, but it’s not a time of year where you gotta feel sorry for yourself.”

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