With uncertainty surrounding the availability of Artem Zub and Jake Sanderson, the Sens’ defense could struggle against the Canes in Game 4.
Quick Pick Carolina vs. Ottawa
- Best Bet: Carolina Hurricanes moneyline – approximately -160 to -175
- Confidence: 4 out of 5
- Win Probability: Carolina 68% | Ottawa 32%
- Best Value Angle: Ottawa’s defensive infrastructure is collapsing – Sanderson’s status is uncertain and Zub is already out – and the market has not fully priced the magnitude of that personnel loss against a Carolina team that has dominated this series at 5 on 5.

Why This Bet Has Value
Game 3 told you everything you need to know heading into Saturday. The Hurricanes won 2-1 in Ottawa, but the scoreline actually flatters the Senators more than it should. Logan Stankoven opened the scoring for the third straight game, and Jackson Blake added the eventual winner just 83 seconds after Drake Batherson tied it at 1-1. Carolina did not cough up the lead – they retook it immediately. That is a team in total command of its composure, not one that is grinding out ugly series wins.
The headline development is the injury to Jake Sanderson, Ottawa’s top defenseman who averaged nearly 28 minutes of ice time across the first 3 games of this series. There was no update on his condition for Game 4 postgame. The Senators are also already without Artem Zub, who has not played since getting hurt in Game 1. Ottawa has been playing shorthanded on the blue line all series, and they just potentially lost the most important piece of their entire defensive corps. That is not a market inefficiency bettors should ignore. The sportsbooks will shade the number for Sanderson’s uncertainty, but they cannot fully price the impact of losing a 27-minute defenseman in an elimination game against the Eastern Conference’s top seed.
The market implied probability on the Carolina moneyline – likely sitting somewhere around 61 to 64% –undervalues the real probability here, which we estimate closer to 68%. That gap is not massive, but it is real, repeatable, and supported by the most important facts of the series.
Game Snapshot Carolina vs. Ottawa
- Matchup: Carolina Hurricanes at Ottawa Senators
- Date & Time: April 25, 2026, 3:00 p.m. ET
- Venue: Canadian Tire Centre, Ottawa, Ontario
- Series Score: Carolina leads 3-0
- Broadcast: TVAS, SN, TBS, truTV, FDSNSO, HBO MAX
Matchup Breakdown
Key Storylines
Carolina is pushing for the sweep, and the Hurricanes are the first team in franchise history to have a player – Stankoven – open scoring in three straight Stanley Cup Playoff games. That consistency at the offensive end is not noise; it reflects a structured, disciplined attack that Ottawa has had no answer for. Meanwhile, Ottawa enters a must-win game facing their worst-case defensive scenario.
What Happened Last Game
Frederik Andersen made 21 saves in Game 3 while Linus Ullmark stopped 25. Stankoven opened the scoring at 5:13 of the first period on a one-timer from the left circle off a setup from Taylor Hall. Batherson tied it at 16:06 of the second, but Blake restored the Carolina lead just 83 seconds later on a cross-ice feed from K’Andre Miller. The Senators generated enough shots to keep it close but could not sustain pressure at the right moments. Carolina controlled the game’s critical junctures – the response goal was the defining moment of the contest.
What Changed
Taylor Hall was assessed a minor penalty for an illegal check to the head on Sanderson in the second period. Senators coach Travis Green described the hit as blatant and was furious that no review was initiated. Sanderson, who had been averaging nearly 28 minutes per game in the series, did not return. Ottawa is also still missing Artem Zub, out since Game 1. The Senators are now potentially entering an elimination game without their top 2 defensive players from the regular season. Thomas Chabot will need to carry an extraordinary workload, and the matchup exploitation available to Carolina’s forwards will only grow.
Recent Form
Carolina has won all 3 games so far – Game 1 by a 2-0 shutout and Game 2 by a 3-2 double-overtime score before winning Game 3 by 2-1 in Ottawa. Game 2 required a Jordan Martinook goal at 13:53 of the second overtime, meaning the Senators have been in at least one game competitively. But Carolina has not trailed in regulation in this series and has found ways to win close games in their opponent’s building. That is what elite teams do.
Goaltending
Andersen has been composed across all 3 games, making 21 saves in Game 3 with a workmanlike but reliable performance. His series numbers do not stand out, but that is partly because Carolina has limited the high-danger chances against. Ullmark has been competitive – stopping 25 shots in Game 3 – but the goals-against have come at damaging moments each time. With a depleted defense in front of him, the stress on Ullmark in Game 4 increases considerably. It is worth noting that Logan Stankoven dealt with an illness earlier in the week but participated in Friday’s practice, suggesting he is expected to play.
Key Skaters
Stankoven has been the series’ most impactful forward, scoring the opening goal in each of the 3 games. In Game 2, his power-play goal came off a Hall setup, going five-hole past Ullmark with a one-timer. The Hurricanes’ ability to generate momentum-shifting goals early in games is a pattern, not a coincidence. For Ottawa, Sanderson had been averaging 27:57 of ice time across the series and was one of the Senators’ most visible contributors. His absence reshapes the entire Ottawa defensive structure.
Team Performance & Metrics
| Metric | Carolina | Ottawa | Betting Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Last Game 5 on 5 | Controlled play, quick response goal | Generating shots but yielding key chances | Edge: Carolina |
| Series Chance Quality | Consistent early-game pressure | Volume but poor timing | Edge: Carolina |
| Special Teams | Power play active; Stankoven PP goal in G2 | PK under pressure all series | Edge: Carolina |
| Goaltending | Andersen solid, not tested heavily | Ullmark competitive but goals allowed at key moments | Edge: Carolina |
| Matchup Edge | Deep blue line; structured deployment | Sanderson status uncertain, Zub already out | Strong Edge: Carolina |
| Regular Season Context | 53-22-7, Eastern Conference top seed | 44-27-11, wild card entry | Supports series trend |
The expected game script is a Carolina-controlled affair from the drop of the puck. Stankoven has scored the first goal in every game. Ottawa’s defense will be reshuffled and potentially without its most important defenseman. The Senators will push – this is elimination – but Carolina’s structure and depth have been too much across 3 games of increasingly close scores. Tight games in elimination situations with depleted rosters tend to break toward the deeper, better-organized team.
Market & Odds Analysis
Carolina opened as a -150 favorite in both Games 1 and 2. For Game 4, odds are not yet confirmed across all major books as of this writing, but based on the series trajectory – a 3-0 lead, a sweep on the line, and Ottawa potentially missing Sanderson – expect Carolina to be priced somewhere in the -160 to -185 range. That implies a win probability of roughly 61 to 65%. Our estimate is closer to 68%, accounting for the Sanderson injury variable and the structural edge Carolina holds on the blue line. The gap between market and true probability is not enormous, but it is directionally sound. The under also deserves consideration. The under is 5-1 in Ottawa’s last 6 games as a favorite, and 7-2-2 in the last 11 Senators games as a home underdog. All 3 games in this series have finished under their respective totals. Tight, structured playoff hockey with both teams playing defensively responsible styles points toward another low-scoring game.
| Market | Odds |
|---|---|
| Moneyline – Carolina | Approximately -160 to -185 |
| Total | 5.5 expected — all 3 games went under |
| Puckline – Carolina -1.5 | Available but elevated risk given series pattern of 1-goal results |
Key Edges Carolina vs. Ottawa
- Sanderson injury severely weakens Ottawa’s defensive structure entering an elimination game — this is an underpriced development in the market.
- Stankoven has scored first in all 3 games – the Hurricanes’ offensive structure creates consistent early momentum that puts Ottawa in reactive mode from the drop.
- Carolina’s depth across the blue line gives them a decisive matchup advantage now that Ottawa’s top pairing is potentially unavailable.
- Under 5.5 goals has hit in all 3 series games – both goaltenders and defensive systems are suppressing offense even in close contests.
Risk Factors
- Sanderson’s availability is unconfirmed – if he plays, Ottawa’s defense is considerably stronger and the edge narrows.
- Elimination game desperation can produce unpredictable results; Ottawa at home, crowd energized, is not a dead team.
- Carolina’s puckline is not recommended – all 3 results have been decided by 1 goal, and that pattern is more likely to repeat than to break in a sweep closer.
- Stankoven’s illness earlier in the week is a minor concern, though practice participation on Friday suggests no significant issue.
Prediction & Verdict Hurricanes vs. Senators
- Best Bet: Carolina Hurricanes moneyline and Under 5.5 as a secondary play
- Score Projection: Carolina 2-1
- Win Probability: Carolina 68% | Ottawa 32%
- Edge: Moderate to Strong
The case for Carolina is not complicated and does not require any leaps of faith. They have won all 3 games, never trailed in regulation, and now face a depleted Ottawa side that is potentially missing the best defenseman in the series entering an elimination game. Sanderson’s role as Ottawa’s top defenseman is unquestioned – he leads the team in scoring among defensemen, logs the most ice time by a significant margin, and his absence puts Ottawa in a nearly inescapable hole according to those who watched him exit Game 3. That is the edge the market cannot fully price, because it is still uncertain. If Sanderson is confirmed out before puck drop, this number moves further. If he plays, reduce your confidence, but the pick does not flip – Carolina has controlled every game in this series.
The under is a legitimate secondary angle. Three games, three unders. A defensive, structured playoff series between a dominant top seed and a wild card team playing without its top defensive pairing does not suddenly go over because of desperation. Desperation often produces urgency, not openness.
Final Score Prediction: Carolina vs Ottawa 2-1
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