Carolina heads to Toronto on Friday night with the stronger profile, the deeper scoring mix, and a far cleaner statistical footprint. The Hurricanes have moved into the top tier of the Eastern Conference race at 43 wins, 19 losses, and 6 overtime losses, while Toronto enters at 29 wins, 28 losses, and 12 overtime losses and is still trying to keep its season alive after losing captain Auston Matthews for the rest of the campaign. For bettors, this game sets up as a test of whether the Maple Leafs can squeeze one more strong home effort out of a battered roster or whether Carolina’s edge in shot volume, five on five play, and overall depth shows up over 60 minutes.
Since Matthews’ injury, the Leafs has picked up a shootout loss against Buffalo, a win against Minnesota and a loss against the Islanders.
Game Snapshot
- Matchup: Carolina Hurricanes @ Toronto Maple Leafs
- Date & Time: March 20, 2026, 7:00 PM ET
- Venue: Scotiabank Arena, Toronto, Ontario
- Broadcast: NHL Network
| Market | Carolina | Toronto |
|---|---|---|
| Spread | -1.5 at +120 | +1.5 at -142 |
| Moneyline | -218 | +180 |
| Total | Over 6.5 at +105 | Under 6.5 at -125 |
Key Storylines
The first story is obvious. Toronto is without Matthews, who had 27 goals and 26 assists in 60 games before knee surgery. That absence strips away the Leafs’ most dangerous finisher and one of their few skaters who can tilt the ice by himself. It also places even more pressure on William Nylander, Matthew Knies, and John Tavares to create offense against one of the stingiest shot suppression teams in hockey.
The second story is Carolina’s depth. Sebastian Aho leads the club with 69 points, Seth Jarvis leads with 28 goals, and the Hurricanes now have five 20 goal scorers. That matters against a Toronto team allowing 32.2 shots per game. Carolina also comes in averaging 3.47 goals per game while Toronto gives up 3.44. That is a strong fit for the road side.
The third angle is current form. Carolina is 6-4-0 over its last 10 and just beat Pittsburgh 6-5 in overtime on Wednesday, with Jackson Blake posting 1 goal and 2 assists, Nikolaj Ehlers adding 3 assists, and Frederik Andersen making 30 saves. Toronto is 2-5-3 over its last 10 and fell 3-1 at home to the Islanders in its most recent outing. The Maple Leafs did beat Minnesota 4-2 on Sunday, but the larger run still points to a club searching for answers.
There is one point in Toronto’s favor. The Leafs had Thursday off, while Carolina is on the second night of a road back to back after an emotional game two days earlier and a high-event overtime win on Wednesday. Still, Carolina has handled travel well all year with an 18-10-4 road mark, and Toronto’s home mark of 17-12-7 is good rather than dominant.
In net, the projected starters were still unconfirmed during the day, but Frederik Andersen and Joseph Woll were the listed likely options. Woll has the better season line with a .906 save rate and a 3.08 goals against average. Andersen has been shakier on the full season with a .873 save rate and a 3.14 goals against average, though he has won 4 straight starts. That creates one reason to avoid laying a huge moneyline, but it does not erase Carolina’s edge in front of him.
On the injury front, Toronto also had Morgan Rielly listed as a game time call because of illness, while Chris Tanev remains out for the season. Carolina has Shayne Gostisbehere listed day to day and Pyotr Kochetkov remains out.
Head-to-Head & Betting Trends
Past meetings this season are split. Carolina won 5-4 in Toronto on November 9, and Toronto answered with a 5-1 win in Raleigh on December 4. Looking at the last 10 head to head games, Carolina owns a 6-4 edge, and 6 of those 10 finished over the total.
Against the spread, neither side has been trustworthy. Carolina is 26-42-0 on the puck line, and Toronto is 29-40-0. Totals have leaned high for both clubs, with Carolina at 37-29-2 to the over and Toronto at 37-27-5.
The split data matters. Carolina is 18-10-4 on the road and has a 38-5-6 record when it scores at least 3 goals. Toronto is 17-12-7 at home, but the Leafs own a negative goal differential and enter this game having averaged 2.5 goals over their last 10 games.
Team stat comparison also tilts to Carolina. The Hurricanes average 32.4 shots and allow only 24.3. Toronto averages 27.2 shots and allows 32.2. Over a single night, that shot gap is one of the clearest signals on the board.
Best Player Props to Watch
| Player | Prop |
|---|---|
| Sebastian Aho | Anytime goal scorer at +155 |
| Seth Jarvis | Anytime goal scorer at +155 |
| William Nylander | Over 2.5 shots on goal |
| Joseph Woll | Over saves prop if posted in the high 20s |
Aho is the cleanest scoring angle on the Carolina side. He leads the Hurricanes with 69 points, has 24 goals in 68 games, and his line has been driving play for weeks. Jarvis also makes sense because he leads Carolina with 28 goals and stays active off the rush and around the crease. On the Toronto side, Nylander is the top volume shooter left with Matthews out, so shots on goal is safer than asking him to carry the full scoring load. Woll save props also deserve attention because Carolina’s 32.4 shots per game usually force opposing goalies to work.
Carolina Hurricanes vs Toronto Maple Leafs Pick & Model Projection
ATS PRO
- Score Projection: Carolina 4 – Toronto 2
- Pick: Carolina -1.5
- Confidence: 4 out of 5
- Win Probability: Carolina 66%, Toronto 34%
The case for Carolina is built on repeatable edges. The Hurricanes create more chances, allow fewer shots, own the better road form, and bring more scoring support throughout the lineup. Toronto’s path to an upset is clear enough. Woll would need to be sharp, Nylander and Knies would need to finish early chances, and the Leafs would need to drag the pace into a lower-event game. That can happen. It just is not the most likely script.
My view is that Carolina eventually wears Toronto down. The Maple Leafs are still capable of effort and energy at home, but without Matthews, the margin for error is tiny. Carolina can score in waves, and its five 20 goal scorers give Rod Brind’Amour several ways to attack a defense that has already been under strain all year. With a projected 4-2 final, the best betting angle is Carolina on the puck line rather than paying a heavy moneyline price.

