Down 4-0. Goalie pulled. Most teams pack it in. The Carolina Hurricanes scored 3 goals in 39 seconds – a Stanley Cup Final record – then tied it up on a power play with under 2 minutes left in regulation, and sent the building into a full-on meltdown. They still lost, because a puck bounced off the end boards in double overtime and somehow found the back of the net, because this series refuses to be normal. Vegas leads 2-1. Game 4 is tonight. And if the last 3 games have taught us anything, it’s that no lead is safe, no goalie is reliable, and there will be goals.
Hurricanes vs. Golden Knights Pick: Goals Should Come Again
The market is still hanging 5.5 despite three straight overs, unstable goaltending on both sides, and a Carolina team that should be forced into attack mode down 2-1 in the series.
The price is juiced, but the total has not moved enough for how open this series has been through three games.
Two goalies with disqualifying Finals save percentages, a series that has gone over 5.5 in all three games, and a back-against-the-wall Hurricanes team built to score at pace.
Game Snapshot
Carolina Hurricanes at Vegas Golden Knights
Tuesday, June 9
8:00 PM ET
Vegas leads 2-1 after surviving Game 3 in double overtime.
Why the Over Has Value
Frederik Andersen was pulled after allowing four goals on 16 shots in the second period of Game 3. Rod Brind’Amour has made a Game 4 goalie decision, but has not named the starter publicly. Could it be Bussi?
Carter Hart has not stabilized the series for Vegas. Carolina has already shown it can erase a huge deficit quickly when it gets sustained offensive-zone pressure.
Every game in the series has cleared 5.5 goals, yet the market has not pushed the total to 6. Yet.
Down 2-1, the Hurricanes should be aggressive rather than passive as they try to avoid a 3-1 series hole.
Vegas has enough speed and rush creation to punish Carolina if the Hurricanes open the game up.
Market Snapshot
The goalie form, series pace, and game-state pressure all point toward another open, high-event game in Vegas.
Why This Bet Has Value
Game 3 looked like a vintage Mitch Marner performance wrapping up an easy Vegas win – until it very much wasn’t. The Golden Knights led 4-0 after 40 minutes before Carolina scored 3 goals in 39 seconds, the fastest 3-goal sequence in Stanley Cup Final history, and eventually tied it on a power-play goal with 1:42 left in regulation. Vegas survived in double overtime, but the underlying message was clear: neither goaltender in this series can hold a lead when the opposition turns it on.
The total is sitting at 5.5 with good reason. All 3 games have cleared it, and the goaltending situation heading into Game 4 is worse, not better. Frederik Andersen’s save percentage has dropped from .931 in the first 3 rounds to .815 in the Finals, while Carter Hart is at .864 compared to .922 in the first 3 rounds. The market has not corrected the line upward – it remains at 5.5. That’s a number with meaningful over-value given what both crease situations look like right now.
Game Snapshot
- Matchup: Carolina Hurricanes at Vegas Golden Knights
- Date & Time: Tuesday, June 9, 8:00 PM ET
- Venue: T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas
- Series Score: Vegas leads 2-1
- Broadcast: ABC, SN, TVAS, CBC

Betting Breakdown
The goaltending story is the engine of this total bet. Andersen allowed 4 goals on 16 shots in the second period of Game 3 alone and was pulled to start the third period – the first time he had been yanked all postseason. Backup Brandon Bussi, who had not played since the end of the regular season, made his playoff debut and stopped 18 of 19 shots in relief before surrendering the double-overtime winner off a freak carom. Brind’Amour has confirmed he has made a goaltending decision for Game 4 but is refusing to name the starter publicly. I think that uncertainty itself is a signal – if Andersen were a clear go, there would be no drama.
Andersen has been outstanding through most of the postseason, allowing 2 goals or fewer in 12 of his first 13 playoff starts, carrying a 1.72 GAA and .917 save percentage across 15 appearances. But his worst game came at the worst possible moment. The question now is whether Brind’Amour trusts him to bounce back or pivots to Bussi, who posted a .895 save percentage in 39 regular-season starts but hasn’t faced live game action in weeks. Either way, Carolina’s crease enters this game with a question mark attached. Hart on the Vegas side offers no shelter – his numbers in this series are just as soft.
The pace of this series has been relentlessly open. Carolina dominates the faceoff circle – they won 59% in Game 3 – which means they generate sustained offensive-zone time and second-chance looks. Vegas counters with transition speed and breakaway creation, as Marner demonstrated repeatedly in Game 3. Jack Eichel has registered just 4 shots on 15 attempts through 3 games, well below his regular-season and early-playoff rates, suggesting statistical correction is coming. If Eichel gets back to his normal shot volume and Marner continues to find space behind the Carolina blue line, Vegas can score 3 to 4 goals regardless of who is in net for Carolina.
Carolina’s motivation amplifies the total argument. Down 2-1 in the series and facing a potential 3-1 hole if they lose, this is a back-to-the-wall game for the Hurricanes. That context historically produces offensive urgency, not defensive caution. Carolina is currently on a 4-game over run, and Vegas has hit the over in 4 straight when coming off a win. The over has also connected in the last 4 meetings between these two clubs. The market knows all of this, which is why the juice sits at -130. But -130 on a total with this much structural support on both sides of the ice still carries value.
Market & Odds Analysis
The total remains at 5.5, with the over priced at -130 at the time of writing. That means the market has adjusted through juice rather than moving the number to 6, which is important. All three games in this series have cleared 5.5, and the goaltending picture has become less stable, not more. Frederik Andersen is coming off his worst start of the postseason, Carolina has not publicly named its Game 4 starter, and Carter Hart has not done enough on the Vegas side to make the under feel comfortable. The price is not cheap, but the number still leaves room for value.
On the moneyline, Carolina is a slight road favorite at -115, with Vegas close behind at -105. That makes the side market close to a pick’em, despite the Golden Knights holding a 2-1 series lead. There is a case for Carolina’s bounce-back profile, and Vegas has shown enough finishing quality to justify its price as well, which makes the side harder to separate. The cleaner angle is the total. Both teams have generated offense in different ways, both creases carry questions, and the game state should push Carolina toward a more aggressive approach as it tries to avoid falling into a 3-1 hole.
Risk Factors
- If Brind’Amour starts Bussi and he carries the form from his Game 3 relief appearance into a full start, Carolina could become structurally harder to score on – Bussi’s first 18 saves in Game 3 were genuinely impressive, and a fresh netminder with no film can occasionally steal a game. That would suppress the total quickly.
- Tortorella may tighten Vegas defensively after they blew a 4-goal lead. If the Knights play a more conservative shell in the second and third periods – prioritizing protecting a lead over creating offense – the pace could drop and the under becomes live.
Final Prediction
The structural case for the over here is as clean as it gets at this stage of a playoff run. Two goalies who are genuinely struggling in the series, a historically fast-paced 3-game sample, a desperation element for Carolina that will produce more not less offense, and a total that has not moved to reflect any of it. The -130 juice is the cost of doing business, but the edge more than justifies paying it. Back the over at 5.5 and expect another 7-plus-goal game in Vegas.
Final Score Prediction: Golden Knights 4, Hurricanes 3

