You’d think this series would tighten up, but with all previous games in the series having 7 goals or more, the value on the Over is hard to ignore.
- Game 4: 5-3
- Game 3: 4-5 (2OT)
- Game 2: 3-4 (OT)
- Game 1: 5-4
Brandon Bussi made his first playoff start for the Canes after Rod Brind’Amour spent most of the day keeping his goalie decision quiet. The result was good enough, even if the numbers were not spectacular. Bussi finished with an .857 save percentage, while Carter Hart stopped 23 of 27 shots at the other end for a similar .852 mark. Hart has now allowed at least four goals in every game this series, and Vegas’ alternative is not exactly straightforward either, with backup and Stanley Cup winner Adin Hill having not played since April 9.
Quick Pick
- Best Bet: Over 6 goals at BetMGM, between -102 and -118
- Confidence: 3 out of 5
- Win Probability: Vegas 42% | Carolina 58%
- Best Value Angle: The market has adjusted upward, but it still may not be fully pricing how unstable the defensive and goaltending environment has become in this series.
Why This Bet Has Value
Game 4 is the right place to start because it looked like another warning sign for anyone expecting this series to suddenly tighten up. Carolina won 5-3, but the scoreline did not come from one team cleanly controlling the game. The Hurricanes built a 3-1 lead, Vegas pushed back to tie it, and the deciding sequence came from another turnover and another failure to protect the front of the net. That matters for the total because the scoring has not been driven only by elite finishing or one-off luck. It has come from repeatable pressure, mistakes under forecheck stress, net-front breakdowns, and shaky save profiles.
The strongest case for the over is simple: neither side has shown it can turn a lead into a calm game. Every game in this Final has reached at least 7 goals, and all 4 games have had a tied score in the third period. That kind of volatility keeps both benches attacking longer than expected, increases empty-net exposure, and makes a total of 6 more playable than a flat 6.5. If this lands exactly 6, the push protection matters.
Game Snapshot
- Matchup: Vegas Golden Knights at Carolina Hurricanes
- Date & Time: June 11, 2026, 8 PM ET
- Venue: Lenovo Center, Raleigh, North Carolina
- Series Score: Tied 2-2
- Broadcast: ABC, SN, TVAS, CBC

Betting Breakdown
The key question is whether Game 4 was a turning point toward Carolina control or another example of a series that keeps breaking open. I lean toward the second. Carolina did enough to win, but it still allowed Vegas to erase a 2-goal gap and create late danger. Vegas did not look finished offensively. It looked messy defensively.
The biggest repeatable issue is around Carter Hart and the Vegas crease. He has been beaten too often in the series, and the Golden Knights have repeatedly struggled to clear bodies and loose pucks from dangerous areas. Jordan Staal has become the most visible example of that problem, but the larger betting point is not about one player staying hot. It is about Vegas allowing Carolina to keep generating second looks and interior chaos.
Carolina’s goaltending also keeps the over alive. Brandon Bussi won Game 4 in his first playoff start, and the Hurricanes kept a tight lid on who they had picked as a starter before the last game. Frederik Andersen was scratched after struggling earlier in the series, so there is still uncertainty in net. That uncertainty does not automatically mean goals, but it does make it harder to project a clean defensive reset from Carolina.
The game script also supports the over. At 2-2 in the series, neither team can afford to sit on a narrow lead, and this matchup has already punished passive third-period hockey. If the first goal comes early again, the trailing team should keep pushing rather than waiting. That has been the defining pattern of the Final so far, and it is directly relevant to a total of 6.
Market & Odds Analysis
The side market looks much closer to efficient. Carolina around -155 implies a win probability above 60% before removing the sportsbook hold, and my projection is closer to 58%. That is not enough of a gap to justify laying the moneyline. Vegas has shown it can score on the road and has already won in Raleigh, so forcing a Carolina side pick would be chasing the Game 4 result.
The total is more interesting. BetMGM had the total at 6 with the over priced around 1.98, which implies roughly 50.5% before accounting for push outcomes. My number makes 7 or more goals closer to 56%, with a meaningful chance of exactly 6. That is not a massive edge, but it is enough to prefer over 6 rather than a side, especially when every game in the series has cleared this number.
The market may be giving too much credit to a natural playoff-tightening idea. That would make sense if Game 4 had shown better defensive structure or a more settled goalie picture. It did not. It showed another blown lead, another high-event third period, and another Vegas game where defensive-zone mistakes directly turned into Carolina goals.
Risk Factors
- Carolina’s goalie decision could stabilize the game if Bussi starts again and gives the Hurricanes cleaner saves behind their defensive structure.
- Vegas could make a real adjustment around the crease and turn this into a more conservative road performance after allowing 17 goals through 4 games.
Final Prediction
The number is no longer cheap, so this is not a max-confidence play. But over 6 still has value because the market may be underestimating how repeatable the chaos has been. Vegas has defensive and goaltending problems that have not disappeared, Carolina has its own uncertainty in net, and the series script keeps creating late scoring chances.
At 6, the push protection makes the over playable.
Final Score Prediction: Carolina 5, Vegas 3

