ALL-STARS, AWARD WINNERS AND OLYMPIANS

ALL-STAR GAME APPEARANCES

1980 NHL All-Star Game (Joe Louis Arena — Detroit, Mich.)
Wales Conference vs. Campbell Conference

Gordie Howe (1a) — Marked the last of his NHL-record 23 All-Star Games

1981 NHL All-Star Game (The Forum — Inglewood, Calif.)
Wales Conference vs. Campbell Conference

Mark Howe
Mike Rogers

1982 NHL All-Star Game (Capital Centre — Landover, Md.)
Wales Conference vs. Campbell Conference

Blaine Stoughton

1983 NHL All-Star Game (Nassau Coliseum — Uniondale, N.Y.)
Wales Conference vs. Campbell Conference

Ron Francis

1984 NHL All-Star Game (Brendan Byrne Arena — East Rutherford, N.J.)
Wales Conference vs. Campbell Conference

Mark Johnson (3a)

1985 NHL All-Star Game (Olympic Saddledome — Calgary, Alta.)
Wales Conference vs. Campbell Conference

Ron Francis (1g)

1986 NHL All-Star Game (Hartford Civic Center — Hartford, Conn.)
Wales Conference vs. Campbell Conference

Ron Francis — Did not play due to injury
Sylvain Turgeon (1a)

Rendez-vous ’87 (Colisee de Quebec — Quebec City, Que.)
Two-game series, NHL All-Stars vs. Soviet national team

Ulf Samuelsson
Kevin Dineen (1g)

1988 NHL All-Star Game (St. Louis Arena — St. Louis, Mo.)
Wales Conference vs. Campbell Conference

Kevin Dineen (2a)

1989 NHL All-Star Game (Northlands Coliseum — Edmonton, Alta.)
Wales Conference vs. Campbell Conference

Kevin Dineen

1990 NHL All-Star Game (Civic Arena — Pittsburgh, Pa.)
Wales Conference vs. Campbell Conference

Ron Francis (2a)

1991 NHL All-Star Game (Chicago Stadium — Chicago, Ill.)
Wales Conference vs. Campbell Conference

Pat Verbeek (1a)

1992 NHL All-Star Game (The Spectrum — Philadelphia, Pa.)
Wales Conference vs. Campbell Conference

John Cullen

1993 NHL All-Star Game (Montreal Forum — Montreal, Que.)
Wales Conference vs. Campbell Conference

Zarley Zalapski

1994 NHL All-Star Game (Madison Square Garden — New York, N.Y.)
Eastern Conference vs. Western Conference

Geoff Sanderson (1a)

1996 NHL All-Star Game (FleetCenter — Boston, Mass.)
Eastern Conference vs. Western Conference

Brendan Shanahan

1997 NHL All-Star Game (San Jose Arena — San Jose, Calif.)
Eastern Conference vs. Western Conference

Geoff Sanderson — Won the Puck Control Relay skills event

1999 NHL All-Star Game (Ice Palace — Tampa, Fla.)
North America vs. World

Arturs Irbe (1a) — Won the Breakaway Relay skills event
Keith Primeau

2000 NHL All-Star Game (Air Canada Centre — Toronto, Ont.)
North America vs. World

Sami Kapanen — Won the Fastest Skater skills event

2001 NHL All-Star Game (Pepsi Center — Denver, Colo.)
North America vs. World

Sandis Ozolinsh (1a)

2002 NHL All-Star Game (Staples Center — Los Angeles, Calif.)
North America vs. World

Sami Kapanen (1g, 1a) — Won the Fastest Skater skills event

2003 NHL All-Star Game (Office Depot Center — Sunrise, Fla.)
Eastern Conference vs. Western Conference

Jeff O’Neill

2007 NHL All-Star Game (American Airlines Center — Dallas, Texas)
Eastern Conference vs. Western Conference

Eric Staal (1g) — Won the Accuracy Shooting skills event
Justin Williams (1g, 1a)

2008 NHL All-Star Game (Philips Arena — Atlanta, Ga.)
Eastern Conference vs. Western Conference

Eric Staal (2g, 1a) — Named All-Star Game MVP

2009 NHL All-Star Game (Bell Centre — Montreal, Que.)
Eastern Conference vs. Western Conference

Eric Staal (1g)

2011 NHL All-Star Game (RBC Center — Raleigh, N.C.)
Team Staal vs. Team Lidstrom

Jeff Skinner (Staal: 1a) — Youngest-ever All-Star Game player (18 years, 259 days)
Eric Staal (Staal: 2g) — Captained Team Staal, picked via first-ever All-Star draft
Cam Ward (Staal)

2015 NHL All-Star Game (Nationwide Arena — Columbus, Ohio)
Team Toews vs. Team Foligno

Justin Faulk (Toews: 2a)

2016 NHL All-Star Game (Bridgestone Arena — Nashville, Tenn.)
Three-on-three tournament, Metropolitan Division vs. Atlantic Division

Justin Faulk (1a)

2017 NHL All-Star Game (Staples Center — Los Angeles, Calif.)
Three-on-three, Metropolitan Division vs. Atlantic/Pacific Division

Justin Faulk (1g, 4a in 2 GP)

2018 NHL All-Star Game (Amalie Arena — Tampa, Fla.)
Three-on-three, Metropolitan Division vs. Atlantic Division

Noah Hanifin

2019 NHL All-Star Game (SAP Center — San Jose, Calif.)
Three-on-three, Metropolitan Division vs. Atlantic/Central Division

Sebastian Aho (1g, 2a in 2 GP)

2020 NHL All-Star Game (Enterprise Center — St. Louis, Mo.)
Three-on-three, Metropolitan Division vs. Atlantic Division

Dougie Hamilton — Did not play due to injury
Jaccob Slavin — Replaced Hamilton, won the Accuracy Shooting skills event

2022 NHL All-Star Game (T-Mobile Arena — Paradise, Nev.)
Three-on-three, Metropolitan Division vs. Pacific/Central Division

Sebastian Aho (1g, 1a in 2 GP) — Won the Accuracy Shooting skills event
Frederik Andersen (1a in 2 GP)
Rod Brind’Amour — Coached the Metropolitan Division

2023 NHL All-Star Game (FLA Live Arena — Sunrise, Fla.)
Three-on-three, Metropolitan Division vs. Atlantic Division

Andrei Svechnikov — Won the Fastest Skater skills competition event
Rod Brind’Amour — Coached the Metropolitan Division

NHL ALL-STAR TEAMS

Second All-Star Team

Mike Liut (G), 1986-87
Eric Staal (C), 2005-06
Dougie Hamilton (D), 2020-21

All-Rookie Team

Sylvain Turgeon (LW), 1983-84
Dana Murzyn (D), 1985-86
Peter Sidorkiewicz (G), 1988-89
Brad Shaw (D), 1989-90
Chris Pronger (D), 1993-94
Shane Willis (RW), 2000-01
Jeff Skinner (F), 2010-11
Justin Faulk (D), 2011-12
Alex Nedeljkovic (G), 2020-21

NHL AWARD WINNERS

Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy
Presented to the player who best exemplifies the qualities of perseverance, sportsmanship and dedication to hockey

Doug Jarvis, 1986-87
FINALISTS: Derek Ryan, 2016-17 // Jordan Staal, 2017-18

Lester Patrick Trophy
Presented for outstanding service to hockey in the United States

Peter Karmanos (Owner), 1998

Lady Byng Memorial Trophy
Presented to the player adjudged to have exhibited the best type of sportsmanship and gentlemanly conduct combined with a high standard of playing ability

Ron Francis, 2001-02
Jaccob Slavin, 2020-21
FINALISTS: Jaccob Slavin, 2021-22

King Clancy Memorial Trophy
Presented to the player who best exemplifies leadership qualities on and off the ice and has made a noteworthy humanitarian contribution in his community

Ron Francis, 2001-02

NHL Foundation Player Award (1997-98 to 2016-17)
Presented to the player who applied the core values of hockey – commitment, perseverance and teamwork – to enrich the lives of people in his community

Ron Francis, 2001-02

Conn Smythe Trophy
Presented to the most valuable player for his team in the playoffs

Cam Ward, 2005-06

Frank J. Selke Trophy
Presented to the forward who best excels in the defensive aspects of the game

Rod Brind’Amour, 2005-06
Rod Brind’Amour, 2006-07

Calder Memorial Trophy
Presented to the player selected as the most proficient in his first year of competition

Jeff Skinner, 2010-11
FINALISTS: Sylvain Turgeon, 1983-84 // Alex Nedeljkovic, 2020-21

Jack Adams Award
Presented to the coach adjudged to have contributed the most to his team’s success

Rod Brind’Amour, 2020-21
FINALISTS: Jack Evans, 1986-87 // Peter Laviolette, 2005-06

William M. Jennings Trophy
Presented to the goaltender(s) having played a minimum of 25 games for the team(s) with the fewest goals scored against it

Frederik Andersen and Antti Raanta, 2021-22
RUNNERS-UP: Frederik Andersen and Antti Raanta, 2022-23

NHL WEEKLY & MONTHLY STARS

NHL Stars of the Week

Rod Brind’Amour, W.E. Nov. 19, 2006 (Second)
Justin Williams, W.E. Oct. 21, 2007 (Third)
Rod Brind’Amour (2), W.E. Oct. 28, 2007 (Second)
Cam Ward, W.E. Jan. 4, 2009 (Third)
Cam Ward (2), W.E. Jan. 25, 2009 (Second)
Eric Staal, W.E. March 8, 2009 (First)
Cam Ward (3), W.E. March 22, 2009 (First)
Cam Ward (4), W.E. March 29, 2009 (Third)
Eric Staal (2), W.E. April 11, 2010 (Second)
Eric Staal (3), W.E. Dec. 19, 2010 (Third)
Jussi Jokinen, W.E. Jan. 16, 2011 (First)
Eric Staal (4), W.E. Jan. 30, 2011 (First)
Jiri Tlusty, W.E. Feb. 17, 2013 (Third)
Jeff Skinner, W.E. Dec 8, 2013 (First)
Jeff Skinner (2), W.E. Jan. 5, 2014 (First)
Andrej Sekera, W.E. Jan. 26, 2014 (Third)
Justin Faulk, W.E. Dec. 13, 2015 (Third)
Cam Ward (5), W.E. Nov. 20, 2016 (Second)
Brock McGinn, W.E. Jan. 15, 2017 (Third)
Sebastian Aho, W.E. Feb. 5, 2017 (First)
Teuvo Teravainen, W.E. Nov. 19, 2017 (First)
Sebastian Aho (2), W.E. Oct. 14, 2018 (Third)
Martin Necas, W.E. March 7, 2021 (Third)
Martin Necas (2), W.E. March 28, 2021 (Second)
Sebastian Aho (3), W.E. Dec. 12, 2021 (Second)
Frederik Andersen, W.E. Jan. 30, 2022 (Second)
Antti Raanta, W.E. Jan. 1, 2023 (Third)
Brent Burns, W.E. April 14, 2023 (Second)

NHL Stars of the Month

Cam Ward, March 2009 (First)
Jeff Skinner, January 2011 (Rookie)
Anton Khudobin, January 2014 (First)
Alex Nedeljkovic, March 2021 (Rookie)
Sebastian Aho, April 2021 (Central)
Frederik Andersen, October 2021 (Third)
Pyotr Kochetkov, December 2022 (Rookie)

TEAM AWARDS

Steve Chiasson Award
Presented to the Hurricanes player who best exemplifies determination and dedication while proving to be an inspiration to his teammates through his performance and approach to the game

1999-00: Sean Hill
2000-01: Rod Brind’Amour
2001-02: Ron Francis
2002-03: Kevyn Adams
2003-04: Sean Hill (2)
2005-06: Rod Brind’Amour (2)
2006-07: Rod Brind’Amour (3)
2007-08: Bret Hedican
2008-09: Rod Brind’Amour (4)
2009-10: Rod Brind’Amour (5)
2010-11: Tim Gleason
2011-12: Eric Staal
2012-13: Tim Gleason (2)
2013-14: Manny Malhotra
2014-15: Jordan Staal
2015-16: Jay McClement
2016-17: Bryan Bickell
2017-18: Jordan Staal (2)
2018-19: Justin Williams
2019-20: Andrei Svechnikov
2020-21: Jordan Staal (3)
2021-22: Jesper Fast
2022-23: Brent Burns

 

Josef Vasicek Award
Presented by the Carolina chapter of the Professional Hockey Writers Association (PHWA) for outstanding cooperation with the local media, formerly known as the Good Guy Award

2000-01: Glen Wesley
2001-02: Arturs Irbe
2002-03: Kevyn Adams
2003-04: Kevyn Adams (2)
2005-06: Aaron Ward
2006-07: Mike Commodore
2007-08: Cam Ward
2008-09: Tuomo Ruutu
2009-10: Eric Staal
2010-11: Jussi Jokinen
2011-12: Jay Harrison
2012-13: Patrick Dwyer
2013-14: Jordan Staal
2014-15: Brad Malone
2015-16: Jeff Skinner
2016-17: Justin Faulk
2017-18: Jordan Staal (2)
2018-19: Justin Williams
2019-20: Jordan Martinook
2020-21: Alex Nedeljkovic
2021-22: Andrei Svechnikov
2022-23: Antti Raanta

 

  

Team MVP
Presented by the Carolina chapter of the Professional Hockey Writers Association (PHWA) to the Hurricanes’ most valuable player

2000-01: Arturs Irbe
2001-02: Ron Francis
2002-03: Ron Francis (2)
2003-04: Sean Hill
2005-06: Eric Staal
2006-07: Ray Whitney
2007-08: Eric Staal (2)
2008-09: Cam Ward
2009-10: Jussi Jokinen
2010-11: Cam Ward (2)
2011-12: Eric Staal (3)
2012-13: Justin Faulk
2013-14: Andrej Sekera
2014-15: Justin Faulk (2)
2015-16: Jordan Staal
2016-17: Jeff Skinner
2017-18: Sebastian Aho
2018-19: Sebastian Aho (2)
2019-20: Sebastian Aho (3)
2020-21: Sebastian Aho (4)
2021-22: Frederik Andersen
2022-23: Sebastian Aho (5)

 

 

WINTER OLYMPIANS

1972 Winter Olympics (Sapporo, Japan)

Kevin Ahearn (United States), Silver
Mark Howe (United States), Silver
Paul Hurley (United States), Silver
Tim Sheehy (United States), Silver

1976 Winter Olympics (Innsbruck, Austria)

Danny Bolduc (United States), 4th

1984 Winter Olympics (Sarajevo, Yugoslavia)

Kevin Dineen (Canada), 4th
Mark Fusco (United States), 7th
David A. Jensen (United States), 7th

Dave Tippett (Canada), 4th

1988 Winter Olympics (Calgary, Alta.)

Gord Sherven (Canada), 4th
Scott Young (United States), 7th

1992 Winter Olympics (Albertville, France)

Sean Burke (Canada), Silver

1994 Winter Olympics (Lillehammer, Norway)

Ted Crowley (United States), 8th
Ted Drury (United States), 8th
Sami Kapanen (Finland), 3rd
Manny Legace (Canada), Silver
Andrei Nikolishin (Russia), 4th
Robert Petrovicky (Slovakia), 6th

1998 Winter Olympics (Nagano, Japan)

Sami Kapanen (Finland), 3rd
Keith Primeau (Canada), 4th

2002 Winter Olympics (Salt Lake City, Utah)

Tom Barrasso (United States), Silver
Sami Kapanen (Finland), 5th

2006 Winter Olympics (Turin, Italy)

Erik Cole (United States), 8th
Matt Cullen (United States), 8th

Martin Gerber (Switzerland), 6th
Bret Hedican (United States), 8th
Frantisek Kaberle (Czech Republic), Bronze
Doug Weight (United States), 8th
Peter Laviolette (United States), 8th — Head Coach
Eric Staal (Canada), 7th

2010 Winter Olympics (Vancouver, B.C.)

Tim Gleason (United States), Silver
Joni Pitkanen (Finland), Bronze
Tuomo Ruutu (Finland), Bronze
Eric Staal (Canada), Gold

2014 Winter Olympics (Sochi, Russia)

Justin Faulk (United States), 4th
Tuomo Ruutu (Finland), Bronze
Andrej Sekera (Slovakia), 11th
Alexander Semin (Russia), 5th

IIHF WORLD JUNIOR CHAMPIONSHIP PARTICIPANTS

Please note that prospects are listed here only if they were with the Whalers/Hurricanes at the time of that year’s IIHF World Junior Championship (e.g., players drafted by Hartford/Carolina will only be listed for the tournaments following their draft year).

1980 (1) Stuart Smith (Canada)
1981 (1) Fred Arthur (Canada)
1983 (2) Ulf Samuelsson (Sweden), Jim Johannson (United States)
1984 (5) Mark Paterson (Canada), Ville Siren (Finland)**, Ulf Samuelsson (Sweden), Jim Johannson (United States), Brian Johnson (United States)
1985 (3)
Leif Carlsson (Sweden), Brian Johnson (United States), Greg Dornbach (United States)
1986 (2)
Sylvain Cote (Canada)**, Greg Dornbach (United States)***
1987 (1)
Scott Young (United States)
1988 (2)
Jody Hull (Canada)*, Joe Day (United States)
1989 (2)
Adam Burt (United States), Barry Richter (United States)
1990 (2)
Bobby Holik (Czechoslovakia)***, Barry Richter (United States)
1991 (1)
Espen Knutsen (Norway)
1992 (4)
Patrick Poulin (Canada), Michael Nylander (Sweden)**, Todd Hall (United States)***, Brian Mueller (United States)***
1993 (2)
Jan Vopat (Czechoslovakia)***, Todd Hall (United States)
1994 (2)
Marek Malik (Czech Republic), Jason McBain (United States)
1995 (3)
Jeff O’Neill (Canada)*, Marek Malik (Czech Republic), Ashlin Halfnight (United States)
1996 (1)
Hnat Domenichelli (Canada)*
19
97 (3) — Hugh Hamilton (Canada)*, Sergei Fedotov (Russia)***, Andrei Petrunin (Russia)***
1998 (1)
Nikos Tselios (United States)
1999 (3)
Kent McDonell (Canada)**, Nikos Tselios (United States), Chris Madden (United States)
2000 (2)
Jaroslav Svoboda (Czech Republic)*, Josef Vasicek (Czech Republic)*
2001 (3)
— J.D. Forrest (United States), Craig Kowalski (United States), Damian Surma (United States)
2002 (1)
Igor Knyazev (Russia)*
2003 (1)
Daniel Manzato (Switzerland)
2004 (2)
Daniel Manzato (Switzerland), Danny Richmond (United States)*
2005 (2)
Andrew Ladd (Canada)*, Casey Borer (United States)
2006 (3)
Risto Korhonen (Finland)***, Magnus Akerlund (Sweden), Jack Johnson (United States)
2007 (3)
Jakub Vojta (Czech Republic), Kyle Lawson (United States)***, Jamie McBain (United States)***
2008 (2)
Brandon Sutter (Canada)*, Jamie McBain (United States)
2009 (3) — Zach Boychuk (Canada)*, Michal Jordan (Czech Republic), Drayson Bowman (United States)

2010 (2)
Michal Jordan (Czech Republic), Tommi Kivisto (Finland)
2011 (4)
Tommi Kivisto (Finland), Rasmus Rissanen (Finland), Brian Dumoulin (United States)***, Justin Faulk (United States)***
2012 (2)
Victor Rask (Sweden)*, Gregory Hofmann (Switzerland)
2013 (2)
Ryan Murphy (Canada), Victor Rask (Sweden)**
2014 (3)
Erik Karlsson (Sweden)**, Elias Lindholm (Sweden)**, Jaccob Slavin (United States)
2015 (3)
Sergey Tolchinsky (Russia)**, Lucas Wallmark (Sweden), Alex Nedeljkovic (United States)
2016 (4)
Haydn Fleury (Canada), Roland McKeown (Canada), Sebastian Aho (Finland)*, Alex Nedeljkovic (United States)
2017 (4)
Jake Bean (Canada)**, Julien Gauthier (Canada)**, Nicolas Roy (Canada)**, Janne Kuokkanen (Finland)
2018 (3)
Jake Bean (Canada)*, Martin Necas (Czech Republic), Janne Kuokkanen (Finland)
2019 (2)
Martin Necas (Czech Republic), Jack Drury (United States)**
2020 (5)
Anttoni Honka (Finland), Lenni Killinen (Finland), Patrik Puistola (Finland), Dominik Bokk (Germany), Jack Drury (United States)
2021 (4)
Ryan Suzuki (Canada)**, Vasily Ponomarev (Russia), Noel Gunler (Sweden), Zion Nybeck (Sweden)
2022 (4) Ronan Seeley (Canada)*, Aleksi Heimosalmi (Finland)**, Ville Koivunen (Finland)**, Nikita Quapp (Germany)
The 2022 IIHF World Junior Championships were originally scheduled to be held from Dec. 26, 2021Jan. 5, 2022. Due to COVID-19 outbreaks within multiple teams, the tournament was cancelled on Dec. 29. The tournament was replayed from Aug. 920, 2022, with updated rosters, and Russia was replaced by Latvia in the tournament due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Nikita Guslistov (Russia), Alexander Pashin (Russia), Vasily Ponomarev (Russia), Zion Nybeck (Sweden), Joel Nystrom (Sweden) and Scott Morrow (United States) were originally rostered for their countries prior to the tournament’s cancellation but were not selected for the rescheduled event. Before rosters and statistics from the original tournament were nullified, Carolina’s 10 prospects were initially tied for the most from any NHL team in WJC history.
2023 (4) Aleksi Heimosalmi (Finland), Ville Koivunen (Finland), Nikita Quapp (Germany), Jackson Blake (United States)***

* — Gold Medalist          ** — Silver Medalist          *** — Bronze Medalist