That’s it: the Rocket is in the final four of the AHL playoffs.
There are only five teams left in the playoffs (the Abbotsford Canucks or Colorado Eagles will be eliminated today, and the winner of the final game will face the Texas Stars in the Western Final), and the Rocket is one of them.
On Wednesday, the Rocket will host the Charlotte Checkers, the Panthers’ training club, at Place Bell. Tickets go on sale in a few hours, for those interested.
Tickets go on sale tomorrow at noon
Tickets go on sale tomorrow at noon pic.twitter.com/IEbCesfsuR– xyz – Rocket de Laval (@RocketLaval) May 26, 2025
This means there will potentially be two two-game sequences in as many nights on Montreal’s North Shore.
The Charlotte Checkers aren’t in the Rocket’s division, and they’re not exactly the best-known club among Quebec fans. What should both sides be on the lookout for in the series?
1. The Checkers, in Anthony Marcotte’s opinion, are a club with more experience than the Americans and the Rocket. On the other hand, they’re not the most talented of the bunch.
But in the playoffs, experience counts.
A much more experienced team from top to bottom than Rochester. Less talented in my opinion. They’ll have a distinct advantage in terms of experience. It’s going to be very interesting.
– Anthony Marcotte (@anthonymarcotte) May 26, 2025
2. The Checkers needed eight games (6-2 record) to get out of their division in the playoffs. But even so, no player has more than six points since the end of the regular season.
For the Rocket, in nine games, four forwards have more than six points. And defenseman Logan Mailloux has six points.
But in Charlotte, it’s a different story. Rasmus Asplund and John Leonard, Charlotte’s leading scorers in the playoffs, aren’t even close to the point-per-game mark.
The two guys, aged 27 and 26 respectively, have been the club’s driving force since the start of the playoffs.
Michael Benning, a 22-year-old defenseman in his second year in the pros, is one to watch. He’s the Checkers’ only real young prospect among the club’s top six scorers since the start of the playoffs. An experienced club, as Anthony Marcotte used to say…
Ah: we’re also keeping an eye on Jesse Puljujarvi. He can go out in force if he wants to.
Laval is off to face the Charlotte Checkers in the AHL Conference Finals, extending the season for a plethora of #Habs prospects. Charlotte is 6-2 in the post-season, led offensively by the following: https://t.co/tDEdrCj5R2 pic.twitter.com/hgjCsUG2r4
– Dan Kramer (@DanKramerHabs) May 25, 2025
3. In front of the net, there’s no doubt about it: the man you can trust is Kaapo Kahkonen. You’ve probably heard of him, having played 140 NHL games with the Wild, Sharks, Devils and Avalanche.
This season, he’s been around: he played for the Avalanche (one game), but mostly in the AHL with the Eagles, Moose and Checkers.
In the playoffs, he played every minute for his club. He has a 6-2 record, a 1.85 GAA and a .918 save percentage. He’s given up just 15 goals and is full of confidence.
Cayden Primeau (because yes, he’ll probably be the one to start the series) will have to repeat his round-robin exploits against the Americans to give his team a chance.
This American against the Americans
This American against the Americans pic.twitter.com/7556gFNbFO– xyz – Rocket de Laval (@RocketLaval) May 26, 2025
Unlike the Rocket, the Checkers needed only one goaltender to advance to the Final Four.
The Rocket, on the other hand, saw Jacob Fowler win every game against Cleveland and Cayden Primeau win nothing against the Monsters. And against Rochester, it was the complete opposite. #EhBien
4. What’s in it for the Rocket?
While Charlotte has a great hockey club (94 points, fourth overall in 72 games this season… and sweep of the Bears to get out of the division), the Rocket is also strong.
It had 103 points on the season. That’s no mean feat.
Yesterday, we saw that the club is really strong when it plays like it can. And Sean Farrell wasn’t afraid to say it after the game: nobody can keep up with the Rocket when they play their way.
WHAT SEAN SAID
WHAT SEAN SAID pic.twitter.com/WDGEzP3oeq– xyz – Rocket de Laval (@RocketLaval) May 26, 2025
5. Pascal Vincent’s club (who still can’t focus 100% on NHL coaching jobs right now) doesn’t have an eye-popping star, but it also has a great collective group.
And David Reinbacher, a high draft pick in 2023, helps stabilize the group. Making a bad decision on the ice doesn’t happen very often, let’s say.
In 30 AHL games so far at the ages of 19 and 20, including nine playoff games, fifth overall pick David Reinbacher is +15. In his first 84 regular-season AHL games, sixth overall pick David Jiricek was -27.
The kid may turn out okay.
– Grant McCagg (@grantmccagg) May 26, 2025
– Les Checkers, en français SVP.
we have our answer https://t.co/jwiUeOiKpc
– Charlotte Checkers (@CheckersHockey) May 25, 2025
– Of note.
First time since 2011 that the Canadiens’ AHL and ECHL clubs make it to the Final Four
2025: Rocket and Lions with 18 Québécois in the lineups in their last games
2011: Hamilton and Wheeling
– Guillaume Villemaire (@GVillemaire13) May 26, 2025
– Bonsoir, he’s (probably) gone.
Darren Dreger: Mitch Marner odds of leaving Toronto now “99%” – Leafs Morning Take Podcast
– NHL Rumour Report (@NHLRumourReport) May 25, 2025
– A machine.
Reminds us of the guy he was in Anaheim. https://t.co/ObxVRLHAJ1
– Passion MLB (@passion_mlb) May 26, 2025
– To read.
Nobody demands perfection from Stuart Skinner – but this is the version the Oilers need.
What Martin Brodeur and Grant Fuhr think of Skinner’s improved performance and what it means in the bigger picture.
My Game 3 WCF column for@TheAthletichttps://t.co/GG4k0FpQIh
– Pierre LeBrun (@PierreVLeBrun) May 26, 2025
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