RALEIGH — Eric Staal became the fourth player to have his number retired by the Carolina Hurricanes when his No. 12 was raised at the Lenovo Center prior to the team’s game against the Anaheim Ducks on Sunday.
The Thunder Bay, Ontario, native and former No. 2 draft pick spent 12 of his 18 NHL seasons with Carolina, recording 455 goals and 608 assists over 1,365 career games. He served as captain from 2009 to 2016 and appeared in six NHL All-Star Games, winning MVP honors in 2008.
The 40-year-old Staal, who retired in July after signing a one-day contract with the team, joined Rod Brind’Amour (17), Ron Francis (10) and Glen Wesley (2) in the rafters.
He set several franchise records after the team relocated from Hartford, Connecticut, in 1997, including goals scored (322), assists (453), points (775), games played (909), power-play goals (105), power-play points (252) and hat tricks (13).
Aside from the individual accomplishments, Staal also saw the franchise carve its place in history with a Stanley Cup in 2006. He called that the highlight of his career.
“The memory I have of a Hurricane is of a Stanley Cup champion,” Staal said. “It’s not easy to win one. I only have one, and I won it here.”
Staal was joined for the ceremony by family, including his brothers Jordan, the current Hurricanes captain, and Marc, a former NHL defenseman. Current Hurricanes players took in the festivities from the bench, and several of his former teammates were also present. Cam Ward and Justin Williams, members of the Hurricanes Hall of Fame, donned varsity jackets and watched the ceremony from the ice.
A video montage was played, featuring highlights and interviews from Staal’s playing days.
“Words can hardly do justice how much this means to me,” said Staal, who was occasionally interrupted by fans chanting his name. “Growing up … playing in the NHL felt like an impossible dream.”
Staal was presented with a Breitling watch engraved with his name, number and phrase, “Forever a Hurricane.”
Speaking with reporters afterward, Staal said he’d like to get involved with hockey again in some capacity. But for now, he’s busy at home.
“I have three boys. They’re 15, 13 and 10,” Staal said. “I’m helping coach my oldest son and my youngest. … Time just kind of goes fast.”
In the game, Cutter Gauthier scored two goals, including one 1:52 into overtime, as the Ducks beat the Hurricanes 3-2.
Jansen Harkins also scored, and Lukas Dostal stopped 35 shots to help the Ducks snap a three-game losing streak. Jackson LaCombe added two assists.
Carolina’s Andrei Svechnikov scored a power-play goal midway through the third period, and Seth Jarvis tied it with 56 seconds remaining in regulation and the Carolina net empty. Pyotr Kochetkov made 17 saves.
Gauthier, the fifth overall pick of the 2022 draft, showed his potential with his sixth and seventh goals of the season.
Carolina dominated possession of the puck and nearly doubled up Anaheim in shots, 37-20, yet had little to show for it.
Dostal kept it scoreless with 7:05 left in the second when he stopped Eric Robinson on the breakaway. The Hurricanes had several other chances to score but struggled to solve Dostal, who had allowed nine goals in his previous two games.
Carolina dropped to 3-3 in overtime this season, losing for the first time since a 4-3 shootout loss to Columbus on Dec. 31.
The Ducks continue a six-game road trip on Tuesday against Washington Capitals while the Hurricanes visit the Buffalo Sabres on Wednesday.