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The Hurricanes and Capitals are contrasts in almost every possible way which should make for an intriguing playoff matchup.Gerry Broome/The Associated Press

When the Carolina Hurricanes take the ice for Game 1 of their first-round series against the Capitals on Thursday, their blueline will have less playoff experience than top Washington defenceman John Carlson.

Of their 342 games of NHL postseason experience, captain Justin Williams and second-line centre Jordan Staal make up 213 of that; half of the Hurricanes’ lineup will be making their playoff debuts. Washington has two such newcomers and 1,282 games of experience, thanks to its Cup run a year ago and many previous playoff trips.

The Hurricanes and Capitals are contrasts in almost every possible way. Carolina is a young, fast, aggressive team that ended a decade-long playoff drought. Washington is a seasoned group largely unchanged from winning it all in June and has its sights set on trying to do it again.

“Sometimes until you actually taste the result, you don’t know whether it’s worth it or not,” Capitals coach Todd Reirden said. “It’s so worth it and then some and I think that’s the opportunity that we were able to gain last year was knowing now how great it does taste and that should drive us through difficult times this year.”

The Capitals are in the playoffs for the 11th time in the past 12 years with Alex Ovechkin and Nicklas Backstrom. The last time the Hurricanes made it, coach Rod Brind’Amour was their captain and they were three years removed from their only championship.

Williams is the tie that binds them after spending the 2015-16 and 2016-17 seasons with Washington before returning to Carolina. He was a linemate of Brind’Amour’s during the glory days and was part of Capitals teams that lost in the second round twice before breaking through after he left.

“Perfect storm,” the 37-year-old winger said. “I want to beat the tails off them. They had their success last year, but obviously it’s going to be an extremely tough series against a proven, playoff-winning team.”

Ovechkin is coming off his eighth career 50-goal season and was the playoff MVP last year, centre Evgeny Kuznetsov was the leading scorer on that run and goaltender Braden Holtby was the Vezina Trophy winner in 2016. The Hurricanes match that with MVP-calibre centre Sebastian Aho, Williams, Staal and overachieving goalies Petr Mrazek and Curtis McIlhenney who helped get them into the playoffs as the first wild card in the East.

The Capitals are trying not to oversell their experience advantage and overlook the “Storm Surge” Hurricanes.

“They battled through all year and I think they are right now in a kind of playoff mode because they were fighting for that spot and they played hard,” Ovechkin said. “It doesn’t matter [if] your opponent is first year or Stanley Cup champions. We just have to play our game and play smart, play hard and get the result done.”

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