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Charlotte Checkers Playoff Watch: Where They Stand With Two Weeks Left

The Checkers are 39-21-5, locked into third in the Atlantic with home ice secured, and closing the regular season with seven consecutive home games at Bojangles Coliseum. The defending Eastern Conference champions have been getting ready for eight years.

Jack Beckett· Staff Writer
||4 min read
Charlotte Checkers Default Illustration
Charlotte Checkers Default Illustration

Brian Pinho scored a shorthanded goal in the first period Friday night in Hartford. Then he scored the overtime winner. Then, on Saturday afternoon in the same building, Jack Devine buried a power-play goal in the second period and Pinho won it again in a shootout. Then the Checkers flew home to Charlotte, where they will play every remaining game of the regular season.

That is the short version. Here is the rest.

Charlotte is 39-21-5, good for 83 points and third place in the Atlantic Division with seven games left — all of them at Bojangles Coliseum. The Checkers clinched their eighth consecutive playoff berth on March 25, the third Atlantic Division team to qualify this season behind Providence and Wilkes-Barre/Scranton. The regular season ends April 19. The question now is not whether Charlotte makes the postseason. The question is what shape they're in when it starts.

The Hartford Statement

The weekend road series against the Wolf Pack answered a question that had been hanging over the roster for a week: whether the Checkers could win tight games away from home against teams with nothing to lose.

Hartford, sitting eighth in the Atlantic at 24-32-5, had every reason to play loose. Charlotte won both games by a single goal — 2-1 in overtime Friday, 2-1 in a shootout Saturday. Pinho, the 63-game iron man from North Andover, Massachusetts, delivered both finishes and has seven points in his last four games. Devine's power-play strike Saturday was the only even-strength or man-advantage goal Charlotte managed all weekend — the rest came shorthanded, in overtime, or in the skills competition. Cooper Black stopped 25 shots in Friday's overtime win. Louis Domingue made 26 saves Saturday and was perfect across three shootout rounds, improving Charlotte's shootout record to 3-0 on the season.

The games were not pretty. They were useful.

Where They Sit

The Atlantic Division standings make Charlotte's position clear:

Providence has run away with it — 99 points in 64 games. Wilkes-Barre/Scranton holds second at 90. Charlotte's 83 points are comfortable for third but seven back of second with seven games remaining. A first-round bye would require a near-perfect close and a Penguins collapse. That is not happening.

What Charlotte does have: 18 points of separation over fourth-place Hershey. Third place is locked. Home ice in the first round is locked. The Checkers will open the Calder Cup Playoffs at Bojangles Coliseum.

The more relevant math is about rhythm. Seven consecutive home games — Rochester tonight, Toronto on Friday and Saturday, Hershey on April 11-12, Lehigh Valley to close April 18-19 — give Charlotte something most AHL teams don't get: a playoff dress rehearsal in their own building. Three sets of back-to-backs against the same opponent. The kind of schedule that lets a coaching staff work on systems, manage minutes, and get its goaltending rotation sorted before the games that count.

The Goaltending Question

Cooper Black is 6-foot-8 and 24-11-4 with a .902 save percentage. The Florida Panthers — Charlotte's NHL affiliate and the back-to-back Stanley Cup champions — are watching his development as closely as anyone in their system.

Black started Friday in Hartford. Domingue, the veteran, got Saturday. Kirill Gerasimyuk, who owns a .904 save percentage in 17 appearances, has been the quiet third option all season. Geordie Kinnear has three goalies he trusts. That is a problem most coaches want.

The playoff question is simpler: who starts Game 1? Black has the Panthers pedigree and the workload. Domingue has the postseason experience and the steadiest numbers down the stretch. Kinnear has two weeks to decide — and seven home games to use as auditions.

The Bigger Picture

This is the eighth consecutive postseason for the Charlotte Checkers. The 2019 Calder Cup sits in the franchise's history. The 2025 Eastern Conference championship banner hangs in the rafters at Bojangles Coliseum — a building that just received $25 million in city-approved repairs after decades of deferred maintenance, including boiler systems dating to the 1950s.

Charlotte is not sneaking into the playoffs. The Checkers are the defending Eastern Conference champions, the primary development affiliate of the reigning Stanley Cup champions, and a franchise that has been to the postseason more often than not since arriving in Charlotte in 2010. The roster includes Panthers prospects like Gracyn Sawchyn, a second-round pick learning the professional game at the AHL level, and a captain in Trevor Carrick who has been through enough Charlotte playoff runs to know what the next two weeks require.

The Hershey back-to-back on April 11-12 carries its own narrative weight. Charlotte swept Hershey in three games in the 2025 second round. The Bears remember.

What Comes Next

Seven games. All home. A roster built for the postseason. A goaltending rotation with depth. A coaching staff that reached the Calder Cup Finals a year ago and knows what the path looks like from here.

The Checkers open tonight against the Rochester Americans at Bojangles Coliseum. Puck drops at 7:05.

The playoffs start in three weeks. Charlotte has been getting ready for eight years.

Jack Beckett

Staff Writer

Staff writer for Mercury Local covering government, elections, public safety, and development across multiple publications. Beckett has filed more than 600 stories on local policy, crime, zoning, and civic accountability in Connecticut and the Carolinas.

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