Edmonton Oilers
Face of the Franchise
Trading down at the 2021 NHL Draft has been a disaster for the Oilers
Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/trading-down-2021-nhl-draft-disaster-edmonton-oilers-jesper-wallstedt
The Edmonton Oilers often tend to shoot themselves in the foot when it comes to trades.
Look no further than the Griffin Reinhart trade at the 2015 NHL Draft. The Oilers sent the 16th and 33rd overall picks to the New York Islanders for a young defender struggling in the American Hockey League. At the time, it was an awful trade, and it has somehow gotten even worse.
Available 16th overall were Mathew Barzal, Kyle Connor, Thomas Chabot, Joel Eriksson Ek, Brock Boeser, and a whole list of talented played. Two picks after the 33rd overall pick, Sebastian Aho was selected. Imagine if the Oilers selected Connor McDavid, Kyle Connor, and Sebastian Aho in the same draft? Their other three picks in the draft, Caleb Jones, John Marino, and Ethan Bear, all played a sizable number of NHL games for how late they were picked.
Without question, this trade is the worst in Oilers history, even worse than the Gretzky trade. It’s the epitome of Peter Chiarelli’s time in Edmonton, paired with the Taylor Hall trade (which was needed), the Jordan Eberle trades, and the ensuing smaller trades. That said, those aren’t the trades we’ll focus on today.
After the Oilers went from Eberle to Ryan Spooner, Chiarelli was fired, but not before signing Mikko Koskinen to a shocking deal worth $4.5 million annually. Cam Talbot was traded soon after, and Edmonton’s search for a goaltender truly began. They signed Mike Smith as a stopgap, and he performed well, but the Oilers had a franchise netminder available.
In the 2021 NHL Draft, the Oilers had the 20th overall pick. Available at the time were Jesper Wallstedt, Fabian Lysell, Xavier Bourgault, Wyatt Johnston, and Mackie Samoskevich. Wallstedt was selected 20th overall, but not by the Oilers, as they traded down to the 22nd overall pick to select Bourgault. They also selected German defender Luca Munzenberger with the additional third-rounder that they received from Minnesota.
Somehow, this one is going to wind up even worse than passing on Zach Parise for Marc-Antoine Pouliot and J-F Jacques.
Five years later, Wallstedt has developed into the real deal. He was already one of the best goaltending prospects in the league, but so far in 2025-26, the 23-year-old has a.926 save percentage and 2.20 goals against average. Among goalies with seven games played, he’s first in save percentage. And he was right there for the taking.
To be fair, the Oilers had Stuart Skinner, Olivier Rodrigue, and Ilya Konovalov as netminding prospects, so how’d that turn out? Well, Konovalov played just 17 games in North America with the Oilers’ American Hockey League team before returning to Russia. Rodrigue joined Konovalov in the Kontinental Hockey League this off-season after playing just two National Hockey League games.
That leaves just Skinner of the trio of netminders that made the Oilers pass on Wallstedt. We all know how that has turned out, as Skinner has been the complete opposite of Wallstedt this season, with his .881 save percentage being the 11th-worst (of 47 goalies) with seven or more games played.
It’s hard not to be bitter about the Oilers trading down, because imagine where they’d be right now if they had chosen Wallstedt over Bourgault? Skinner has shown that when he’s at his best, he’s an above-average starter, but the issue is that he’s so inconsistent that he’s costing the Oilers games at this point.
Over four years later, the Oilers have four goaltending prospects of note. Eemil Vinni was their second-round pick in 2024, and he has a .879 save percentage in 11 games played in Finland’s second tier. Nathaniel Day was selected in the sixth round of the 2023 draft, and after four rough seasons in the Ontario Hockey League, the 20-year-old has an .887 save percentage in the ECHL.
In the 2025 draft, the Oilers drafted another Finnish netminder, Daniel Salonen, who has an .878 save percentage in 13 games in SM-Liiga. Their lone hope to develop a starting netminder is 21-year-old Swede Samuel Jonsson, who has a .926 save percentage and 1.64 goals against average in six ECHL games.
There have been many decisions since the start of the Decade of Darkness that have set the Oilers back. The Ryan Smyth trade, falling for Griffin Reinhart because he was good with the Oil Kings, trading Eberle, but none have had an impact on the 2025-26 Oilers like trading down two spots in the 2021 draft and passing on Wallstedt.
Ryley Delaney is a Nation Network writer for Oilersnation, FlamesNation, and Blue Jays Nation. Follow her on Twitter @Ryley__Delaney.
Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/trading-down-2021-nhl-draft-disaster-edmonton-oilers-jesper-wallstedt