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Oilers’ Trent Frederic trending upward after being healthy scratched

Through the first half of the season, Trent Frederic’s start with the Edmonton Oilers after signing his eight-year deal hasn’t quite lived up to expectations, with only three points through 45 games.

As someone on the outside looking in, you can only speculate as to why — perhaps he’s still feeling the effects of the injury from last season, or maybe it’s simply still taking him time to adjust to the team. That said, the word that’s been sticking with me lately is confidence, which is something that can’t be tracked by data, or even the finest of technologies, at least to my knowledge.

Recently, Connor McDavid’s father, Brian, spoke about confidence while explaining the heater his son is on, recently extending his point streak to 20 games, saying, “Confidence is a huge thing, even for a player like him.”

Additionally, this past week I interviewed Vasily Podkolzin’s skills coach, Ned Lukacevic, and when I asked him what stands out most about Podkolzin’s improved offensive instincts this season, among a few things he mentioned was “confidence.”

Confidence, in life or in sports, is an important factor, and even professional athletes making millions of dollars struggle with it. For Frederic, this is purely speculation, but you don’t need a PhD to guess that his confidence — with only three points on the season after signing the biggest contract of his life — has likely taken a big hit.

And trying to dive further into the player’s mindset, I feel that at the start of the season, Frederic struggled with an identity issue. He played on the first line with Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl in the preseason, stayed there for only a couple of games in the regular season before the experiment was abandoned, and was then dropped to the bottom six. At that point, the question for him becomes: am I a top-six player, or a north-south, bottom-six physical guy?

And while Frederic was trying to figure out his identity on the team, the season wore on, and the points didn’t come. Thereafter, the 27-year-old likely started gripping the stick tighter and overthinking plays. In a hockey hotbed like Edmonton, that kind of pressure can weigh on a player, and I’d imagine his confidence on the ice hit a low point, and it’s been an uphill climb ever since.

Frederic’s game has picked up noticeably since the healthy scratch​


Then comes the healthy scratch against the Nashville Predators on Jan. 6, which I’d imagine is one of the more difficult spots an NHL regular can find themselves in.

The Oilers beat the Predators 6–2 on Jan. 6, while Frederic had a bird’s-eye view from the press box. However, perhaps sitting out was the wake-up call he needed, because he’s been very noticeable in every game since — something he hadn’t been during stretches throughout the season.

The rugged winger returned to the lineup the following game, and with his team trailing 3–1 against the Winnipeg Jets in the second period, Frederic became the catalyst for the Oilers’ comeback.

His fourth line went to work late in the second, getting a puck on net and stirring the pot after the whistle. That led to Frederic picking out the biggest guy in the pile — the 6-foot-7, 231-pound Logan Stanley — dropping the gloves with him and landing the cleanest punch of the tilt for his third fight of the season.

Trent Frederic vs Logan Stanley from the Edmonton Oilers at Winnipeg Jets game on Jan 8, 2026 https://t.co/NgCLsrLHRo

— HockeyFights.com (@hockeyfights) January 9, 2026

You have to give credit where it’s due to Frederic for engaging in that tilt, because it was a turning point in the game. Minutes later, Connor McDavid scored a gorgeous goal late in the period, setting the stage for the Oilers to come back and win the game.

Since then, Frederic’s play seems to be trending upward, and with it, maybe his confidence too.

Frederic didn’t register any points in the next game against the Los Angeles Kings. Still, it was a momentum-building effort, finishing with a couple of hits, winning 80% of his faceoffs, and the advanced metrics show he tilted the ice in the Oilers’ favour. According to Natural Stat Trick, he posted the following at 5v5 in 9:19 of ice time:

• 63.64 CF%
• 55.52 xGF%
• 60 SCF%
• 100 HDCF%

After that, the St. Louis, MO, native carried that momentum into the next game against the Chicago Blackhawks, in what I feel was one of his best games of the season.

The Oilers’ forward fired three shots on goal, which was significant considering he hadn’t registered one in his previous four games. Additionally, head coach Kris Knoblauch found ways to give Frederic more ice time, showing greater confidence in the forward. On one shift, he was lined up alongside Draisaitl and Podkolzin for a defensive-zone faceoff, which resulted in a 3-on-1 chance. Frederic opted to shoot, but couldn’t bury it.

Have to give credit where it’s due to Trent Frederic.

No points tonight, but he tilted the ice in just 9:25 of ice time:

• 3 shots on net
• 9–2 edge in shots
• 14–3 scoring chances
• 5–1 high-danger chances
• 83.52 xGF%

Tough season, but a step in the right direction.

— seanpangs (@seanpangs) January 13, 2026

Once again, no points on the night, but when I checked the team’s advanced metrics after the game, Frederic’s numbers were eye-popping, posting a 9–2 edge in shots, 14–3 edge in scoring chances, 5–1 edge in high-danger chances and 83.52% xGF.

He led the team in several underlying metrics against Chicago, with him and his line pushing the pace throughout the night. Considering that, it would have made sense to keep his line with Curtis Lazar and Mattias Janmark intact for the next game against the Predators. However, with Isaac Howard sitting out the previous game and the team likely wanting him to get a game in during the Oilers’ dads trip, Lazar was out, Howard was in, and Frederic was moved to center in Nashville.

As a whole, the metrics for the Howard-Frederic-Janmark line against the Predators weren’t great, having been scored on after a Howard giveaway. However, there weren’t any glaring errors by Frederic, and for him playing down the middle — a position he hasn’t played in quite some time — he once again was noticeable in a good way.

He won 71.43% of his draws, a team high at 5–2, and tied for the team lead in hits with four. One of those hits earned recognition on a Sportsnet slo-mo replay before the commercial break, when he delivered a heavy hit on the 6-foot-6 Michael McCarron, who had fought Darnell Nurse earlier in the night, crushing him behind the Oilers’ net in the second period.

Now, I know there’s a crowd that will come at me and say, ‘But he hasn’t produced any points!’ — which is completely fair. However, I think I’ve come to accept where we’re at with Frederic. He’s had a very rough season so far — nightmarish for a guy who signed a long-term deal — and for him, it’s about building his game for the second half of the season, one step at a time, in hopes of getting a confident Frederic for the playoffs.

So, we have to take the positives. There have been games throughout the season where he’s been very unnoticeable on the ice, but over the last few games, he’s stood out — whether it’s a fight, creating scoring chances, holding onto pucks longer, or delivering a big, crushing hit. The signs are pointing upward.

Keep the Frederic-Lazar-Janmark 4th line together​


Moving forward, I think Frederic’s spot on the fourth line is exactly where he needs to be to continue building his game. Additionally, I also feel Knoblauch needs to give the Frederic-Lazar-Janmark line a more consistent look.

They’ve looked like a legitimate fourth line that can sustain pressure, and I’ve previously mentioned that I feel Frederic and Lazar have some chemistry as well. They read off each other effectively on the forecheck, and an example of that came last month against the Jets, when their pressure caused a turnover that led to a goal by David Tomášek, as seen below:


Now, adding Janmark to the mix with Frederic and Lazar — and despite Lazar not being in the lineup for the last game against the Predators — the trio posted very good metrics over the previous two games playing together.

Against the Kings, that fourth line posted a 66.67 SF%, 96.80 xGF%, and 100 SCF% (9–5). Against the Blackhawks, Lazar had some point-blank chances to score, with the trio posting a 75 SF%, 65.32 xGF%, and 75 SCF%.

That said, both the eye test and the metrics show this line works, and giving the Frederic-Lazar-Janmark line a longer look could help them build even more chemistry and potentially be a solid line the team can lean on in the playoffs.

Meanwhile, Frederic’s goal for the second half of the season should be simple: build confidence on that fourth line and do the little things right — hit, cycle, battle hard, and make an impact in the minutes he’s given. And if he keeps trending in the right direction, we could slowly start to see his ‘expected goals’ turn into real ones on the scoresheet.


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Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/edmon...trending-upward-after-being-healthy-scratched
 
Better Lait Than Never: Oilers get Tristan Jarry and Jake Walman back, and the non-McDavid heaters

It’s been another wild week around here with the Oilers rollercoaster making another loop, and I’ve got a fresh episode of Better Lait Than Never ready to recap it all. On today’s podcast, I talked about Connor McDavid’ heater, Tristan Jarry’s return, Jake Walman, and much more.

I kicked off this week’s episode with a look at the heaters that are happening throughout the Oilers’ lineup right now, and while Connor McDavid is understandably getting all of the attention, there are a couple of other guys who are nearly as hot as the captain. From there, I offered the latest updates on Trent Frederic and Andrew Mangiapane after both guys returned to the lineup this past week, following some well-deserved time in the press box. Finally, I tried to figure out what to expect from Edmonton’s goaltending situation after Tristan Jarry returned to the crease Tuesday night in Nashville.

Finally, I wrapped up this week’s episode of BLTN with a Righteous Sack Beating about windrows, then closed out the podcast with another round of voicemails. The voicemail was alive this week, and everyone’s takes were all over the map and very fun for me to listen to. The voicemail is the best way to wrap up the show and give everyone a chance to share their thoughts. Another hearty thank you to everyone who contributed to this week’s episode. Having all of you in the mix makes the show so much better.

Want to leave a voicemail for next week’s show? Do it here!

Subscribe to Better Lait Than Never for FREE on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, and wherever else you get your podcasts from! Better Lait Than Never is proudly presented by Sports Interaction, Star Mechanical, and Trilogy Oilfield Rentals. Without them, this podcast would not be possible.

Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/bette...y-jake-walman-back-non-connor-mcdavid-heaters
 
Pre-Scout: Islanders visit Oilers amid season-long road trip

This is the second straight time the Edmonton Oilers host a team that just lost to the Winnipeg Jets.

The New York Islanders make their annual pilgrimage to Edmonton following a 5-4 loss, as they glide across the continent on a season-long road trip.

The group upfront took the blame, despite coming back from three goals down, as the usually steady Iyla Sorokin made just 17 saves.

“It felt like the game we expected tonight,” Lee said. “I think we knew that this Winnipeg team is much better than where they are right now and can easily put a big push in.

“Defensively, we have to be better, there’s no question about it…We know that in this room. It wasn’t our best tonight. You put in (four) goals and it’s not enough to get a point. We made some mistakes on the back-end tonight as a group, and we can fix that.”

The Islander names of old, combined with new faces, are making a competitive run for playoff contention, sitting second in the Metro Division with a 25-16-5 record.

That’s already within ten wins of their total a year ago, where they finished 23rd overall in the NHL, but lucked out in the lottery.

They’ve been playing good hockey.

But one of their biggest pieces likely won’t be in the lineup. Chosen for Team Canada, Bo Horvat hasn’t played in two weeks. His anticipated return is Jan. 21, but stranger things have happened.

Alex Romanov and Kyle Palmieri have knocked out for the year already, and longtime backup Semyon Varlamov is trending to return beyond the Olympics.

Who’s popping on Long Island?​


Simon Holmstrom had two goals and an assist in 4-3 overtime victory on Saturday against Minnesota. The Islanders erased deficits on three separate occasions, the second time this season they’ve done that en route to victory (also Oct. 18 in a 5-4 win against the Ottawa Senators).

He’s quietly lighting the lamp with a dozen goals. Holmstrom has been a slow developing prospect, drafted in the first round back in 2019. But last year was his coming out party with 45 points. He’s trending to produce another similar season.

Mathew Barzal has been finding ways to produce offensively. He has points in five of his last seven games, with one goal and eight points. He remains the de facto offensively driver in this lineup.

Of course, another Matthew has taken the league by storm. The prohibitive betting vavourite for the Calder Trophy, Matthew Schaefer is third on the team in goals with 13 and already hit 30 points.

While third in rookie scoring, behind Ivan Demidov and Beckett Senecke, Schaefer has been remarkably consistent and is such a pillar of their lineup already. In fact, two of the last three games his ice-time has topped 27 minutes. Impressive.

But a not so sexy name across the league is Emil Heineman, who is a sweetener in the blockbuster trade with Montreal that swapped Noah Dobson to the belle province.

Heineman’s scored 14 goals in his breakout sophomore campaign, trailing only Olympic selection Bo Horvat.

The former second round pick looks legit.

Notes…​

  • The power play discrepancies in this matchup tonight do not get anymore stark. The Islanders powerplay has been dreadful, sitting dead last in the NHL at ay 15.2 per cent, more than 18 per cent worse the Oilers power play.
  • The penalty kill is much better, a unit that is top-10 in the league at 81.4 per cent. Keep in mind, the Oilers penalty kill is continuing to creep up the ranks as well. Edmonton is ranked 12th on the PK at 80.3 per cent.
  • The Oilers will play in four games in three different timezones in six nights, this week. After central timezone battles on the road, this is just a quick pop-in back home, before going to the pacific to face the Vancouver Canucks.
  • Meanwhile, for the Islanders this is their fourth game of their monster seven-game roadtrip. So far the trip has elicited three points, 1-1-1.
  • The Isles are 3-2-1 in the month of January. This season, they’ve played well against the Western Conference too, suiting up with a 11-7-1 record.
  • I’d be surprised if the Islanders don’t start Sorokin, who’s been great this season. His .911 save percentage, if the season ended today, would be better than the previous two seasons.

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Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/pre-s...it-edmonton-oilers-amid-season-long-road-trip
 
Oilers can’t get anything past Ilya Sorokin as Islanders pick up 1-0 road win: Recap, Reaction, and Highlights

There’s nothing more boring than a game against the New York Islanders.

That was the fate of the Edmonton Oilers on Thursday evening. After 60 minutes of “action”, the Oilers fell 1-0 to Ilya Sorokin. Let’s take a look at what happened.

The lone goal came with about six minutes left in the game on the only Islanders’ power play of the game. Calum Ritchie received the puck down low beside Connor Ingram, and then passed it behind his back to Anthony Duclair. The Islanders’ forward was given way too much in the slot, beating Ingram for the 1-0 lead.

Anthony Duclair breaks the deadlock, and the Islanders lead 1-0 late in the third period.

📹: Sportsnet pic.twitter.com/zsyJgfaQCC

— Oilersnation.com, Oily Since ‘07 (@OilersNation) January 16, 2026

There were some lowlights in/during the game, and I’m not just talking about Kyle Tucker signing with the Dodgers. The Oilers thought they scored twice in the third period, the horn even came on for the first, as Evan Bouchard hit two bars, but the puck stayed out.

After review, the officials deem no goal for the Edmonton Oilers.

📹: Sportsnet pic.twitter.com/Gxgo4NoOvx

— Oilersnation.com, Oily Since ‘07 (@OilersNation) January 16, 2026

Seeking a goal with their goalie pulled, the Oilers came oh so close to tying the game. From his office, Leon Draisaitl ripped the puck on a one-timer, but it hit the post and went wide. The Islanders were able to kill off the rest of the time.

Takeaways…


It was a goaltender battle. Ilya Sorokin stopped all 35 shots that he faced, making numerous big saves along the way. If there was a worse goalie between the Islanders’ pipes, the Oilers would’ve won this game handedly. Seriously, the Oilers had 4.3 expected goals and 17 high-danger scoring chances in this game, according to Natural Stat Trick.

Most of Connor Ingram’s big saves came in the first period, facing just six shots over the last two periods. It only took one goal for the win, but Ingram stopped 17 of 18 shots for a .944 save percentage, the seventh time in eight games he’s had a save percentage above .900. He was good enough for a win on any other day.

Connor McDavid’s point streak has come to an end. It began after a 1-0 loss at the hands of the Minnesota Wild on Dec. 2, and ended with a 1-0 loss to the Islanders. In the 20 games, McDavid registered 46 points as the Oilers went 12-5-2.

The only line that had a subpar game was the fourth line of Trent Frederic, Mattias Janmark, and Curtis Lazar, as they had 32.85 percent of the expected goal share, giving up three high-danger opportunities while generating two of their own during five-on-five play. They had five defensive zone starts.

Their third line was the best line, as they had 86.32 percent of the expected goal share in their seven minutes and 40 seconds. Both the first and second line had strong games as well, as both lines had about 74 percent of the expected goal share.

At the end of the day, expected goals don’t count for much unless the puck goes into the net, but this wasn’t a devastating loss, they just got goalie’d. The Oilers are back in action on Saturday at 8:00 PM MT on the road against the Vancouver Canucks. After that, they’ll play their next eight games at Rogers Place.



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/edmonton-oilers-lose-new-york-islanders-recap-reaction-highlights
 
‘I already kind of forget what it was like in Edmonton’: Penguins’ Stuart Skinner talks life after trade

It’s been over a month since the Stuart Skinner era ended for the Edmonton Oilers, after he was dealt to the Pittsburgh Penguins in a mid-December exchange that saw the acquisition of Tristan Jarry.

In an interview with The Hockey News’ Kelsey Surmacz published Wednesday, Skinner opened up about the trade and his transition to Pittsburgh. Moving to a market that is smaller in size and population, he spoke about already feeling more comfortable in his new environment.

“Yeah, it feels great,” Skinner said. “Definitely a big difference in terms of, kind of, the feelings. I think here, it’s honestly just a great feeling. I feel like everyone’s really rooting for you and is really ‘all together.’ It feels like Pittsburgh is one big family, and we’re a very united city.”

So far with the Penguins, Skinner has posted a similar statline to that which he had in Edmonton, with a 4-4-0 record and an .901 SV% in Pittsburgh. Though he’s found a groove as of late, with a .942 SV% across his last four starts. Of course, Edmonton fans are all too familiar with this hot-and-cold quality of his game.

His comments on the difference in market do seem to imply some sour grapes about being traded away from Edmonton, though it’s no secret that Skinner often struggled under the pressure of playing for the Oilers. In the end, a smaller market may be what’s more suited for his approach and mentality.

“I think there are similarities, and there are a lot of differences as well,” Skinner said. “Obviously, we want to win the Stanley Cup just as badly as anybody else, so I think that feeling will always be there. But just the whole feeling around this room, it’s been nothing but positive here. It’s been really, honestly – again – just family-oriented. It’s just been really enjoyable, and I already kind of forget what it was like in Edmonton.”

Considering he went to two Cup Finals with the Oilers, that last comment may sting a little for some fans in Edmonton. Still, he had some positives to say about his time in Alberta, including what it means to have played with Leon Draisaitl and Connor McDavid.

“It is really cool, thinking about it, that I got to play with, I mean, the best players that have ever played the game,” he said. “Obviously, being able to play with ‘Leo’ and ‘Davo’ for quite some time – really getting to know them and what they’re doing – they’re very determined, very hard-working people that are just extremely disciplined.”

He added that it has been special to now play with guys like Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin, observing similarities to Draisaitl and McDavid in their drive and work ethic.


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Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/i-alr...enguins-stuart-skinner-talks-life-after-trade
 
Oilersnation Radio: Oilers get goalie’d, goaltending decisions, and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins’ 1000th game

It’s Friday afternoon, which means a fresh episode of Oilersnation Radio is ready to massage your eardrums with an hour of off-season Oilers talk. On today’s podcast, the fellas discussed the Oilers’ loss to the Islanders, the end of Connor McDavid’s point streak, Edmonton’s goaltending dilemma, line combos, and more.

We kicked off the Friday episode of ONR with a delicious debate about the Oilers’ goaltending situation and tried to figure out how the team will solve it. Given that carrying three goaltenders is less than ideal, the organization will eventually have to make a decision. Given how well Ingram has played since being recalled, it seems completely unlikely that Connor Ingram will be the one to go, but it’s clear that the organization still respects what Calvin Pickard has done in his time here.

Shifting gears, the guys looked at last night’s loss to the New York Islanders, and Ilya Sorokin absolutely robbed them of two points by standing on his head. Given how well New York’s goalie played, it’s almost impossible to be too upset about the result, but that didn’t stop the boys from being slightly annoyed anyway. They also discussed Andrew Mangiapane being a healthy scratch again and looked at what it will take to get him either in the mix or out of the market.

Finally, we wrapped up the Friday episode of ONR with another round of Ask the Idiots, betting talk for our friends at bet365, and Hot and Cold Performers to look back on the week that was. With the 2025-26 season now past the halfway mark, the guys spent the bulk of the podcast moving through a range of topics, some related to the Oilers and others not, but that’s the way things go on the Friday episode of ONR.

Listen to the Friday episode of Oilersnation Radio below:

Subscribe to Oilersnation Radio for FREE on Soundcloud here, on Apple Podcasts, or wherever else you get your podcasts from!

Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/oiler...decisions-and-ryan-nugent-hopkins-1000th-game
 
Oilers’ Leon Draisaitl takes leave of absence due to family illness

The Edmonton Oilers will be without Leon Draisaitl for the next number of games.

The club announced that Draisaitl would be taking a leave of absence from the team to attend to a family illness in Germany. Draisaitl is expected to return to the team later next week.

“On behalf of Leon, the club asks for privacy at this time,” the team said in a statement.

Draisaitl, 30, has appeared in all 48 of the Oilers’ games this season, scoring 25 goals and 67 points at a 1.4 points-per-game pace, which is up from his career average of 1.22.

#Oilers statement re: Leon Draisaitl https://t.co/FgGcC8Pd2s

— Edmonton Oilers (@EdmontonOilers) January 17, 2026

Centring the Oilers’ second line, Draisaitl has found success over the last six games with Kasperi Kapanen and Vasily Podkolzin on his wing, with the trio outscoring the opposition 7-3 in 73 minutes of five-on-five ice-time over that stretch.

With Draisaitl out of the lineup, the Oilers have adjusted their lines, Bob Stauffer reported Saturday. Vasily Podkolzin slid up to the Oilers’ top line alongside Connor McDavid and Zach Hyman, while Ryan Nugent-Hopkins is set to centre Trent Frederic and Kasperi Kapanen. The third line of Jack Roslovic, Isaac Howard and Matt Savoie is expected to remain the same, while Curtis Lazar, Andrew Mangiapane and Mattias Janmark will make up the fourth line.

The Oilers have a busy schedule through the remainder of January, visiting the Vancouver Canucks Saturday night, and hosting the St. Louis Blues Sunday, with the team set to honour Ryan Nugent-Hopkins playing in his 1,000th game.

Sunday’s game against the Blues kicks off an eight-game home stand, which continues Tuesday against the New Jersey Devils and Thursday against the Pittsburgh Penguins. They close out the month hosting the Washington Capitals, Anaheim Ducks, San Jose Sharks, and Minnesota Wild.

They play twice at the start of February, hosting the Toronto Maple Leafs on February 3rd, before visiting the Calgary Flames on the 4th. A two-and-a-half week break will then come as NHL players, including Draisaitl, who will represent Germany, to the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan and Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy. Prospect Josh Samanski will join him on the German roster, while Connor McDavid will represent Canada.

Edmonton’s schedule resumes on February 25th, kicking off a three-game in four-night stretch visiting the Anaheim Ducks, Los Angeles Kings and San Jose Sharks.

Oilersnation wants to hear from you, the reader, in our new weekly “Letters to the Editor” segment. Letters can be emailed to Oilersnation’s managing editor Zach Laing ([email protected]), titled “Letters to the Editor.” Please include a letter up to 200 words, including your name, place of residence (city, town, province, or state). Your letters may be edited for length and/or clarity. Letters must be submitted by 6 PM MT Saturday night to be considered for feature on Sunday mornings.


Zach Laing is Oilersnation’s managing editor, and The Nation Network’s news director. He also makes up one-half of the Daily Faceoff DFS Hockey Report. He can be followed on X at @zjlaing, or reached by email at [email protected].



Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/edmonton-oilers-leon-draisaitl-leave-of-absence-family-illness
 
Oilers pour it on the Canucks in 6-0 win: Recap, Reaction, and Highlights

Everyone loves a good, old-fashioned butt-kicking.

On Saturday evening, the Edmonton Oilers played their penultimate road game ahead of the Olympic break, smashing the Vancouver Canucks 6-0 to move their record to 24-17-8. Let’s take a look at what happened in this one.

In the first period, it looked like it was going to be a battle of the netminders for the second consecutive game. Then, the second period happened. Just over three minutes into the middle frame, the Oilers got on the board thanks to a good zone entry, a little bit of goalie interference, and Jack Roslovic’s 13th of the season. The Canucks challenged the goal, but it was deemed that the defender pushed Lazar into their netminder.

Jack pulls it back 😮‍💨 #LetsGoOilers pic.twitter.com/1c89hlBtYe

— Edmonton Oilers (@EdmontonOilers) January 18, 2026

While the Oilers didn’t score on the delay of game power play after the failed challenge, they did get on the board thanks to a power play goal after Roslovic drew a high-sticking penalty. It was Zach Hyman’s 17th goal of the season and he, of course, scored from in front of the net seven minutes into the second period.

Hy-man advantage 💪 #LetsGoOilers pic.twitter.com/KbNYEFqaHT

— Edmonton Oilers (@EdmontonOilers) January 18, 2026

From that point onward, the game came completely off the rails for the Canucks. With eight minutes left in the second, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins sprung the speedy Kasperi Kapanen for a breakaway, with the Finn going post and in to make it 3-0 for the good guys.

Kappy & you know it 👏 #LetsGoOilers pic.twitter.com/kLIm11SCQy

— Edmonton Oilers (@EdmontonOilers) January 18, 2026

Nearly three minutes later, the Oilers got on the board again, as the third line finally got a goal. On a breakout, Matthew Savoie found Ike Howard on the opposite side of the ice. The rookie carried the puck in and found a streaking Roslovic on a semi-breakaway for a tap-in.

Jack at it again 🤭 #LetsGoOilers pic.twitter.com/YyyXM7cUcI

— Edmonton Oilers (@EdmontonOilers) January 18, 2026

Not to be out done, Kapanen scored his second of the game 37 seconds later. Nugent-Hopkins came out of the corner and made a beautiful back-handed pass to Kapanen in the slot. It was a good finish by Kapanen, but an even better cut to the centre of the ice to get open.

What’s Kapanen?! 😅 #LetsGoOilers pic.twitter.com/kyXGSNHRNC

— Edmonton Oilers (@EdmontonOilers) January 18, 2026

The Oilers scored their sixth goal of the period about a minute and half following the second Kapanen goal. Connor McDavid brought the puck in, had the puck swiped off his stick, but it was cleared to a trailing Vasily Podkolzin. The former Canuck ripped it past the netminder for his 11th goal of the season.

This is getting Vasilly 🤪 #LetsGoOilers pic.twitter.com/lyMi1SM5nx

— Edmonton Oilers (@EdmontonOilers) January 18, 2026

Takeaways…


The Oilers got a big boost thanks to scoring from those who don’t get on the scoreboard all that often. Kasperi Kapanen has been great since his return, but he had just one goal entering this season. Playing alongside Trent Frederic and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, he was able to score twice, giving him three goals for the season.

With Leon Draisaitl out of the lineup, Podkolzin was elevated to the top line alongside Connor McDavid and Zach Hyman. He was able to score his 11th goal of the season to make it a 6-0 game for the Oilers at that point. Podkolzin is now on pace for 18 goals and 35 points, which would be career highs in both categories.

Jack Roslovic also had a strong game, scoring his 13th and 14th goals of the season. His first goal came thanks to a nice drop pass by Curtis Lazar, set up by Mattias Janmark with the Gretzky assist. Roslovic’s second goal was assisted by Ike Howard and Matthew Savoie, the first time that trio has gotten on the board.

Frederic was held pointless in this game, but he played well alongside Kapanen and Nugent-Hopkins, as the trio was on the ice for two goals. Andrew Mangiapane received a couple of hard hits in the first period and was briefly missing from the bench to begin the second period, but he returned shortly into the middle frame.

The third line may have scored their first goal as a unit, but much like last Saturday, it wasn’t a great game for their unit when looking at their under-the-hood numbers. They outshot opposition eight to seven during five on five action, but had just 27.70 percent of the expected goal share, and gave up seven high-danger chances, while generating just three of their own. Their second and third period was rough in particular.

With the addition of Andrew Mangiapane on the fourth-line, it had 42.77 percent of the expected goal share. But the Oilers’ top two lines had a strong game. The second line of Frederic, Nugent-Hopkins, and Kapanen owned 90.77 percent of the expected goal share with three high-danger scoring opportunities, while not allowing one of their own. Expect this line to get another look on Sunday.

The Connor McDavid line with the addition of Podkolzin were okay, as they had 57.76 percent of the expected goal share in the 10:25 of ice time during five on five action. All these stats come courtesy of Natural Stat Trick.

Three defencemen had a point in this game, as Evan Bouchard, Ty Emberson, and Jake Walman all had assists. Nurse was a +3 and Mattias Ekholm was a +4 in this game. Strong stuff from the Oilers’ back-end in this game.

This was easily Jarry’s best game as an Oiler. Aside from stopping 12 of 13 shots in the game he was injured in, Jarry hadn’t finished with a save percentage above .900. That changed in this game, as he stopped all 31 shots he faced for his second shutout of the season. It’s not like he wasn’t challenged either, as the Canucks had 2.43 expected goals.

Up next for the Oilers is an eight-game home stand that carries into early February. They’ll host the St. Louis Blues on Sunday at 6:00 PM MT.



Ryley Delaney is a Nation Network writer for Oilersnation, FlamesNation, and Blue Jays Nation. Follow her on Twitter @Ryley__Delaney.


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Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/edmon...canucks-6-0-win-recap-reaction-and-highlights
 
Pre-Scout: All eyes on Nuge’s 1000th game, but the St. Louis Blues can be sneaky

All eyes and focus will be on the Edmonton Oilers and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins as he celebrates the terrific milestone of 1000 games.

But in terms of the matchup tonight, the St. Louis Blues have been alright lately, after starting in the doldrums.

In the last 10 games, the Blues are an even-steven 5-5, not truly pressing for a wildcard position in the Western Conference, but also not getting blown out every night.

St. Louis will enter Rogers Place feeling good about snapping the Tampa Bay Lightning’s franchise record-tying win streak of 11 games on Friday night, with a 3-2 victory in the shootout.

Bad luck or otherwise, the Blues had been 0-8 in games past regulation before Friday.

“It feels great,” said Kyrou, who scored the lone goal in the shootout. “Obviously, we haven’t done that all year. It feels good to get that one.”

The mini two-game homestand also saw St. Louis beat another top team in the Eastern Conference, a 3-0 shutout over the Carolina Hurricanes.

Joel Hofer seems to give the Blues the best chance to win on a nightly basis, which doesn’t bode well for Team Canada and Jordan Binnington. Hofer’s goal against average is 2.76 with a .905 save percentage, and four shutouts. Binnington’s goal against average is 3.53 with a .871 save percentage.

In his last ten starts, he’s 7-3, with two shutouts. Fanning out the games since American Thanksgiving, he’s providing nearly a .930 save percentage. Hofer’s game has rebounded after a shaky start.

No doubting Thomas​


Leading scorer Robert Thomas was placed on injured reserve this week and is expected to miss a bit of time. He’s one of just three Blues players to have double-digit goals this year, scoring 11 times and producing 33 points. The other two are Jake Neighbours and Justin Faulk.

Pius Suter was shaping up to be an attractive trade target. But after suffering an ankle injury in late December, he’s been out for a few weeks and won’t be re-evaluated until late January.

There was concern that former Oilers blueliner Philip Broberg could miss time with a concussion. However, it was just a one-game protocol that held him out of the lineup, as he played 25:15 and was +2 against the Lightning.

Team Sweden chose him for the Olympics, and Doug Armstrong inked him to a six-year, $48 million contract extension last week. It’s pretty expensive for a defender who has yet to play 200 games, and offensively, has scored two goals and 15 points.

The Blues did get reinforcements in the form of another former Oiler in Nick Bjugstad, who missed 15 straight games with an upper-body injury. He’s scored goals in back-to-back games upon his return.

Start of the trip​


Tonight kicks off three straight on the road, heading to Winnipeg on Tuesday and Dallas on Friday. Afterwards, the Blues will have a four-game homestand.

The road has not been friendly to St. Louis. They are tied with Toronto for the fewest road wins in the league with seven.

The Blues are also 31st in goal differential with a -43, having scored the fewest goals in the NHL with 120.

Edmonton gagged away a two-goal lead on November 3 to lose 3-2 in regulation to the Blues in their lone matchup so far this year. According to Natural Stat Trick, the Oilers had an 8-6 advantage in High Danger Scoring Chances in all situations.

They’ll play once more on March 13.

Notes:

  • Jake Neighbours has been streaky, but leads all Blues scorers with 12 on the year. He has a pair in his last three games.
  • Former Oiler Dylan Holloway is close to returning to the lineup and will travel on this roadtrip. He practiced on Friday for the first time since suffering a high ankle sprain on December 14.
  • Brayden Schenn’s best days appear to be behind him, as he’s struggled on both sides of the puck. He’ll be pressed to match last year’s point total of 50, as he has 19 points in 48 games with a -23. Only Brock Boeser has a worse plus/minus.
  • In fact, three Blues are among the eight worst plus/minus stats in the league. Logan Mailloux is -21, and Cam Fowler is -19. You can debate the effectiveness of plus/minus as a stat, but it is interesting.
  • By the way, Doug Armstrong is motivated to have every Blues defenceman signed for next season and beyond. Not only did he extend Broberg days ago, but he handed Mailloux a one-year extension mid-game this week. Remember, he gave Cam Fowler an extension in the pre-season, which baffled me. Is it just me, or is Armstrong determined to handcuff Alex Steen once he takes over the general manager job after the season?
  • Speaking of Steen, he was one of three alumni inducted into the franchise’s Hall of Fame this week, going in alongside Barret Jackman and Al Arbour.
  • The Blues have a bottom-10 power play at a 16.8 per cent success rate. They make up for it with a bottom-five penalty kill at 76 per cent.
  • Edmonton is 5-3-2 in their last 10 vs St. Louis. They’ve won three in a row at home.
  • Oilers’ record in the second of back-to-backs: 1-3-4.


Michael Menzies is an Oilersnation columnist and has been the play-by-play voice of the Bonnyville Pontiacs in the AJHL since 2019. With seven years news experience as the Editor-at-Large of Lakeland Connect in Bonnyville, he also collects vinyl, books, and stomach issues.


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Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/pre-s...kins-1000th-game-st-louis-blues-can-be-sneaky
 
Monday Musings: Oilers Shutouts, Hyman and RNH’s Impacts, and some Trade Talk

The Edmonton Oilers finished a five-game-in-seven-day trek in style with back-to-back shutouts over Vancouver and St. Louis. The Oilers won 6-0 in Vancouver on Saturday and 5-0 at home last night. It was only the third time in franchise history that they posted consecutive shutouts by different goalies.

Tristan Jarry stopped all 31 shots in Vancouver while Connor Ingram didn’t allow a goal on 27 shots last night. The two previous times this happened was in 2002, when Jussi Markanen won 4-0 in Florida on December 7th, and the next night Tommy Salo defeated Atlanta 3-0. And in 2023, Stuart Skinner blanked Los Angeles 2-0 on March 30th and two days later, Jack Campbell beat Anaheim 6-0.

The Oilers are playing much better defensively, and their goalies are making timely saves. Connor Ingram has made nine starts, and eight of them were classified as quality starts. In those eight starts, he’s allowed 14 goals on 213 shots (.934 Sv%) and a 1.73 GAA. He had one off game v. Boston where he allowed six goals on 29 shots, and overall in nine games he has a .917 Sv% and 2.22 GAA.

Those are still excellent numbers, and since making his Oilers debut on December 21st, Ingram’s nine starts are tied for the eighth most among goalies. Among the 38 goalies who have made at least six starts in that time, he ranks eighth in save percentage and sixth in goals against average. Funny enough, Stuart Skinner has the lowest GAA in that time at 1.85, and he’s second in save percentage at .927. Skinner has made six starts in that time for Pittsburgh, and after a rough first game against his former team, Skinner has played well. He’s rotated evenly with Arturs Silovs, and less seems to be more for him. The Tristan Jarry for Stuart Skinner trade has worked for both teams, but because Jarry got injured, it opened the door for Ingram to be recalled, and one could argue the trade helped the Oilers more in that it gave Ingram an opportunity he might not have had.

Jarry has made five starts with the Oilers and is 4-0-1 with a .907 save percentage and 2.58 goals against average. He’s been solid, but Ingram’s play should allow Kris Knoblauch to rotate evenly between Ingram and Jarry leading up to the Olympic break. The Oilers have eight games before the break, and it would make sense to split them evenly between Ingram and Jarry. Jarry is coming off his second injury of the season, so there is no reason to play him in consecutive games, especially with how well Ingram is playing.

HYMAN AND RNH MAKING BIG CONTRIBUTIONS


Zach Hyman has 31 points in 31 games since returning from his wrist injury. The first 11 games were a bit slow in the goal scoring department, as he needed to improve his mobility, but the past 20 games he’s been excellent. Hyman has 17 goals and 25 points in his last 20 games. He’s been outstanding around the net and I asked him last night about his wrist. He said it is feeling much better and his range of motion has improved. The results show it, but Hyman’s impact is more than just his goal scoring.

He complements Connor McDavid very well. Hyman is excellent on the forecheck, wins a lot of puck battles on the boards, is great at cycling the puck and he retrieves a lot of pucks which he then puts on McDavid’s stick.

In the 19 games with Hyman injured, McDavid averaged 1.42 points/game with 27 points.

In the 31 games with Hyman, McDavid has averaged 1.87 points/game with 58 points.

Obviously at 1.42 pts/GP, McDavid can produce without Hyman, but his return to the lineup has led to more open space in the offensive zone for McDavid and he’s shooting the puck at a much higher rate. Hyman creates space for McDavid in the corners when battling for pucks, but also because of how Hyman is constantly around the net which forces a defender to cover him, which leaves more space for McDavid to attack.

While many people outside of Edmonton scoff at my suggestion that Hyman would be the best choice to replace Brayden Point (if he can’t play) at the Olympics, I believe it is true. It doesn’t mean I think Hyman is a better player than Mark Schiefele, Connor Bedard, Seth Jarvis or Sam Bennett, just that he is a better fit to play RW with him in a short tournament. Hyman knows how to play with McDavid, and that isn’t as easy as some claim. Schiefele, Jarvis and Bedard don’t win board battles or penetrate the front of the net like Hyman. Bennett is great along the boards, but he doesn’t have the same scoring touch around the net. Bennett, Schiefele and Bedard are used to playing centre, and the latter two transport the puck a lot. They won’t do that with McDavid. It is about chemistry and fit, and Hyman would be the best fit. I sense Team Canada views it differently, and it might not matter who goes, as Canada has the deepest lineup, but Hyman’s style and his recent play makes him a strong candidate for me.

Meanwhile, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins is quietly having a strong season. RNH is one of 59 forwards with 40+ points this season and his 0.98 PTS/GP is tied for 34th with Cole Caufield, Drake Batherson and Troy Terry.

RNH is on pace for the second-highest PTS/GP of his career. He had 1.27 in 2023 when he tallied 104 points and then produced 0.94 in 2020 (61 in 65 games), and he’s had 0.84 three times in 2012, 2019 and 2024. He’s having his second best season on the powerplay, while still producing solid numbers 5×5 and playing on the penalty kill.

He played his 1,000th game as an Oiler last night and received multiple loud ovations during his pre-game ceremony and a “Nugent-Hopkins” chant in the third period. The fans expressed their love and appreciation and he received it.

“It was an amazing night, one I will never forget and will truly cherish,” he said after the game.

It wasn’t just exciting for him. His teammates were fired up and they played like it.

“I saw him in the hallway just after the game and I told him I know it is his night, but this is something I will talk about for a long time,” Ingram told me. “It was amazing to be a part of. I hope I get to keep the warmup jersey, because it is the only time I will wear a letter (smiles).”

The players also had the name bars in their stalls made specially for the game as on the left side it said Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, 1,000th game and the date. That will be a cool keepsake for the players. — not to mention the RNH shirt.

“I will be wearing it on the golf course for sure,” laughed Ingram.

It was fitting that Nugent-Hopkins opened the scoring, and in doing so he joined a very rare club.

Ryan Nugent-Hopkins is the 63rd player to score in his 1000th game and only the 10th player to score a goal in his 1st NHL game and his 1000th. Others include:
Jean Ratelle
Gilbert Perreault
Luc Robitaille
Joe Nieuwendyk
Alex Kovalev
Milan Hejduk
Marian Gaborik
Evgeni Malkin
Lars…

— Jason Gregor (@JasonGregor) January 19, 2026

To score in your first NHL game is special, but then to play and score in game 1,000 is even more rare. You could tell this game meant a lot to him and his teammates really wanted to win for him. It was their fifth game in seven days with the Oilers never playing consecutive games in the same city. It was an impressive weekend for them.

TRADE TALK


Stan Bowman has been working diligently trying to find a trade for Andrew Mangiapane. Mangiapane hasn’t had the year he or the Oilers were hoping for, but there are some teams interested. Mangiapane has $3.6 million remaining on his deal, so I looked at teams who might need help getting to the floor next year.

The salary cap ceiling will be $104 million and the floor will be $76.9 million.

Here’s a look at the teams with the least salary committed for next season:

San Jose: $50.24 million with 13 players.

Pittsburgh: $51 million with 14 players.

Chicago: $56.42 million with 16 players.

Columbus: $57.85 million with 14 players.

Chicago has Nick Foligno, Jason Dickinson, Ilya Mikheyev, Sam Lafferty, Connor Murphy and Matt Grzelcyk whose contracts end this season. They also have Shea Weber’s $7.86 million coming off the books.

Connor Bedard needs a new contract, and he’ll get a massive raise to take over Weber’s contract plus another $4-$6 million most likely. The Blackhawks might just re-sign some of their existing veterans but adding Mangiapane and giving up a prospect who Bowman drafted but hasn’t worked out in Chicago is a plausible scenario.

San Jose acquired Keifer Sherwood from Vancouver this morning, so I doubt they’d be in the mix for Mangiapane.

KAPANEN INJURY​


Kasperi Kapanen can’t catch a break. He caught an edge and fell awkwardly into the boards and didn’t return for the final two periods. “He won’t return immediately, but it won’t be long term like his last injury,” said Knoblauch when I asked him about Kapanen’s injury.

I saw Kapanen walking through the dressing room after the game and he was walking quickly without a limp. Kapanen has played great since returning with three goals and seven points in seven games. His speed, shot, play making ability and his physicality were a major addition. Hopefully he can return quickly and the three-week Olympic break can allow him more time to rest. They need him healthy for the stretch drive and the playoffs.

With Kapanen hurt and Leon Draisaitl in Germany tending to a family illness the Oilers have 11 healthy forwards. Draisaitl won’t play tomorrow and is likely out Thursday, but he is expected to play Saturday v. Washington. The Oilers could just dress 11 forwards and seven D-men for the next two games.

The only way they can add another forward, without trading Mangiapane, is if they send Calvin Pickard down, and they’d have to expose him to waivers. I don’t see the risk being worth it. If they can wait until after the Olympic break to sort out his situation, they will. Trading Mangiapane this week would free up space for them to recall a forward.


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Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/monda...-talk-shutouts-zach-hyman-ryan-nugent-hopkins
 
NHL News: Golden Knights acquire Rasmus Andersson, Panthers to activate Matthew Tkachuk, and more

We’ve got ourselves a couple of trades between Pacific Division rivals.

On Sunday, the Calgary Flames dealt defenceman Rasmus Andersson to the Vegas Golden Knights in exchange for defenseman Zach Whitecloud, defence prospect Abram Wiebe, a 2027 first-round pick, and a conditional 2027 second-round pick. The second-round pick will become a first-round selection if the Golden Knights win the Stanley Cup this year.

The Flames will also retain 50 percent of Andersson’s contract. The native of Malmö, Sweden, is signed through the end of the 2025-26 campaign with a cap hit of $4.55 million and is set to become an unrestricted free agent on July 1.

Andersson was selected by the Flames in the second round of the 2015 draft. The defender made his NHL debut during the 2016-17 season, playing one game with Calgary in April. After appearing in 10 games with the Flames in 2017-18, Andersson broke through as an everyday player in 2018-19, scoring 19 points over 79 games and logging an average of 16:02 per night.

Since then, Andersson has developed into a top-pairing defender for the Flames. The 6-foot-1 left-hander scored 57 goals and 261 points over 573 games with Calgary between the 2018-19 and 2025-26 seasons. This year, he’s third on the team with 30 points in 48 games, and ranks first in time-on-ice at 24:14 per night on average.

The Flames are seventh in the Pacific Division at 21-23-4, while the Golden Knights are two points up on the Edmonton Oilers for top spot with a 24-11-12 record.

Canucks trade Kiefer Sherwood to Sharks​


On Monday morning, the Vancouver Canucks traded forward Kiefer Sherwood to the San Jose Sharks in exchange for second-round selections in 2026 and 2027, along with minor-league defenceman Cole Clayton.

The Canucks inked Sherwood to a two-year, $3 million contract on July 1, 2024, and the rugged winger put together a breakout performance in his first season in Vancouver, setting career-highs with 19 goals and 40 points, while also setting an NHL record with 462 hits.

An undrafted free agent from Miami University (Ohio), Sherwood made his NHL debut with the Anaheim Ducks in 2018-19. Before signing with the Canucks, he played parts of six seasons with the Ducks, Colorado Avalanche, and Nashville Predators, scoring 24 goals and 58 points over 187 games.

This season, Sherwood is on pace to shatter the career-high in goals that he set with Vancouver in 2024-25. The 30-year-old has 17 goals through 44 games, just three shy of reaching the 20-goal plateau for the first time in his NHL career.

The Canucks sit dead last in the league with a 16-27-5 record, and it seems nobody is off the board in Vancouver when it comes to trade talk. Earlier this season, the team moved captain Quinn Hughes to the Minnesota Wild when the star defenceman indicated he didn’t want to sign a new contract with the club.

For San Jose, the move signals a push to snap a six-year playoff drought. At 24-20-3, the Sharks are one of four teams tied at 51 points for the final two Western Conference playoff spots. Macklin Celebrini leads the team with 24 goals and 72 points, a whopping 40 points ahead of Alexander Wenneberg in second.

Matthew Tkachuk to make season debut on Monday​


Matthew Tkachuk confirmed Monday that he’ll make his season debut when the Florida Panthers host the San Jose Sharks. The winger has been skating with the team for the past couple of weeks and took reps during morning skate on a line with Mackie Samoskevich and Evan Rodrigues.

Tkachuk has missed the first half of the season after undergoing surgery in August to repair a torn adductor muscle and a sports hernia. The injuries stemmed from the 4 Nations Face-Off last February and ultimately cost him the remainder of the 2024-25 regular season. He did return for the playoffs, though, and even while clearly limited, still managed 23 points in 23 games. That included seven points in the Stanley Cup Final, helping Florida secure its second straight championship.

His return comes at an important time. With Aleksander Barkov sidelined, the Panthers have been inconsistent and sit at 25-19-3, currently outside the playoff picture in a crowded Eastern Conference.

Tkachuk’s comeback is also good news for USA Hockey. With the Winter Olympics approaching, these next few weeks give him a chance to find his rhythm and game speed before heading to Milan.

Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/nhl-n...lorida-panthers-activate-matthew-tkachuk-ltir
 
GDB 51.0: The Oilers have improved drastically in their defensive zone (8 PM, SNW)

The Edmonton Oilers are starting to find their way defensively.

Since Christmas, the Oilers rank fifth in goals against per game played at 2.42 and their penalty kill is tied for second best at 88.9 percent. In January they are even better at 2.11 goals against per game and their PK is 89.5%.

It has taken longer than Kris Knoblauch and his team would have liked, but Edmonton has found consistency in their defensive end, have reduced the glaring turnovers/giveaways and they are giving up fewer high danger chances.

Many facets of the Oilers’ overall games are trending in the right direction. They’ve limited scoring chances, goals, are defending better, both five-on-five and on the PK, and they’re starting to get a bit more depth scoring. Vasily Podkolzin has seven points in his last eight games. Kasperi Kapanen had seven points in seven games before getting injured in the first period against St. Louis. Curtis Lazar has points in consecutive games. Andrew Mangiapane scored last game. They still need some production from Matt Savoie, Isaac Howard and Trent Frederic, but the bottom six have started to chip in.

But the most important improvement has been lowering their goals against. The Oilers rank third in goals scored, and while you like a bit more depth scoring, offence is rarely a major concern for the Oilers. Heading into the Christmas break, Edmonton ranked 25th in goals against per game at 3.32. It wasn’t pretty, but Santa Claus delivered a defensive mindset to the group at Christmas, because since returning from that short three-day break, Edmonton has been much better defensively.

The glaring turnovers have been reduced significantly, and not surprisingly their goals against have gone down. They allowed 3.32 goals against per game in their first 38 games before Christmas and they’ve dropped almost one goal per game down to 2.42 post Christmas. That’s a significant improvement and with no travel and a favourable schedule, the Oilers look poised to go on a run. They’ve yet to have a real dominant stretch of games this season. Here’s a quick look at their first 50 games in 10-game intervals.

Games 1-10: 4-4-2
Games 11-20: 5-3-2
Games 21-30: 4-4-2
Games 31-40: 7-3
Games 41-50: 5-3-2

The Oilers should be able to win at least seven of their next ten, and have realistic chance to win 8+. The only team ahead of them in the standings in their next 10 is Minnesota, and their next seven games are at home and five of them have clear “scheduling advantages.”

Edmonton and Vegas have separated themselves from the rest of the Pacific Division, and if the Oilers want to finish first in the division, they need to take advantage of this stretch and win at least seven games, and likely more.

They are playing well enough to do it.

SNAPSHOTS….​


— For the ninth time this season the Oilers will try to win three games in a row. They’ve are 0-6-2 in their previous eight attempts but tonight is set up favourably. The Oilers are playing their best defensive hockey of the season, allowing only one goal in their past three games, while the Devils are struggling at 8-16-1 in their last 25 games and tonight is the Devils’ third game in four nights and the second half of a back-to-back. The Oilers haven’t capitalized on some of their previous “scheduling advantages” and tonight might be their best chance.

— Here’s a look at all 32 teams and how many 3+ game winning streaks they’ve had. The chart below outlines the streaks beginning with the most recent and the * means it is an active streak.

[td width="64px"]
TEAM
[/td]​
[td width="119px"]
3+ GWS
[/td]​
[td width="58px"]
TEAM
[/td]​
[td width="114px"]
3+ GWS
[/td]​
[td width="64px"]
ANA​
[/td]​
[td width="119px"]
4*, 3, 7​
[/td]​
[td width="58px"]
BOS​
[/td]​
[td width="114px"]
6*, 4, 7, 3​
[/td]​
[td width="64px"]
CGY​
[/td]​
[td width="119px"]
3, 3, 3​
[/td]​
[td width="58px"]
BUF​
[/td]​
[td width="114px"]
3, 10​
[/td]​
[td width="64px"]
CHI​
[/td]​
[td width="119px"]
4, 3​
[/td]​
[td width="58px"]
CAR​
[/td]​
[td width="114px"]
3*, 4, 5, 4, 5​
[/td]​
[td width="64px"]
COL​
[/td]​
[td width="119px"]
10, 10, 3​
[/td]​
[td width="58px"]
CBJ​
[/td]​
[td width="114px"]
4*, 3, 4​
[/td]​
[td width="64px"]
DAL​
[/td]​
[td width="119px"]
4, 4, 4, 5, 3, 3​
[/td]​
[td width="58px"]
DET​
[/td]​
[td width="114px"]
4, 3, 3, 3, 5​
[/td]​
[td width="64px"]
EDM
[/td]​
[td width="119px"]
0 (9: 2GW)
[/td]​
[td width="58px"]
FLA​
[/td]​
[td width="114px"]
4, 3, 3​
[/td]​
[td width="64px"]
LAK​
[/td]​
[td width="119px"]
4​
[/td]​
[td width="58px"]
MTL​
[/td]​
[td width="114px"]
3, 3, 3, 4​
[/td]​
[td width="64px"]
MIN​
[/td]​
[td width="119px"]
7, 7​
[/td]​
[td width="58px"]
NJD​
[/td]​
[td width="114px"]
3, 8​
[/td]​
[td width="64px"]
NSH​
[/td]​
[td width="119px"]
3, 3​
[/td]​
[td width="58px"]
NYI​
[/td]​
[td width="114px"]
3, 3, 4, 4​
[/td]​
[td width="64px"]
SJS​
[/td]​
[td width="119px"]
3, 3, 3, 4​
[/td]​
[td width="58px"]
NYR​
[/td]​
[td width="114px"]
3, 3, 3​
[/td]​
[td width="64px"]
SEA​
[/td]​
[td width="119px"]
4, 4​
[/td]​
[td width="58px"]
OTT​
[/td]​
[td width="114px"]
4, 3​
[/td]​
[td width="64px"]
STL
[/td]​
[td width="119px"]
0 (5: 2GW)
[/td]​
[td width="58px"]
PHI​
[/td]​
[td width="114px"]
3, 3​
[/td]​
[td width="64px"]
UTA​
[/td]​
[td width="119px"]
3*, 3, 7​
[/td]​
[td width="58px"]
PIT​
[/td]​
[td width="114px"]
6, 4​
[/td]​
[td width="64px"]
VAN​
[/td]​
[td width="119px"]
4, 3​
[/td]​
[td width="58px"]
TBL​
[/td]​
[td width="114px"]
11, 7, 5​
[/td]​
[td width="64px"]
VGK​
[/td]​
[td width="119px"]
7, 4, 4​
[/td]​
[td width="58px"]
TOR​
[/td]​
[td width="114px"]
4, 3, 3​
[/td]​
[td width="64px"]
WPG​
[/td]​
[td width="119px"]
4, 3, 5​
[/td]​
[td width="58px"]
WSH​
[/td]​
[td width="114px"]
6, 3, 4​
[/td]​

Edmonton and St. Louis have yet to win three in a row while Los Angeles has one winning streak of 3+ games. Colorado has 23 of their 34 victories in three different streaks, while Tampa Bay has amassed 23 of their 30 wins during three winning streaks.

— Edmonton’s upcoming schedule gives them a wonderful opportunity to go on a winning streak. New Jersey plays its third game in four nights and second half of a back-to-back after a 2-1 OT victory in Calgary last night. The Penguins, Capitals and Ducks play in Edmonton this Thursday, Saturday and next Tuesday and all of them will be playing their third game in four nights and the second half of a back-to-back. All three of the Penguins, Capitals and Ducks will be playing their fourth game in six nights as well. The next four games are “scheduling advantages” and comes at a time when Edmonton is playing very well.

— Philadelphia did the Oilers a huge favour last night by defeating Vegas 2-1 in regulation. The Golden Knights are two points ahead of Edmonton with two games in hand. Sam Ersson played, arguably, his best game of the season stopping 24 of 25 shots. He needed that performance and so did the Flyers as they ended a five-game losing streak. Ersson’s performance could also help Edmonton on the waiver wire. If he can string together a few strong performances the Flyers are less likely to claim Calvin Pickard, if the Oilers put him on waivers later this season.

— Zach Hyman (163) passed Shawn Horcoff for 13th on the Oilers’ all-time goal list last game. He needs three to pass Jordan Eberle (165) and 16 to pass Esa Tikkanen (178).

— Connor McDavid needs two goals to pass Mark Messier (392) for fifth on the Oilers’ goal list.

— Vasily Podkolzin is tied with Leon Draisaitl for second most 5×5 goals on the Oilers with 12. McDavid has 15. Podkolzin is on pace for 19.8 goals at 5×5. He’s having an outstanding season scoring goals 5×5. Here’s the list of Oilers who have scored 20 goals 5×5 in the salary cap era:

6x: McDavid (32, 30, 24, 22, 21 and 21). He’s at 19 this season.

4x: Leon Draisaitl (28, 26, 23, 22).

1x: Zach Hyman (36), Patrick Maroon (24 in 2017), Dustin Penner (23 in 2010), Jordan Eberle (23 in 2012).

Only six players have done it. It is difficult to score 20 goals 5×5, and more rare for a player who doesn’t play on the power play. Although, Podkolzin will get a look on the first unit PP tonight in place of Jake Walman, who was filling in for Leon Draisaitl. Podkolzin has a sneaky good one-timer so don’t be surprised to see him let one rip tonight.

— McDavid has scored a point in every game he’s ever played against New Jersey. He has a 17-game point streak, and the only longer streak against an opponent is Leon Draisaitl’s 20-game point streak versus Chicago. McDavid has 7-24-31 in 17 games against New Jersey including 15 points in seven home games.

— Curtis Lazar will skate in his 600th game tonight. Lazar has dressed in seven of the last eight games and he’s made a positive impact. He’s only been on the ice for one goal against, while chipping in with two assists and being on the ice for three goals for. He’s been physical ranking third on the team in hits with 14, but first in hits/60. Most importantly he’s been solid defensively and his line has outscored the opposition. Lazar has carved out a very nice career and now that he’s fully healthy again, he’s showing he can be a contributor on a good team. He’s quietly been a very good signing for Edmonton.

LINEUPS…​

Oilers…


Podkolzin – McDavid – Hyman
Frederic – RNH – Roslovic
Howard –??? – Savoie
Janmark – Lazar – Mangiapane

Ekholm – Bouchard
Nurse – Emberson
Walman – Stastney
Regula

Jarry

Tristan Jarry threw a curveball at me and other media members. Tonight will be his first home game with the Oilers, and turns out he prefers to practice in the non-starting goalie net. I’ve covered the Oilers for 25 years, and the starting goalie is always the goalie who spends the most time at the morning skate in the net that the Oilers defend in the first and third period. Connor Ingram was in that net all morning, which usually means he would start. But turns out that Jarry prefers the other net, and he will be starting tonight. I’m interested to see if that will last, as most goalies like to practice in the net they will play most of the game in. It is a small quirk, but something I’ll be watching. It makes no difference to me (now that I know which net he prefers), but I’m interested to see if he will morph into taking the “home” net in the future.
Kasperi Kapanen and Leon Draisaitl are out tonight. Kapanen will be out “around a week” said Knoblauch this morning, while Draisaitl will be returning to Edmonton later this week. I suspect he will play against Washington on Saturday.

Devils…

Meier – Hughes –Bratt
Palat – Hischier – Mercer
Gritsyuk – Glass – Hameenaho
Dadonov – Cotter – Brown

Dillon – Pesce
Siegenthaler – Kovacevic
Nemec – Hamilton

Allen
Luke Hughes separated his shoulder in Calgary last night and is out. The Devils are 9-15-1 in their last 25 games after a very good start to the season. They have the Dougie Hamilton drama of sitting him out trying to force him to expand his no-trade list on top of their sub-par play.
This is their third game in four nights, which is the same for the Oilers, but Edmonton has been at home since Sunday morning and are well rested and playing better.

TONIGHT…​

GDB 51 Edmonton Oilers New Jersey Devils Ty Emberson

Photoshop by Tom Kostiuk
GAME DAY PREDICTION: It finally happens…the Oilers win three in a row and defeat New Jersey 4-1.
OBVIOUS GAME DAY PREDICTION: McDavid extends his point streak to 18 games against New Jersey and picks up two points.
NOT-SO-OBVIOUS GAME DAY PREDICTION: Podkolzin scores his first power play goal since 2022. He has only played a total of 1:41 on the PP with the Oilers, but he gets a look tonight and makes the most of it.

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Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/gdb-5...ally-defensive-zone-new-jersey-devils-preview
 
Oilers miss details against Devils in 2-1 loss: Recap, Reaction and Highlights

Once again, the Edmonton Oilers have failed to win three consecutive games.

On Tuesday evening, the Oilers dropped a 2-1 decision to the New Jersey Devils after sleepwalking through the first two periods. Let’s take a look at what happened in this one.

For the first 25 minutes of the game, the Oilers and Devils played low-event hockey. Five minutes into the second period, the Devils opened the scoring as a pass from the boards found Arseny Gritsyuk wide open in the slot. Tristan Jarry got a piece of it, but it squeaked through him for the 1-0 Devils’ lead.

Arseny Gritsyuk opens the scoring, 1-0 Devils.

📹: Sportsnet pic.twitter.com/9Q7jpoNfGm

— Oilersnation.com, Oily Since ‘07 (@OilersNation) January 21, 2026

Seven minutes into the second, the Oilers tied the game. Off a faceoff, Isaac Howard was able to get the puck back to Jake Walman at the point. His shot deflected off Matthew Savoie and past Jake Allen to tie the game up at one.

Matt Savoie's goal, 1-1.

*not anymore*

📹: Sportsnet pic.twitter.com/v4XbWoZETJ

— Oilersnation.com, Oily Since ‘07 (@OilersNation) January 21, 2026

And then, the lead was gone 30 seconds later. Darnell Nurse had a horrendous change, allowing the Devils to break into the Oilers zone on an odd-man rush of sorts. A pass over to the weak-side gave Cody Glass all the time in the world to one-time it past Jarry.

Cody Glass takes the lead back for the Devils, 2-1.

📹: Sportsnet pic.twitter.com/dLbHFq1G6A

— Oilersnation.com, Oily Since ‘07 (@OilersNation) January 21, 2026

Takeaways…​


After two low-event periods, the Oilers realized they were down a goal and put heavy pressure on the Devils. The game was extremely entertaining down the stretch, but the Oilers couldn’t pull out the game-tying goal. With the Devils on the second game of a back-to-back, the Oilers should’ve played like this all game.

A big reason for the win was because of Jake Allen’s third period. There’s something about Allen against the Oilers, as he has now won his last five games against the Albertan team, where has a .945 save percentage. He made numerous big saves when called upon in the third.

In under a minute, the Edmonton Oilers created about three scoring chances but couldn't bury the puck.

God bless Jack Michaels and his voice.

📹: Sportsnet pic.twitter.com/Vajjas0PQs

— Oilersnation.com, Oily Since ‘07 (@OilersNation) January 21, 2026

That doesn’t mean Tristan Jarry was bad. The Oilers had a power play shortly after the Devils made it 2-1, and on the power play, he made a massive stop on a breakaway. In the third period, the faced a few high-danger scoring opportunities. Jarry had a sub .900 save percentage, but he was decent.

WE HAVE A ROBBERY AT ROGERS PLACE.

TRISTAN JARRY HOW DARE YOU, THAT'S DISGUSTING!

📹: Sportsnet pic.twitter.com/rgrTvGb7jj

— Oilersnation.com, Oily Since ‘07 (@OilersNation) January 21, 2026

As you know, the Oilers are down to 11 forwards on their roster, meaning they went 11/7 for this game. Well, Vasily Podkolzin answered a hit on Connor McDavid and fought late in the first period. Thanks to an instigator penalty, Podkolzin received 17 penalty minutes. Realistically, this was a horrendous penalty to give as both players accepted the fight. It also dropped the Oilers down to 10 forwards for those 17 minutes.

Because of dressing 11 forwards and Podkolzin being in the locker room for as long as he was, the Oilers’ lines were a mess. The only two lines that got more than seven minutes were the Isaac Howard/Jack Roslovic/Matt Savoie line, and the Ryan Nugent-Hopkins/Connor McDavid/Zach Hyman line.

Savoie and Howard both picked up a point in this game, as Howard had a secondary assist and Savoie picked up his first goal in 16 games. In their last three games, both rookies have two points, as they each had an assist on Saturday.

This game was another failed attempt at stringing three wins together, so the Oilers will be back to the drawing board. The drawing board is running out of room, as this is the ninth time they’ve had a “win streak” end at two games. You can say it’s two steps forward, one step back.

Former Oiler Connor Brown made his return to Edmonton in this game and picked up an assist. Well, Stuart Skinner and Brett Kulak return to Edmonton for the first time since the trade, as the Penguins roll into town. That game is at 7:00 PM MT on Thursday.



Ryley Delaney is a Nation Network writer for Oilersnation, FlamesNation, and Blue Jays Nation. Follow her on Twitter @Ryley__Delaney.


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Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/edmon...rsey-devils-2-1-recap-reaction-and-highlights
 
The Oilers are playing a man short in 11-7 if they don’t give Alec Regula shifts

There are just 11 forwards at Edmonton Oilers’ head coach Kris Knoblauch’s disposal, but there are 18 available bodies.

Running 11 forwards and seven defencemen on Tuesday night against the New Jersey Devils got the Oilers into a bind. Vasily Podkolzin missed 17 minutes due to “instigating” and misconduct for jumping to Connor McDavid’s defence, meaning that for most of the second period, Edmonton had just 10 forwards to play with.

There’s no replacing Leon Draisaitl when he’s gone, and Kasperi Kapanen quickly moulded into top-six form before he went down. Their absences were especially noticeable in the second period, and despite a dominating third period, they lost 2-1.

Looking at the ice-times after the game, seventh defenceman Alec Regula played a whole two minutes and 35 seconds on the night.

So really, the Oilers were playing 11-6, and for a third of the game were playing 10-6.

At this important juncture of the season, can the Oilers afford to play undermanned for any longer?

Regula at forward?


At practice on Wednesday morning, Alec Regula skated as a forward with Trent Frederic and Vasily Podkolzin.

Jason Gregor pointed out that he’s acting as a “placeholder” in that forward spot, but after watching a very winnable game slip between the Oilers fingers, Knoblauch needs to be creative.

There doesn’t seem to be any appetite to help the forward situation by deciding on Calvin Pickard, which would solve this issue. The Oilers can’t call up a forward unless they waive Pickard.

Situations like last night’s game illustrate why it can be costly. It doesn’t take much during the game – whether it be injury or penalties – and you’re playing severely undermanned, especially when the seventh defenceman isn’t taking a shift.

Oilers practice lines…
RNH-McDavid-Hyman
Howard-Roslovic-Savoie
Janmark-Lazar-Mangiapane
Podkolzin-Frederic-Regula (playing Fwd)

D pairs the same.
Ingram and Jarry each in their respective starter net, as Jarry likes the visiting net.

— Jason Gregor (@JasonGregor) January 21, 2026

Is skating Regula on a wing for a couple of minutes that bad?

I don’t think so.

He’s played 51 NHL games, granted, and there’s been growing pains this season. He’s the seventh defenceman for a reason at the moment and under ideal circumstances, would fill into the lineup occasionally.

But when you’re playing with a short deck, you have to play the cards you have in your hand. Spreading the load every so much with a couple more minutes can help.

Former Oilers coach Jay Woodcroft loved using 11-7. Knoblauch doesn’t strike me as someone who likes that structure nearly as much, finding perhaps the seventh defenceman a nuisance.

Leon Draisaitl is expected back “later this week,” likely Saturday, and Kasperi Kapanen likely won’t miss more than two more games. Provided there are no more forward injuries, then Knoblauch will have a complement of 13 forwards again.

Since you’re being forced into it, why not skate Regula at wing for a few shifts, especially if he’s not getting anywhere near a regular shift on the blu eline. The Oilers need to grit their teeth through this all-hands-on-deck scenario.

It seems a better strategy than having him rot on the bench for the entire game.


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Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/edmon...ort-11-7-if-they-dont-give-alec-regula-shifts
 
Better Lait Than Never: Winning three straight is the Oilers’ Everest

It’s been another wild week around here with the Oilers rollercoaster making another loop, and I’ve got a fresh episode of Better Lait Than Never ready to recap it all. On today’s podcast, I talked about the Oilers’ inability to string wins together, Tristan Jarry’s first home start, Curtis Lazar’s 600th game, and much more.

I kicked off this week’s episode with a quick recap of Ryan Nugent-Hopkins’ 1000th game and how cool it was to be in the building for the milestone. Next up was a discussion about why the Oilers cannot seem to win three straight games to save their lives. They’ve had nine opportunities to string some wins together this season, but for whatever reason, they simply cannot get that third one to go through. Last night, the boys played for 20 minutes instead of a full sixty, but the result was the same. I also spent a few minutes talking about Curtis Lazar’s 600th NHL game, and how he’s turned himself into a player I want to see in Edmonton’s lineup every night.

Finally, I wrapped up this week’s episode of BLTN with a guest Righteous Sack Beating before closing out the podcast with another round of voicemails. The voicemail was alive this week, and everyone’s takes ranged from what you’re nerdy about to Oilers talk and everything in between. The voicemail is the best way to wrap up the show and give everyone a chance to share their thoughts. Another hearty thank you to everyone who contributed to this week’s episode. Having all of you in the mix makes the show so much better.

Want to leave a voicemail for next week’s show? Do it here!

Subscribe to Better Lait Than Never for FREE on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, and wherever else you get your podcasts from! Better Lait Than Never is proudly presented by Sports Interaction, Star Mechanical, and Trilogy Oilfield Rentals. Without them, this podcast would not be possible.

Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/better-lait-than-never-winning-three-straight-edmonton-oilers-everest
 
GDB 52.0: Oilers Searching for Home Ice Success (7 PM, SNW)

The Edmonton Oilers have played 23 home games this season. They’ve won 12 and are only 12-7-4 and have outscored teams 83-74.

In the three previous seasons, the Oilers had the eighth most home wins in the NHL and were three back of the fifth most. They have been a very good to dominant team on home ice (in 2024, when they went 28-9-4), but lately they’ve struggled to win.

Kris Knoblauch felt his team wasn’t ready to play against New Jersey, and it cost them two points. Tonight is game three of a season-long eight-game homestand, and Edmonton needs to be better and more engaged on home ice.

The January schedule has Edmonton playing 11 games at home and four on the road. They went 3-0-1 on the road, which is great, but they are only 2-3-1 at home thus far. Edmonton was 4-0-2 in its first six home games, but then they got pounded 9-1 by Colorado and that started them on a run of where they’ve only won eight of 18 home games. They have lost their last four home games against Eastern Conference teams, and they face the Pittsburgh Penguins tonight and the Washington Capitals on Saturday.

The Oilers need to rediscover a killer instinct on home ice, especially against non-conference teams. The Oilers have played nine games against Eastern teams, and they’ve allowed the first goal eight times. I don’t expect the Oilers to score first or be the hungrier team every game. Both teams are paid to play and want to win, but they need to be much better at home this season against Eastern opponents. You can’t be chasing the game that often. The Penguins are one of the better road teams in the NHL this season. They’ve scored first in 16 of 24 road games, and they rank 9th in points percentage on the road and they have the third-best GAA at 2.50. They’ve allowed two goals or fewer in half of their road games.

Head coach Dan Muse has the Penguins playing well on the road, especially lately as the Penguins are 5-1 in their last six road games and have outscored teams 26-13. Their only blemish was a 1-0 loss in Boston. They have four victories by three or more goals. The Penguins have moved ahead of Edmonton in the standings with 59 points in 49 games compared to Edmonton’s 58 points in 51 games. Pittsburgh is one of the hottest teams in the NHL over the past month going 10-3-2. They rank fourth in wins and P%.

The Oilers need to be ready from the opening puck drop. They need to be ready to play and be emotionally engaged against a non-conference opponent.

They need to start piling up some wins at home, to keep pace with Vegas and hopefully earn first place in the Pacific Division. Over the past two seasons, Edmonton has been one of the best home teams in the playoffs with a record of 15-7. They were 14-11 on the road, which is solid, but a much lower winning% than at home. Edmonton has Stanley Cup aspirations, and while earning home ice advantage doesn’t guarantee them a championship, it can make their path to a ring easier, and any small advantage in the playoffs is one you should try and obtain.

Edmonton has 18 home games remaining, including six to finish out this homestand. They need to win more than 52% of their home games down the stretch and increasing their intensity, especially against eastern opponents, should lead to more victories.

SNAPSHOTS…​


Stuart Skinner lost his first start with Pittsburgh, against the Oilers, but in his last eight starts he’s been good with a .922 save percentage and 1.89 GAA. He’s allowed one goal in five of those eight starts. He and Arturs Silovs have split time evenly as Silovs is expected to start his eighth game since December 21st tonight while Skinner made his eighth start last night in Calgary. Tristan Jarry and Skinner faced their former teams the first time these teams met in December, but it doesn’t look like we will see a rematch tonight.

— The Penguins are 10-3-2 in their last 15 games outscoring opponents 56-36. They’ve been better defensively, and Edmonton is getting a bit of a break as they face Silovs instead of Skinner. In their last 15 games Skinner is 6-2 and Silovs is 4-1-2. Skinner has a .922 save percentage and 1.89GAA while Silovs has a .896 save percentage and 2.64 GAA.

— The Oilers are 14-5-4 in the game after a loss. They struggle to win three in a row, but have been pretty good at not extending losing streaks. Edmonton is now 0-7-2 when trying to win three in a row, and not surprisingly, they have allowed the first goal in eight of those games. Edmonton is a woeful 4-17-4 when allowing the first goal, and they are 21-4-1 when scoring first. They win 21 of 26 when scoring first and only four of 25 when trailing first. In the five regulation losses after losing the previous game, the Oilers allowed the first goal in all five games. It is pretty clear how important the first goal is tonight, and most games, for the Oilers.

— The Oilers have won four consecutive home games against the Penguins. Pittsburgh hasn’t won in Edmonton since December 20th, 2019. Oddly, the Penguins had won six consecutive games in Edmonton prior to this four-game losing skid.

Matt Savoie ended his 16-game goal drought against the Devils. It was the longest goal drought of his hockey career at any level. He did go 10 games last year in Bakersfield, but the NHL is a different beast and for many young players a lengthy goalless streak often occurs. Savoie wasn’t playing poorly during the drought, but he did miss the net a few times on some of his best chances, which is often a sign of trying to be perfect with your shot. The goal was a huge relief for him, and don’t be surprised to see him get back to scoring more frequently. He did have six goals in the previous 22 games prior to the slump. Slumps happen in the NHL, and it can be challenging, especially for skilled players who have never gone that long without a goal. It is a hard, but good learning experience, and I thought Savoie played quite well despite not scoring.

Isaac Howard hasn’t scored in his last 16 games with the Oilers, and like Savoie a goal would be very welcoming. The hardest part is not getting frustrated and letting it get you down, but that is easier said than done.

LINEUPS…​

Oilers…

RNH – McDavid – Hyman
Howard –Roslovic– Savoie
Podkolzin – ??? – Frederic
Janmark – Lazar – Mangiapane
Ekholm – Bouchard
Nurse – Emberson
Walman – StastneyRegula
Jarry
Tristan Jarry will face his former team and play back-to-back games for the first time since returning from injury. Connor Ingram has made eight quality starts in his nine appearances. He’s been excellent since being recalled from the American Hockey League, and I’d expect he will play Saturday against Washington. At least he should. He shouldn’t go too long without playing, considering how well he’s playing, plus with Jarry coming off his second injury of the season, giving him a bit of rest between games could be beneficial. I’m sure the Oilers want to see Jarry in consecutive games, but it is a delicate dance to not have Ingram sit out too long.

Penguins…

Rakell – Crosby – Rust
Chinakov – Novak – Malkin
Mantha – Kindel – Brazeau
Dewar – Lizotte – Acciari
Kulak – Letang
Wotherspoon – Karlsson
Graves – Clifton
Silovs
Erik Karlsson has missed the last five games, but there is a good chance he returns to the lineup tonight. Kris Letang also didn’t play last night in Calgary, and will be a game-time decision. Without their top two defencemen, the Penguins played a very good defensive game last night. Parker Wotherspoon and Brett Kulak were the top pairing logging over 20 minutes each at 5×5, while Connor Clifton/Ryan Graves and Ryan Shea/Jack St. Ivany played between 16 and 17 minutes each. The top six is simply a projection with the assumption Karlsson and Letang might play. We won’t know until Dan Muse speaks to the media around 5:30 p.m. MT.
Muse rolled four lines about as evenly as you could imagine. Each team took one minor penalty, and no one scored on the power play, so the game had 56 minutes of 5×5 time. Muse rolled his four lines as follows:
Rakell/Crosby/Rust played 13:25
Mantha/Kindel/Brazeau logged 12:58
Chinakov/Novak/Malkin played 12:46
Dewar/Lizotte/Acciari skated 12:00
That is very abnormal. In their previous game in Seattle Crosby’s line played 12:42 at 5×5, while Novak’s played 11:28, Kindel’s skated 8:26 and Lizotte’s line played 7:25. Last night was the perfect storm to rotate lines evenly. There weren’t many penalties, the Penguins led for 52:11 of the game and the Flames don’t have a dominant top line to try and match against. It allowed Muse to spread out minutes, and the Penguins shouldn’t be as fatigued playing their third game in four nights and second half of a back-to-back tonight.
The forwards’ TOI ranged from 17:14 (Rust) down to 13:28 (Acciari) while the defenders logged between 22:14 (Wotherspoon) and 16:55 (St. Ivany).

TONIGHT…​

GDB 52 Edmonton Oilers Evan Bouchard Pittsburgh Penguins

Photoshop by Tom Kostiuk
GAME DAY PREDICTION: Edmonton improves to 15-5-4 after a loss with a 4-2 victory.
OBVIOUS GAME DAY PREDICTION: McDavid produces two points. He has 24 points in his last nine games against the Penguins and strangely he had two home games with no points. The 24 points came in the other seven games.
NOT-SO-OBVIOUS GAME DAY PREDICTION: Mattias Ekholm scores a goal.

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Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/gdb-5...-home-ice-success-pittsburgh-penguins-preview
 
Oilers set franchise record for fastest three goals against in embarrassing 6-2 loss to Penguins: Recap, Reaction and Highlights

Well, that was ugly.

On Thursday evening, the Edmonton Oilers hosted the Pittsburgh Penguins on the third game of their eight-game home stand. With Tristan Jarry starting against his former team, it didn’t go well, as the Penguins put six past their old netminder in a 6-2 victory. Let’s take a look at what happened in this one.

The game was won by the Penguins in the first three minutes.

A minute and 20 seconds into the game, Anthony Mantha was found by the back post for the easy tap-in. On the same shift, about 15 seconds later, Mantha was sprung for a breakaway to score twice in just 22 seconds. Before the game even hit the three-minute mark, the Penguins got in the zone and shot from the point, with Sidney Crosby deflecting it in from the high-slot. Officially, the Penguins scored three times in 37 seconds, setting an Oilers franchise record for the fastest three goals against.

GOOD START, PART III 🐧 pic.twitter.com/CY6AIFwWne

— Pittsburgh Penguins (@penguins) January 23, 2026

That was it for scoring in the first period, and the Oilers got a brief glimmer of hope five minutes into the middle frame. On a penalty kill, the Oilers stopped a Penguins break in, turned it around for a three-on-two, and Jake Walman was found in as the trailer in the slot. The defenceman scored his second short-handed goal of the season with a well-placed shot.

Jake & bake 🔥 #LetsGoOilers pic.twitter.com/KU1uTrYpv6

— Edmonton Oilers (@EdmontonOilers) January 23, 2026

That hope was quashed by a goal from Rickard Rakell with seven and a half minutes remaining in the middle period. Just a minute and 58 seconds later, the Penguins made it a 5-1 game thanks to an Evgeni Malkin breakaway goal.

Watch out… GENO'S LOOSE 💪 pic.twitter.com/oX6X2OTjOH

— Pittsburgh Penguins (@penguins) January 23, 2026

At this point, the game was very much over, but that didn’t stop the Penguins from scoring one more, as Egor Chinakhov ripped one past Jarry’s shoulder to make it 6-1. The Oilers added another goal with six minutes left in the game, as Matthew Savoie sniped it past Artūrs Šilovs.

Savvy snipe 🎯 #LetsGoOilers pic.twitter.com/AzDVMZVgox

— Edmonton Oilers (@EdmontonOilers) January 23, 2026

Takeaways…


There aren’t really many positive takeaways from this game, other than seeing Matt Savoie continuing to play better. With that goal, he now has two goals and an assist in his last four games, while also being on the ice for the Oilers’ other goal.

That was Jake Walman’s second shorthanded goal of the season. The first one came against the Columbus Blue Jackets on November 10th. The Oilers are a better team with him in the lineup, he just has to remain healthy.

After missing three games due to a personal absence, Leon Draisaitl returned for the game against the Penguins, which came to the surprise of everyone. He was a -1 in his 19:17 minutes of ice time. The majority of his five-on-five action was spent with Andrew Mangiapane and Vasily Podkolzin, where the trio picked up 96.95 percent of the expected goals over six minutes and 42 seconds, according to Natural Stat Trick.

The line of Isaac Howard, Jack Roslovic, and Savoie had a strong game for the first time in a while, at least looking at under-the-hood numbers. In seven minutes and 21 seconds, the trio had 54.4 percent of the expected goals, scoring the Oilers’ only five-on-five goal.

With the return of Draisaitl, the Oilers reunited Curtis Lazar, Trent Frederic, and Mattias Janmark. The fourth line out-shot opposition 2-0 and finished with 75.7 percent of the expected goals. Janmark picked up his seventh assist of the season, but that was on the penalty kill.

It was a tough game for the Oilers defence, as every defender but Darnell Nurse was a minus. Evan Bouchard was a -3 and Mattias Ekholm was a -2. Both Bouchard and Ekholm had an assist on Savoie’s goal, while Walman scored a goal.

A rough game from the Oilers’ defence didn’t help Tristan Jarry, as he allowed six goals on 22 shots for a .727 save percentage. Not very nice of his former team. Since joining the Oilers, Jarry has only finished a full 60+ minutes with a save percentage above .900 once, his shutout victory over the Vancouver Canucks on Saturday. This game should’ve been started by Connor Ingram, who has been playing much better.

The Oilers continue their home stand with a game against the Washington Capitals on Saturday at 8:00 PM MT. Let’s hope that one goes a bit better than Thursday’s game.



Ryley Delaney is a Nation Network writer for Oilersnation, FlamesNation, and Blue Jays Nation. Follow her on Twitter @Ryley__Delaney.


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Top 100 Oilers: No. 54 — Jeff Beukeboom

Oilersnation is reviving the Top 100 Edmonton Oilers of All Time list, a project originally created by the late Robin Brownlee in 2015. Jeff Beukeboom comes in at No. 54 on our updated 2025 list. He was ranked No. 37 on Brownlee’s original list.

There were many better Edmonton Oilers, but does anyone have a better hockey name than Jeff Beukeboom?

His name is a great throwback, just like his play was. An imposing stay-at-home defenceman, Beukeboom concerned himself with the front of his own net rather than the opposition.

So much so, when he was drafted 19th overall by the Oilers in 1983, Beukeboom became the first non-goaltender to be drafted in the first round after going goalless the season prior.

For a guy who carved out a long NHL career, over 800 NHL games, and was a part of four Stanley Cup championships, that’s pretty darn good.

As Steve Levy of ESPN learned during one of their iconic “This is Sportscenter” commercials, don’t call him “Puke-a-boom” or you’re gonna get whacked.

Beukeboom was a tough SOB. But like many who played in the 1980s and 1990s, his career ended due to several concussions, including one of the most gutless assaults you’ll ever see, where Matt Johnson cold-cocked him from behind.

beukeboom-hockeydb.png


Notable​


Drafted from the Soo Greyhounds in 1982-83, Beukeboom played three seasons in the OHL, ending his junior career with a league title in 84-85 on a great Greyhounds team. That Soo team went undefeated on home ice that year, earning a Memorial Cup bid.

After one of the best drafting runs in NHL history, the 1983 draft was the last where the Oilers would get multiple pieces for later Stanley Cup teams, as Esa Tikkanen was taken later in the fourth round.

As a prospect, Beukeboom’s size was attractive. Standing 6’5”, 215lbs, he was an imposing force that Glen Sather believed would only help the blueline.

He got a brief taste of a playoff game in 1985-86, and would stick around the Oilers until 1991-92 where he was traded as part of the exodus to the New York Rangers. Although a separate trade, it really completed the Mark Messier swap.

He’d play eight more seasons with the Rangers, became a depth pillar on the 1994 Stanley Cup team, but was forced to retire at age 33.

12-1.jpeg


The Story


Beukeboom played the game heavy and hard, giving and taking as good as he got.

In 1987-88, he enjoyed his best individual season in a career high 73 games. He scored five goals and 25 points, while accumulating 201 penalty minutes. But he would also miss portions of the season due to injury or as a scratch. Even in that career-high year, Beukeboom only played seven playoff games.

But he and the organization kept at it. In 1990-91, it was Beukeboom’s time to shine against the Calgary Flames in that wildly entertaining Smythe Division semi-final series.

As Edmonton Journal writer Cam Cole put it, “He has personally turned the Mild Disagreement of Alberta [sic] into a battle, after all, by starching several of the Calgary Flames with murderous hits in the first two games of the series.”

That included a nasty hit from behind on Gary Roberts that he didn’t feel too great about. But as he said, Roberts speared him earlier in the season, so he didn’t lose any sleep.

“It is better to give than to receive,” he said on April 8, 1991.

His terrific play helped the Oilers make a real go of another playoff run in 1991, defeating the Flames in seven and dispatching the Los Angeles Kings in six. But they ran out of gas in the Campbell Conference final.

Beukeboom’s performance made him hard to keep, as he was a later piece added to complete the Mark Messier trade in November 1991.

He is remembered fondly for his honest style of play, and he’s got the rings to show it.

Jeff Beukeboom after 1991 CGY series on April 18, 1991 via Edmonton Journal.

Jeff Beukeboom after 1991 CGY series on April 18, 1991 via Edmonton Journal.

What Brownlee said

Jeff Beukeboom was a throwback player, a stay-at-home defenseman who took care of his own end of the ice first and made it possible for his more skilled teammates with the Edmonton Oilers to do their jobs because he was so good at his. Beukeboom was as tough and as honest a player as you’d ever meet, quietly winning three Stanley Cups with the Oilers.
It was particularly sickening, then, to see Beukeboom’s career end prematurely as the result of a stunning act of cowardice by Los Angeles Kings thug Matt Johnson, who attacked him from behind. At the time, Beukeboom was 33 and playing for the New York Rangers. While he’d come back briefly after the incident, Beukeboom, who’d suffered multiple concussions during his career, was forced to retire.

The Last 10​


Michael Menzies is an Oilersnation columnist and has been the play-by-play voice of the Bonnyville Pontiacs in the AJHL since 2019. With seven years news experience as the Editor-at-Large of Lakeland Connect in Bonnyville, he also collects vinyl, books, and stomach issues.

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Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/top-100-edmonton-oilers-no-54-jeff-beukeboom
 
Oilersnation Radio: Are the Oilers blowing their homestand?

It’s Friday afternoon, which means a fresh episode of Oilersnation Radio is ready to massage your eardrums with an hour of off-season Oilers talk. On today’s podcast, the fellas discussed the Oilers’ loss to the Islanders, the end of Connor McDavid’s point streak, Edmonton’s goaltending dilemma, line combos, and more.

We kicked off the Friday episode of ONR with a delicious debate about whether or not the Oilers are blowing their January homestand. Given that they’ve lost twice as many home games as they’ve won, it’s hard not to think that Edmonton is dropping the ball on a golden opportunity to make up some ground in the standings.

Shifting gears, the guys looked at last night’s loss to the Pittsburgh Penguins and wondered how much of that loss the boys hung on Tristan Jarry, given that he allowed six goals on the night. While no one is saying Jarry was very good, the reality is that the skaters in front of him were just as bad, if not worse. We also discussed Leon Draisaitl’s return to the lineup, and how it was a valiant effort by Drai, considering the heavy week he had and the long travel back from Germany.

Finally, we wrapped up the Friday episode of ONR with another round of Ask the Idiots, betting talk for our friends at bet365, and Hot and Cold Performers to look back on the week that was. With the 2025-26 season stretch drive well underway, the guys spent the bulk of the podcast moving through a range of topics, some related to the Oilers and others not, but that’s the way things go on the Friday episode of ONR.

Listen to the Friday episode of Oilersnation Radio below:

Subscribe to Oilersnation Radio for FREE on Soundcloud here, on Apple Podcasts, or wherever else you get your podcasts from!

Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/oilersnation-radio-are-edmonton-oilers-blowing-their-homestand
 
GDB 53.0: Oilers need to show signs of life against the Capitals (8PM MT, CBC)

The Edmonton Oilers are a couple of days removed from an embarrassing beatdown by the Penguins, and tonight’s game feels like it should come with a bit of a lecture. Not the yelling kind. Not the dramatic kind. Just a quiet, arms-crossed big-dad disappointment that comes when you know a team is capable of more than what it’s been showing. The Oilers dropped their last two games in horrific fashion, not because they were unlucky, but because they didn’t look particularly interested in playing winning hockey. When that happens, no one around here is going to give you sympathy. You get scrutiny, and deservedly so.

The most frustrating part about the Oilers being this bad at this point in the season is that there are numbers that suggest they should be doing better than what we’re getting. Edmonton sits at 25-19-8, scores 3.33 goals per game, controls play north of 50 percent in both Corsi and expected goals, and gives up fewer shots than they take. This is not a bad team. This is a broken team. This is a team that, from my side of the TV screen, has been going through the motions and paying for it on the scoreboard. You expect better from a group that should know exactly what it takes by now, and watching this mess is beyond annoying at this point.

The Washington Capitals roll into town at 25-21-6, right in the same neighbourhood in the standings, but are really struggling to put wins on the board right now. They’ve only won four of the 12 games they’ve played in January, including the 3-1 dub they picked up in Calgary last night. But even though Washington is a bit of a mess lately, there’s a catch. Though these two teams score score at a similar rate, the Caps do tend to defend better on average, and are getting strong goaltending, as shown by a .919 team save percentage. That said, they are not playing anything close to their best hockey right now, and I see this as the perfect opportunity for the Oilers to get this train back on the rails.

Special teams are still an area where the Oilers should feel confident, assuming the boys actually show up ready to work. Edmonton’s power play continues to hum along at 32.2 percent, while Washington’s sits at 16.7. The penalty kills are closer, but the Oilers still hold a slight edge. If this game turns into a special teams battle, that’s an advantage Edmonton should be able to lean on. The key word there is should. The special teams advantage only matters if the effort matches the opportunity. But if Edmonton is going to earn those opportunities, it has to start with a whole lot more effort at 5v5, especially against a team that played the night before.

In the end, the most important thing I’m looking for isn’t just that the Oilers find a way to win, but that they look like they deserve the two points. I don’t even care if they lose, provided that the effort is there and they look like they actually want to be playing hockey. We haven’t seen that in the last two games. This isn’t about proving anything to anyone, but reminding themselves who they’re supposed to be. The Oilers are at home, playing a team on the second half of a back-to-back, and there’s no hiding from the effort level in your own building. This doesn’t need to be perfect hockey. It just needs to be honest hockey. Show up. Compete. Care.

Let’s see what the numbers say…

THE NUMBERS​

OILERSCAPITALS
RECORD25-19-825-21-6
WIN/LOSS STREAKL2W1
LAST 10 GAMES5-3-24-6-0
GOALS FOR173165
GOALS AGAINST166153
POWER PLAY%32.216.7
PENALTY KILL%80.977.7
GOALS FOR/GAME3.333.17
GOALS AGAINST/GAME3.192.94
AVG. SHOTS/FOR29.229.3
AVG. SHOTS/AGAINST26.928.3
TEAM SAVE%.892.919
CORSI FOR%50.2350.84
PDO.9811.018
TEAM SHOOTING%8.869.92
EXPECTED GOALS FOR%51.4151.48

Numbers courtesy of Natural Stat Trick (Sv%, CF%, PDO, Shooting%, xGF% all at 5×5)

  • The Oilers are 4-2-0 over their last six home games against Washington.
  • Evan Bouchard will play in his 400th career game.
  • The Oilers have the best PK percentage in the NHL since December 23rd, sitting at a sparkling 91.2%.

LINEUPS…​

Oilers


Nugent-Hopkins – McDavid – Hyman
Podkolzin – Draisaitl – Mangiapane
Howard – Roslovic – Savoie
Frederic – Lazar – Janmark

Ekholm – Bouchard
Nurse – Emberson
Walman – Stastney

Ingram

Kris Knoblauch went back to some classic line combos for Saturday’s game, with the exception of having Andrew Mangiapane up on the second line. We all know that this hasn’t been the Bread Man’s year, but I’m hopeful that being up with Draisaitl could help him make something happen in this revenge game. Looking in net, Connor Ingram is getting the start and another opportunity to show that he can not only be a competent backup, but maybe even challenge Tristan Jarry for the starter’s job.

Capitals


McMichael – Strome – Leonard
Protas – Sourdif – Wilson
Ovechkin – Dowd – Frank
Duhaime – Lapierre – Beauvillier

Fehervary – Carlson
Chychrun??? – Roy
Sandin – Van Riemsdyk

Lindgren

With the Capitals playing last night, I haven’t seen any updates on their line combos, aside from Jacob Chychrun being day-to-day. Considering the guy has 18 goals on the season, not having him in the Capitals’ lineup would be a nice bonus for an Oilers team trying to get back in the win column. That said, we can’t expect dubs just because the other team is/could be missing pieces.

TONIGHT…​

Edmonton Photoshop Leon Draisaitl GDB

Edmonton Photoshop Leon Draisaitl GDB by Tom Kostiuk

Game Day Prediction: Oilers score first. Oilers score on the power play. Oilers win 4-2 with the empty-netter.

Obvious Game Day Prediction: Connor McDavid called himself out after the loss to Pittsburgh, and that has me thinking (and betting) on a two-point night for the captain.

Not-So-Obvious Game Day Prediction: You didn’t expect a two-goal game from Andrew Mangiapane, but it’s going to happen. Revenge game success. LFG.

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Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/game-...f-life-against-washington-capitals-8pm-mt-cbc
 
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