Penguins’ Tristan Jarry among goaltenders ‘drawing significant interest as a potential option’ for Oilers

The full court press is on, and the Edmonton Oilers might be forced to make a move to address their goaltending situation.

The team ranks dead last in team save percentage this season, with Stuart Skinner and Calvin Pickard combining for an abysmal .860 mark through the first 25 games of the Oilers’ season.

Neither has been good enough this year, and rumours began to swirl on Tuesday about St. Louis Blues goaltender Jordan Binnington being a potential option. It’s hard to say whether or not Binnington would be an upgrade, given his own rough start to the season, but another netminder who’s had a better start popped up as a potential option on Wednesday: the Pittsburgh Penguins’ Tristan Jarry.

👀 I’m told 2X @NHL All-Star and @penguins Goalie Tristan Jarry is among
the goalies drawing significant interest as
a potential option for the @EdmontonOilers , keep in mind he played
in Edmonton with the Oil Kings.#HockeyX pic.twitter.com/gDcqv6TOBO

— Kevin Weekes (@KevinWeekes) November 26, 2025

Jarry, as noted by ESPN’s Kevin Weekes, has roots in Edmonton having played his major junior career with the WHL’s Oil Kings. The 30-year-old Surrey, B.C. native was part of the powerhouse 2014 Memorial Cup winning team, and has spent his whole 10 year NHL career with the Penguins, who drafted him in the second round of the 2013 draft.

While Jarry had a rough 2024-25 season, posting a 16-12-6 record, .892 save percentage and a 3.12 goals against average, he’s rebounded well this year, posting a 5-2 record, a .911 save percentage and a 2.60 goals against average on the surprisingly strong Penguins.

He has two years remaining on a deal paying him $5.375-million per year, and has a 12-team no-trade list.

Jarry has seemingly lost the crease this season to rookie Arturs Silovs, who the Penguins acquired over the summer, while they have another young netminder, Sergei Murashov, who is starting to emerge as an option for the team, too.

The Penguins have roughly $12-million in cap space, according to PuckPedia, and if the two teams were to pull off a trade surrounding Jarry for Skinner — as is rumoured to be the base of a Binnington trade — and Pittsburgh were to retain 50 percent of Jarry’s contract, the Oilers would gain roughly $88,000 in cap space.

It’s unknown if Pittsburgh would even be interested in taking on Skinner, who is a pending unrestricted free agent at the end of this season, making $2.6-million.

Nonetheless, things appear to be heating up in the rumour mill.



Zach Laing is Oilersnation’s associate editor, senior columnist, 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].


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Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/pitts...ificant-interest-trade-option-edmonton-oilers
 
Better Lait Than Never: Oilers blown out again, goalie rumours, and a whole lot of defensive problems

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’ most recent blowout, goalie rumours, players coming back from injuries, and much more.

Just when you think the Edmonton Oilers might be turning things around, we’ve got another debacle on home ice that has the fanbase questioning their sanity and what the hell is going on around here. After a strong finish to their seven-game road trip, the Oilers returned home to get completely dismantled by the visiting Dallas Stars, and that loss has people running through the same old questions again. When will Stan Bowman trade for a goalie? Do they need more help on defence? Can this team figure it out? Only time will give us the answers, but that didn’t stop me from wading in with my takes anyway.

Finally, I wrapped up this week’s episode of BLTN with a guest Righteous Sack Beating from Eoin, 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 to listen to. The voicemail is my favourite 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...oalie-rumours-standings-american-thanksgiving
 
Despite rumblings about Oilers goaltending, Bowman trying to fill ‘different holes in this roster’

Goaltending has been a hot topic for the Edmonton Oilers, but despite how many think that should be the team’s top priority to change, that may not be the case for general manager Stan Bowman.

The Fourth Period insider David Pagnotta joined Daily Faceoff Live on Thursday, and when talking about Tristan Jarry and whether or not he would be a fit for the Oilers, he also revealed that goaltending isn’t even what Edmonton is looking for on the trade market right at this moment.

“I know there’s so much talk with the Oilers and their goaltending, but they have different holes in this roster that they need to fill,” said Pagnotta on Daily Faceoff Live. “That’s what GM Stan Bowman and co. are trying to do right now.”

Pagnotta did not specifically allude to what parts of the lineup the Oilers are prioritizing, but given the lack of scoring and defensive depth on the roster, that may be what Edmonton is looking for first.

After the Oilers lost some scoring depth in the offseason in Corey Perry, Connor Brown, Evander Kane, and even Viktor Arvidsson and Jeff Skinner, they added Isaac Howard, Andrew Mangiapane and Jack Roslovic, as well as gave larger roles to Trent Frederic and Matt Savoie, in hopes of replacing that offence. While Roslovic (10 goals and 18 points) has been much better than expected, the rest have disappointed.

Howard (two goals and three points) only lasted 17 games before he was sent to the AHL, while Frederic (two goals), Mangiapane (four goals and eight points) and Savoie (three goals and seven points) haven’t held up so far. Given the injuries to Zach Hyman and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins this season, the Oilers have needed more from this group, so it’s easy to see why they may be looking for help on the market.

While there are plenty of options on the market for scoring help, the Oilers are also limited by their salary cap space, as they only have $159,667 available at the moment. Some cheaper forward options on the market include Yegor Chinakov, Brad Lambert, Lukas Reichel, Nick Robertson and Kiefer Sherwood.

The Oilers may also be looking for defensive depth, considering the struggles of Mattias Ekholm and Darnell Nurse so far this season. Ekholm is a bit more understandable given his age and how he’s still working his way back from the injury he sustained right before the playoffs last season, but Nurse’s struggles have been too frequent over the years that they may need permanent help there.

But like their options for scoring depth, the Oilers are limited by their cap space unless they can move on from a big contract. Some cheaper options currently on the market include Emil Andrae, Pavel Mintyukov, and if salary is retained, Rasmus Andersson, Brandon Carlo and Mario Ferraro.


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Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/despi...trying-to-fill-different-holes-in-this-roster
 
Real Life Podcast: Thanksgiving football, Oilers autograph session at WEM, and max wait times

Thursday afternoon means a fresh episode of Real Life was recorded, edited, and is ready to help you wrap up the week. On today’s podcast, the guys discussed Thanksgiving football, Chalmers’ door-locking routine, the Oilers’ autograph session at WEM, and more.

The guys kicked off the Thursday episode of Real Life with a Thanksgiving discussion about turkey and how many cuisines from around the world don’t use turkey. Somehow, talking about turkey led the guys to discuss whether they’d be comfortable hunting. Given how popular hunting is among a segment of the population, it was interesting to hear the boys’ thoughts on whether they could do it. Spoiler: The room was split.

Changing gears, the conversation somehow turned to Chalmers’ fear of judgment when he locks the door behind a departing guest too soon. He doesn’t want the person to hear him lock the door behind them. While he was the only one on the podcast to have this fear, it was fascinating to hear his thoughts on the proper timeline for locking up. Shifting the conversation again, the boys discussed the Oilers’ autograph session at WEM and how long they would be willing to wait in line for an autograph.

Finally, the guys wrapped up the podcast with the Thursday episode of Real Life with a random collection of topics, including a look at anything other than the Edmonton Oilers. Needless to say, when the team is as bad as they’ve been lately, talking about literally any other topic just seems more enjoyable. As always, the Thursday episode was all over the map, which is precisely what you’d expect from the Real Life podcast.

Listen to the Thursday episode of Real Life below:

Subscribe to the Real Life Podcast for FREE on Spotify here, on Apple Podcasts here, on YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts.

Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/real-...ilers-autograph-session-at-wem-max-wait-times
 
Oilers winger Jack Roslovic expected to miss several weeks after blocking shot vs. Stars

The injuries just won’t stop for the Edmonton Oilers.

As the team prepares to get Ryan Nugent-Hopkins back in the lineup for Saturday’s game against the Seattle Kraken, Oilers head coach Kris Knoblauch said Friday that Jack Roslovic is expected to miss multiple weeks.

Roslovic played in the Oilers’ loss to the Dallas Stars on Tuesday but missed the final 15 minutes of the second period after blocking a Tyler Seguin shot early in that frame. He would return for the third period, taking five shifts and playing 3:24, while also scoring a goal and looking no worse for wear.

Knoblauch updates injuries:

Roslovic will be out multiple weeks.
Kapanen is a week at least and could be longer.
Walman is progressing and maybe next week. #Oilers

— Jason Gregor (@JasonGregor) November 28, 2025

Roslovic, who signed a one-year, $1.5-million contract early in the season, has been a big contributor for the Oilers this year, scoring 10 goals, and eight assists for 18 points in 23 games with all of his goals and seven of his assists coming in his last 16 games.

He’s been a staple in the top-six over that stretch, playing just under 72 of his 251 five-on-five minutes with Connor McDavid, and 158 of those minutes with Leon Draisaitl. In those 16 games, the Oilers have outscored their opposition 15-12.

Knoblauch provided some other injury updates Friday, including that Kasperi Kapanen is expected to be out at least another week and potentially longer. The winger has been working his way back from a knee injury suffered in October, and appeared to re-aggravate the injury during Thursday’s practice.

Jake Walman, Knoblauch added, is working his way back from injury after blocking a shot in last weekend’s game against the Tampa Bay Lightning. Walman was seen in a walking boot earlier this week, but was on the ice Thursday. Knoblauch said Walman was progressing, and could return next week.

The Oilers visit the Kraken on Saturday afternoon, before kicking off a five-game homestand in early December as the Minnesota Wild, Kraken, Winnipeg Jets, Buffalo Sabres and Detroit Red Wings roll through Edmonton.



Zach Laing is Oilersnation’s associate editor, senior columnist, 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].


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Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/edmon...-out-several-weeks-blocking-shot-dallas-stars
 
Oilersnation Radio: Oilers blown out on home ice again and we had all week to think about it

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 goalie rumours, Tuesday’s debacle against the Stars, Connor Clattenburg’s first NHL goal, more injury woes, line combos, and much more.

We kicked off the Friday episode of ONR with a delicious debate about the goaltending rumours that are circling the Oilers these days, and tried to figure out which of these names would be the best fit for Edmonton. Whether it’s Jordan Binnington, Tristan Jarry, or some other name we’re not even discussing, there’s little doubt that there are risks regardless of who the target may be. Yet, irrespective of what the boys think about the situation, there’s little doubt that the noise is getting louder by the day.

Shifting gears, the guys looked at Connor Clattenburg’s recall so far and how he’s making the most of his opportunity through the first two games. Even though he’s not a player who will score goals in bunches, there’s little doubt that he gives it 1000% effort on every shift he gets. We also talked about the run of injuries that is plaguing the Oilers right now, and how the Hockey Gords don’t seem interesting in making our lives any easier.

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 more than 1/3 complete, the guys spent the bulk of the Friday episode discussing a range of topics, some related to the Oilers and others not, but that’s what happens when the team is playing as poorly as they have been.

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...e-again-and-we-had-all-week-to-think-about-it
 
Ryan Nugent-Hopkins’ impactful return, Zach Hyman’s first goal, and Stuart Skinner gets the shutout

The Edmonton Oilers rolled into Seattle on Saturday afternoon looking for signs of life after getting dummied by the Stars on Thursday night in one of the worst losses of the season. With injuries piling up, trade rumours flying all over social media, and the season slipping quietly toward the danger zone, this matchup with the Kraken felt less like a late-November matinee and more like a gut check test the boys desperately needed to pass. And exactly as we all hoped, the Oilers understood the assignment. They went into Seattle and took two points with a 4-0 win without ever looking like the result was in doubt, penalties and all. That’s a big dub.

WELCOME BACK, RYAN NUGENT-HOPKINS


Ryan Nugent-Hopkins was back in the lineup after missing nine games with a concussion, and it did not take him long to make an impact on the game. Even though we knew he would give the team quality minutes in all situations, he also took it upon himself to open the scoring on what ended up as the game-winner just past the midway point of the first period. Nuge’s sixth of the year also marked the 300th of his NHL career while simultaneously kick-starting a power play unit that had been spinning its wheels a little bit over the last couple of weeks. To say that the guy is vital to this roster’s success would be a massive understatement. He may not be the best player in the lineup, and we are always looking for more five-on-five offence, but he is undoubtedly one of the most important.

On Saturday, Nuge gave us yet another under-the-radar performance that saw him post a goal and an assist (18 points in 17 GP), two shots on goal, and a big blocked shot on the PK when the Kraken were gifted six PP minutes toward the end of the first period, all in under 18 minutes of TOI. It is the kind of game that tends to go unnoticed when you have Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl each scoring goals, and Zach Hyman finally cashing his first of the season. But even without the spotlight, Nugent-Hopkins will go about his business and do whatever his coach asks of him, and you really notice when he is not in the lineup. That should not surprise anyone for the longest tenured Oiler. There is a reason every coach in the long list of coaches he has had has loved him, and Saturday afternoon was yet another example of why you Keep Nuge Forever.

ZACH HYMAN GETS ON THE BOARD


It has been a grind for Zach Hyman in the seven games he has played since returning from his wrist injury. It is a lot to go out in Game 4 of the Western Conference Final, recover from the required surgery, miss training camp, the pre-season, and the first month of the season, so it was always going to take a minute for ZMH to get back up to game speed. It’s one thing to be healthy enough to play, but another story entirely to get back up to NHL game speed. That is why I was so pumped to see him cash in his first goal of the year on what was a lucky bounce off his skate on Leon Draisaitl’s low shot attempt. It was the most Zach Hyman goal that Zach Hyman could ever score. You never question the effort when it comes to Hyman, but sometimes it is nice to get a lucky one from time to time to crack the floodgates open.

And to think that it was his first goal in more than six months makes you believe that goal must have felt damned good, even though it was not the prettiest thing you will ever see. That bodes well for an Oilers offence that can always use more drivers. Hyman finished the game with two points (1G, 1A), two shots, one hit, and a plus-one rating in only 15:27 of TOI. Clearly, the coaching staff is still working Hyman into the mix tactfully after all the time he has missed, but he is also a guy who scores in bunches, and I will not be the least bit surprised if this lucky one off his skate kickstarts a run that gets our favourite child author, entrepreneur, and gentleman’s season back on track. We knew it was going to take time, but I am hoping that notching three points in his last five games is the start of better days. The effort is always there, and I would bet Gregor’s money that Saturday’s goal was only the first of many to come.

STUART SKINNER GETS THE SHUTOUT


It’s been a long week of goalie talk around here after a long month of it before that, and with only two games on the schedule this week, there wasn’t a whole lot else to talk about. Start Skinner is taking heat, per tradition. Calvin Pickard is in the same boat. And with both guys getting tagged for four goals apiece on Tuesday, it was fair to wonder how the former would respond in his start on Saturday afternoon in Seattle. So, how did Stuart Skinner respond to allowing four goals on eight shots against the Dallas Stars? With a 26-save shutout. That’s how. If ever there was a way to do it, Stu just worked the playbook perfectly. Whether it was being down shorthanded six times and coming through when needed, or shutting the door in moments when Seattle wasn’t pinned in its own zone, Skinner set a sturdy foundation that his teammates could build upon.

And while the haters will say that it was a one-off or that Seattle cannot score or whatever other excuse comes to mind, Stuart Skinner responded to a rough start and a long week of questioning by not allowing a single puck to get past him. In terms of expectations, that is as good as it gets, and if we are going to pile on Stu when things go sideways, then it is only fair to give him his flowers when he locks things down. This was the exact kind of performance his teammates needed behind them, and it was the exact kind of performance he needed for himself. If the Oilers are going to drag their season back to life, they need more nights where their goaltender gives them a chance instead of drowning in the same mistakes as everyone else. On Saturday, Skinner did his part. And whether you buy into the rumours or not, I’m tipping my cap to the guy for bouncing back as best as you possibly can. Now we’ll see if he can build upon it… if he’s still around… if you buy into the rumours.

THE SAUCE W/ RYDER AND LISA


theSauce-Promos_727x404.png


Wake up with Ryder and Lisa on The Sauce! Your new chaotic morning show streaming live from 8-10AM MST every weekday on Oilersnation YouTube starting Monday November 3rd. It’s unpredictable, unfiltered, and totally them. Like, follow and subscribe to never miss an episode!

Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/ryan-...mans-first-goal-season-stuart-skinner-shutout
 
The Day After 26.0: Oilers snag win that means a little more

All wins don’t come equal.

Some you have to fight a little bit harder for, and some just mean a little bit more.

For the Edmonton Oilers, all of the above were relevant in their 4-0 drubbing of the Seattle Kraken, as they won in every which way. They dominated on the scoreboard, putting up four goals, they dominated on the power play, scoring on both opportunities, and they dominated on the penalty kill, negating all six of the Kraken’s chances which included a minute and a half of five-on-three time at the end of the first.

“We had a fighting mentality,” said Oilers goaltender Stuart Skinner, who posted a 26-save shutout — the ninth of his career — as rumours of a trade involving him swirl.

And when things got physical, the Oilers didn’t shy away. Kraken winger Mason Marchment laid a late blindside hit on Darnell Nurse in the second period that drew a crowed, and while Marchment refused to take care of his own business then — or near the end of the game, when Nurse approached him for a fight, only for Marchment to hide behind a linesman — other players weren’t so shy.

Connor Clattenburg laid a thunderous hit in the offensive zone in the third period, getting up and dropping the gloves with Freddy Gaudreau, while minutes later, Alec Regula — who tried to find a dance partner earlier in the game — squared up with Tye Kartye.

“It started with one hit that should have been called,” said Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, who had a goal and an assist on the two power play goals in his return to the lineup. “We’re going to stand up for each other and make sure that they know when something like that happens, it’s not just going to go away.”

It was a much-needed win for the team coming off last Tuesday’s loss to the Dallas Stars, as the team got embarrassed on the national stage in the only NHL game of the night. The kind of win that takes the sour taste out of your mouth.

While it may not quiet down all the rumours surrounding this team, Oilers head coach Kris Knoblauch applauded his team’s work.

“The special teams were outstanding tonight,” said Knoblauch. “We had a lot of kills, especially early in the game, and just (made) a lot of good reads.

“I thought everyone was on their toes. Any loose pucks, they were attacking, and there were some chances… and Stu made some big saves.”

Edmonton’s ability to catch their breath continues after their heavily condensed start to the season with no games until Tuesday, when the red hot Minnesota Wild come to town. It’ll kick off a stretch of 12 games in 21 day stretch leading into the Christmas break.

It includes a five-game homestand to kick things off, with the Kraken, Winnipeg Jets, Buffalo Sabres and Detroit Red Wings coming to town after the Wild do, before Edmonton jetsets for a five-game road trip. That will take them to visit the Toronto Maple Leafs, Montreal Canadiens, Pittsburgh Penguins, Boston Bruins and the Wild, before returning home to take on the Vegas Golden Knights on Dec. 21. and the Calgary Flames on Dec. 23.



Zach Laing is Oilersnation’s associate editor, senior columnist, 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].


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Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/the-day-after-26-0-edmonton-oilers-snag-win-means-a-little-more
 
Sunday Scramble: Don’t expect Oilers to make goalie trade, media scrum drama, Bettman quiet on expansion, and more

What did we learn about the Edmonton Oilers this week?

Not much.

The Oilers have long been fans of the zig-zag. Think they’re turning the corner? No, no. That game against Dallas was a classic Oilers trap. Coming off an emotional win vs arch-nemesis Florida, they had one of their several letdown games this season.

So in response, we see a much more concerted effort on Saturday afternoon against the offensively flailing Kraken, up there with one of their best games of the season.

The penalty kill went a perfect 6/6.

Tuesday against the Wild? Would any of us be surprised if the Oilers look slow, sloppy, and disinterested? I wouldn’t.

A week ago, I said this stretch would be a “hinge” part of their season, playing 6/7 at home, and a chance to really tinker under the hood of what ails the team’s play.

It started with hysteria and rightful concern, and ended with a tidy 26-save shutout for Stu Skinner. That’s hockey, baby! We turn to December…

Five-game homestand:

  • Tuesday vs Minnesota
  • Thursday vs Seattle
  • Saturday vs Winnipeg
  • Tuesday, Dec. 9 vs Buffalo
  • Thursday, Dec. 11 vs Detroit

It wasn’t as bad as advertised​


I did have a thought about the Jim Matheson/Stu Skinner drama of the week.

In case you missed it, long-time scribe Matheson asked during a Skinner scrum:

“The fans, every time they turn around, they want another goalie,” Matheson said. “They don’t want you. That must hurt, or does it?”

Skinner replied:

“It’s happened a few times here. I think it happens anywhere around the league. Goalies need to come up with big saves at big times. I’m not really too sure how much I can say on that either. That’s kind of just part of the game of being a goalie. I decided to choose that. I’m going to try and get my kids to be a player.”

This interaction was overblown, especially if you watch the video and see how both the reporter and the player go about this interaction. It’s an intrusive question to be sure, and perhaps the phrasing wasn’t as sharp as it could’ve been, but to act like the Skinner topic wasn’t the biggest of the week would be dishonest.

Matheson and Skinner chuckle during this exchange as it continues, with Matheson sharing an anecdote about Glenn Hall. Matheson has been vocal online, and if there is such a thing, has been pro-Skinner.

Large portions of the fanbase were angry, but many of the same fans are the ones who slander Skinner publicly all the time.

All I can resort to is my own history being a reporter and asking someone of authority questions (a politician, coach, player, expert, etc). There are questions that you think are important, questions that require answers for technical reasons and quotable reasons, but you also have to consider what the audience, or fanbase, wants answers for, too.

There were times I was quite uncomfortable heading into interviews knowing I would have to be confrontational or assertive because that’s what the situation required. I had to hold the authority to task.

The question, albeit I think phrased clumsily, isn’t out of the realm by any means. To his credit, Skinner handled it like a pro.

I just can’t stand the same online accounts, often without their actual names attached to them, rail on and on about the goaltending, and then play shrinking violet when Skinner is grilled. It’s dishonest.

I don’t expect a goalie trade​


On the goalie trading scenarios: here’s my theory.

GM Stan Bowman and Connor McDavid must have talked about goaltending during contract discussions. There had to be an organizational plan, and I think it was to ride out the season with Skinner and Pickard.

However, sometimes the team tells you things through their play that necessitate a move.

It looked like that after Tuesday’s debacle.

But just at the salary cap. Look at all the no-trade and no-movement clauses the Oilers have. They’re snookered in terms of an in-season move.

Connor Ingram will play games for the Oilers, ready or not, I imagine. As much as it’s needed, I’d be surprised if Bowman pulls the trigger. They aren’t going to win one of these trades, dealing from a position of such weakness. But can they afford to wait?

That’s why you pay Bowman the big bucks, but the thought of Tristan Jarry makes me shiver…I’d take Jordan Binnington 11 times out of 10 over Jarry, but the Blues are 3-1-1 in their last five.

GM Doug Armstrong loves to send out memos to the league that his players are available and then never does it. Not to mention, he values his players higher than someone selling a used 2007 diesel pickup on Marketplace.

“Eight grand. No low-ballers. I know what I got!!!!”

Let’s just say the guy who carved the Oilers with two beauty offer sheets wouldn’t be my top candidate to throw the Oilers a life raft.

To the outside of Oil Country…

Bettman speaks​


Commissioner Gary Bettman gave an interview to CNBC, talking about the outlet’s projected franchise values, but the talk also touched base on expansion.

The big takeaways are that the franchise values are doing very well, with the average franchise worth an estimated $2.2 billion.

The Toronto Maple Leafs are projected $4.3 billion, which Bettman was quick to buttress, believing if the Leafs went on sale, they’d net much more than that.

“We’re undervalued by CNBC,” Bettman said.

The question about expansion was partially cut off, but

“My instructions from ownership are, if we’re going to expand – we’re not in an expansion mode – It’s got to start with the two ($2 billion). Otherwise, it doesn’t make sense.

“And people tend to say, ‘Oh, that’s a lot of money.’ But you remember, you’re selling off a piece of your overall equity in the league. If we expand by two teams, instead of dividing national revenues by 32 teams, we’d be dividing it by 34, and there is an economic value to doing that.”

That’s a key emphasis. The NHL will not expand by one, it will be two, but not yet. There was also talks about a partnership with prediction markets, which one of these times I’ll discuss in the Scramble. But on expansion…

Stuff the expansion talk​


Financially, expansion is dollar signs to the NHL, like prospective owners firing loonies towards the talent at Shade.

But, surely, 32 teams is the maximum. It’s irresponsible to continue watering down the league with franchises, making the Stanley Cup more and more a lottery ticket of luck and fortune.

Clearly, nothing is sacrosanct in the NHL anymore. They put ugly, stupid company logos on sweaters, there are digital boards on your TV screens on top of sold rink boards, every waking second is sponsored and advertised, subscription services to watch the games ratchet up significantly year by year…where is the cap?

For a league that instituted the cap, they can’t find a cap in terms of teams.

Thirty-two teams are enough. It’s the maximum. The nature of hockey itself is much more random than any other major sport. It’s a game played on three millimetre blades with a vulcanized piece of rubber that bounces with a mind of its own. The nature of the game makes it hard enough for the good teams to win.

I don’t think the league should actively make it harder to win the best trophy in pro sports, plus water down the talent (all while advertising us to death), so they can try and put hockey in Atlanta a third time.

Give me a break.

What a dawg​


Kyle Palmieri registered the assist of the season.

If you didn’t see it, the veteran Islanders forward suffered a torn ACL on Friday against the Flyers, but while struggling to the bench, stripped an unsuspecting Emil Andrae, backhand saucers the puck to Jonathan Drouin, who drops it right on the blade of Emil Heineman, who scores.

This effort is different!

Kyle Palmieri would NOT quit on the play 🔥 pic.twitter.com/BTAghx555l

— SportsCenter (@SportsCenter) November 28, 2025

This makes the Kobe Bryant free throws on a torn ACL years back look like child’s play.

Best wishes to Palmieri, and what a ridiculous play. He’s played 925 regular-season games, and hopefully the recovery doesn’t put his silver stick status in jeopardy.

More injuries​


A couple other Saturday injuries of consequence.

Logan Cooley faced a brutal knee against the Blues from Alexey Toropchenko. It looks bad, real bad. For Utah’s sake, they hope not, particularly as they’ve won just three of their last ten games.

Logan Cooley had to leave the game after this knee on knee contact pic.twitter.com/mECkSW48UF

— B/R Open Ice (@BR_OpenIce) November 30, 2025

Plus, Adam Fox, who is second behind Cale Makar in defensive point scoring, is being evaluated after a hit from Brandon Hagel. The Rangers have played on the road nearly as much as the Oilers, and it’s actually kept their season alive, amidst a home record sitting 2-8-1. They play three of their next four at home, and the loss of Fox would be huge.

Looked like Adam Fox’s left arm gets crunched by Hagel.

He’s still in the #NYR locker room. pic.twitter.com/jvaQLfA69S

— Jonny Lazarus (@JLazzy23) November 29, 2025

Cooper for Adams?​


The Tampa Bay Lightning are first in the East after winning their seventh game in a row on Saturday against the suffering New York Rangers.

Lots of chatter about how Jon Cooper has never won the Jack Adams Award. The NHL typically doesn’t reward the best coaches in the league. It’s all about who outperforms expectations.

However, the voters (the broadcasters) may look to correct past sins, sort of like actors who have been long snubbed for an Academy Award.

Ray Ferraro​


Ray Ferraro was doing colour on the Saturday night Hockey Night in Canada game in Los Angeles as the Vancouver Canucks were in town. I miss hearing Ferraro regularly. In a hockey culture where tell-you-how-I-see-it commentary is almost non-existent, Ferraro continues to deliver.

The team of Kevin Quinn and Ray Ferraro for the Oilers is a nice dose of nostalgia back in those turbulent times.

Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/sunda...ade-media-scrum-drama-bettman-quiet-expansion
 
Monday Mailbag: How soon do you see the Oilers making a goalie trade

Good morning, everyone, and a happy Monday to you all. As per tradition, I’ve got a brand new mailbag set to go after taking your questions and sending them to the crew for their takes. This week, we’re discussing goalie trades, being out of the playoffs at American Thanksgiving, the schedule, and more. If you’ve got a question you’d like to ask, email it to me at [email protected] or on Twitter at @jsbmbaggedmilk, and I’ll get to you as soon as I can.

Tampa Bay Lightning celebrate goal

Nov 20, 2025; Tampa, Florida, USA; Tampa Bay Lightning left wing Nick Paul (20) is congratulated after he scored a goal against the Edmonton Oilers during the third period at Benchmark International Arena. Mandatory Credit: Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images

1) Ed M. asks – Looking at the standings today on American Thanksgiving, the Oil sit 10 the conference, and 25th in the league. This is despite playing more games than most other teams. Last or near last in both goal differential and goals allowed. If we consider the Hollandism that you know where your team rates by this time of the year. Is all the chatter about trading this guy or that guy just putting lipstick on a pig?

Tyler Yaremchuk:

I see where you’re coming from, but this team has no choice but to try and shake things up. They absolutely need their current group of players to start performing better, but they also can’t just sit on their hands and watch this thing continue to slip away. Just letting this season play out is not an option for a team with Stanley Cup aspirations.

Baggedmilk:

I think the Oilers have enough talent to crawl out of this hole, but the longer these struggles go on, the harder that will be. I don’t think we’re at pig lipstick territory just yet.

Edmonton Oilers Jack Roslovic vs Florida Panthers

Nov 22, 2025; Sunrise, Florida, USA; Edmonton Oilers center Jack Roslovic (28) moves the puck against Florida Panthers defenseman Seth Jones (3) during the second period at Amerant Bank Arena. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

2) Aaron from Calgary asks – Not to go completely in the dark, but we’re used to it… I believe Jack Roslovic can’t sign an extension until January, but if the team hasn’t shown any life by then, can you see the team trading him along with Kulak, Henrique, Kapanen, Tomasek, Lazar, and/or Philp (pending UFAs)? If we are burning this year, the team needs draft capital to regroup and retool the team with their upcoming cap space next year.

Tyler Yaremchuk:

No. The Oilers are not going to be sellers. Lazar, Tomasek, Philp and players like that don’t hold any value, so not even worth having a conversation there. The other pieces mentioned only make sense to move if the team is going to flip those assets or use the cap space for a different player that they think can help the team win right now.

Baggedmilk:

Nah, they’re not punting and definitely not this early. I get the allure of high end draft picks, but we’ve lived that life for so long. I want to win.

Walter Tychnowicz-Imagn Images

Nov 25, 2025; Edmonton, Alberta, CAN; Edmonton Oilers centre Connor Clattenburg (64) celebrates his first goal against the Dallas Stars during the second period at Rogers Place. Mandatory Credit: Walter Tychnowicz-Imagn Images

3) James asks – How did Connor Clattenburg go from being a fifth-round pick in 2024 to playing games with the Oilers just over a year later? That never happens for picks that late.

Tyler Yaremchuk:

His style of play just happened to scratch an itch that the Oilers had. They needed someone to bring them a lot of physicality and play with some emotion, and he does exactly that.

Baggedmilk:

He’s cooking with ingredients that the rest of the roster doesn’t seem to have in their cupboards, and it’s created a lane for him to get into the NHL lineup. I don’t know how long he’ll be here or what he needs to do more than he is now to stick, but I love everything about his story. You don’t see this happen often.

Edmonton Oilers Dallas Stars

Nov 25, 2025; Edmonton, Alberta, CAN; Dallas Stars players celebrate a goal as Edmonton Oilers left winger Andrew Magiapane (88) skates past during the third period at Rogers Place. Mandatory Credit: Walter Tychnowicz-Imagn Images

4) James in Peterborough asks – No Oilers fan is happy with yet another start to the season. The Oilers will have a large number of home games in December. With few losses at home in regulation to date, do you see them ‘righting the ship’ with the more favourable schedule? Why or why not?

Tyler Yaremchuk:

Yes, they’ve historically been a very dominant home team so I think this run of games at Rogers Place will help them immensely. The issue is that with the hole they’ve put themselves in, just having a .600 points percentage in those games won’t be enough. They need to be winning eight of every ten home games, or something around that mark.

Baggedmilk:

Schedule has been wild so far. A lot of games in short stretches and most of them on the road. Having a run of home games in the back half can only help because the Oilers are strong at Rogers Place, generally speaking.

Edmonton Oilers Tristan Jarry

Oct 24, 2022; Edmonton, Alberta, CAN; Edmonton Oilers forward Connor McDavid (97) tries to screen Pittsburgh Penguins goaltender Tristan Jarry (35) during the first period at Rogers Place. Mandatory Credit: Perry Nelson-USA TODAY Sports

5) Andrew asks – We’re starting to see more smoke around the goalie rumours lately with the likes of Binnington and Jarry being thrown out there. How realistic do you think it is that Stan Bowman makes a goalie trade sooner rather than later?

Tyler Yaremchuk:

Very realistic. I think that patience has run thin in Edmonton and this management group knows that they need to make a swap. Tristan Jarry is a very attainable goalie who I think could be an upgrade on what they have.

Baggedmilk:

I think it’s realistic that something gets done, but I don’t know that Stan Bowman is in a rush to pull the trigger. No one wants to help the Oilers, and I’m thinking the price for any goal is 25-50% higher than it should be. We may not like it, but being a little patient to not have to overpay will be huge here.

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Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/monday-mailbag-how-soon-do-you-see-the-oilers-making-a-goalie-trade
 
Monday Musings: Rest Helps Oilers, Injuries Across the League, Stats, the Month of Giving begins and More

A mental, emotional and physical reset seemed to help the Edmonton Oilers.

Edmonton is in a stretch where they play just once in six days. They had consecutive days of practice for the first time in almost a month, and it paid off as they played their most complete game of the season en route to a 4-0 victory over the Seattle Kraken. Stuart Skinner was excellent. He didn’t face a heavy dose of quality shots, but he stopped a breakaway and made a few other key saves during his 26-save shutout. The Oilers’ penalty kill was a perfect 6-for-6, the power play went 2-for-2, and they scored two goals 5×5.

They started strong, and never allowed Seattle to take over the game for an extended period of time.

It is only one game, but in order to dig out of a funk, you have to take multiple steps to get out of the hole. Saturday was a good initial step, and tomorrow the Oilers begin a five-game homestand against Minnesota, Seattle, Winnipeg, Buffalo and Detroit. Minnesota will be the toughest test, while Detroit, Seattle and Buffalo are like the Oilers and have won less than half of their games.

Winnipeg is 13-11, but they are 1-4 since announcing Connor Hellebuyck is out four-to-six weeks, and when they come to Edmonton, it will be their sixth game in nine days, in six different cities and the second half of a back-to-back. That is a game where Edmonton will have a clear rest advantage.

Edmonton has a favourable schedule for the next 10 days with no travel. They play Winnipeg, Buffalo and Detroit on the second half of a back-to-back game, and Edmonton plays two games with two days between games and the other three they have one day in between. The schedule presents an opportunity to win three games in a row for the first time this season, and maybe even five out of six games. In Seattle, they showed themselves the type of game they are capable of playing, if they commit to making good decisions with and without the puck. Now they have to do it again.

HERE AND THERE…​


— There seems to be more injuries this season. The NHL doesn’t track man-games lost, but certain websites do. You can see each team’s injuries here at NHL Injury Vis. I added up each team’s and here they are by division:

Pacific:
VAN (131)
EDM (91)
SEA (70),
VGK (66)
ANA (62)
SJS (55)
CGY (49)
LAK (23)

I didn’t include players like Logan Couture who is retired, Alex Pietrangelo, because he hasn’t officially retired, he most likely is done and isn’t expected to play this season.

Not all injuries are equal. If a starting goalie is out 10 games and a third liner is out 10 games, I think the impact is different, so we have to keep that in mind.

Central:
DAL (98)
MIN (80)
UTA (80)
COL (79)
WPG (71)
CHI (60)
NSH (49)
STL (29)

Dallas has had key injuries to players like Jamie Benn, Thomas Harley and Matt Duchene. As they’ve gotten healthier they’ve looked stronger. Winnipeg losing Connor Hellebuyck for four-to-six weeks is easily the biggest injury in the division, and likely forces Winnipeg to battle for a Wildcard spot instead of one of the top-three spots in the division.

Atlantic:
FLA (115)
BUF (91),
TBL (86)
TOR (68)
MTL (50)
OTT (39)
BOS (32)
DET (20)

Florida hasn’t had Alexander Barkov or Matthew Tkachuk yet this season and it a main reason why they sit in 14th place in the East. Tkachuk could return within a month and that will be a huge boost, but Barkov’s return is likely late in the season or the playoffs, and the Panthers are likely battling for a Wildcard spot rather than a division position due to injuries. Detroit has been the healthiest team in the NHL, but haven’t been able to take advantage of that as they sit in fifth place. They are only two points behind second place Boston, but the Wings healthy lineup hasn’t been as good as other team’s injured roster.

Metropolitan
NJD (127)
CAR (89)
PIT (85)
NYI (77)
NYR (49)
WSH (42)
PHI (35)
CBJ (23)

The Devils have lost 37 games to injury to Evgeni Dadonov and Zach MacEwan, so that does alter the impact of their total games lost, but their blue line has been without Johnathan Kovacevic, Brett Pesce and Dougie Hamilton for a total of 43 games and they’ve been without Jack Hughes and Jacob Markstrom for a total of 13 and climbing. The Hurricanes haven’t had stalwart defender, Jaccob Slavin for 22 games, yet they lead their division with 34 points. They and the Devils sitting 1-2 despite their injuries tells me the gap between those two and the rest of the division is likely larger than it looks right now, once those clubs get healthy.

— The injury bug isn’t just biting on the ice. Alexey Toropchenko of the St. Louis Blues, became the third player this season to miss time due to an off-ice injury involving food/dinner. Toropencko scalded his legs in an accident at home. Earlier this year New Jersey’s Jack Hughes cut himself at a team dinner and will be out at least six-to-eight weeks. Florida’s Eetu Luostarinen burned himself using his barbecue and has already missed six games and will miss a few more. It’s been a wild season injury wise across the NHL.

— What a tilt in the American League over the weekend. Wow.

FIGHT OF THE CENTURY!! OH MY GOODNESS, YANICK TURCOTTE AND TYREL BAUER 🤯 pic.twitter.com/yJ1FmdC3l2

— Travis (@TravisC_19) November 30, 2025

— Colorado has been unreal, but if I had to pick which D corps 1-6 I liked better, I’d take Dallas’ right now. The Avs will need to add some size to their backend. I don’t think they can play both Sam Malinski and Samuel Girard in their bottom four in the playoffs. Remember when they won the Cup in 2022, Girard only played in seven games. Not all your D have to be big, and when they are elite offensively or defensively like Cale Makar or Gustav Forsling, size isn’t a major factor, but neither Malinki or Girard are elite. I’d expect the Avs to bulk up their D corps before the playoffs.

— I get all the excitement over the Avalanche, but is interesting to breakdown their record. They’ve lost five games in OT/SO to Minnesota, Carolina, Utah, Dallas and New Jersey and 13 of their 18 wins came against non-playoff teams from last season. I see many suggesting they could push Boston for the best record in the NHL. I’d be surprised, mainly because 135 points is a crazy number, but also they’ve had a good schedule rest wise. They have played five sets of BTB games, but they’ve had nine stretches with at least two days between games. Edmonton has played five BTB games, and has had five stretches with 2+ days between games, and two of those came last week. They had three prior. Rest is a major factor during the regular season.

— In December and January, Colorado will have six sets of 2+ days rest, and one of those is the Christmas break that all teams have. Maintaining and 18-1-6 record would be difficult even with the same number of rest days, but don’t be surprised to see them lose a few more simply due to rest and recovery.

— Nathan MacKinnon is on pace for 144 points. He’s had another unreal start to the season and it will be very difficult for someone to catch him in the Art Ross race, as long as he remains healthy.

MONTH OF GIVING…​

Our 15th annual Month of Giving begins today. Each day this month we will have different items to bid on (Fridays are donation days). You can see the packages up for grabs this week by clicking here.
Day ONE: Your choice of a new Furnace or a new Air Conditioner courtesy of Legacy Heating & Cooling.
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  • Legacy Heating & Cooling Wifi Smart Thermostat
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  • One installed Goodman GLXS3B Air Conditioner with Evaporator coil, pad/bracket and electrical connections.
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  • Legacy Heating & Cooling Wifi Smart Thermostat
  • 10 year Parts/Labour/Compressor on Air Conditioner
You can bid via text between 2-6 p.m. on Sports 1440 by texting 833.401.1440 (can call same number) and include your name and donation amount. Every dollar raised will be donated to the Christmas Bureau.

Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/monda...on-oilers-injuries-across-nhl-month-of-giving
 
Oilers prospect Asher Barnett selected for preliminary Team USA World Juniors roster

On Monday, USA Hockey released their preliminary roster for the upcoming edition of the IIHF World Junior Championship. Named as one of 10 defenders selected is Edmonton Oilers’ prospect Asher Barnett.

One step closer to Minnesota 👏

The preliminary roster for the 2026 U.S. National Junior Team is here! 🇺🇸

Details: https://t.co/S1VOlGVj2k pic.twitter.com/1X1Ufp3mQO

— USA Hockey (@usahockey) December 1, 2025

Asher Barnett was selected early in the fifth round of the 2025 NHL entry draft by the Oilers from the United States National Team Development Program. Edmonton traded for the pick from the Nashville Predators in exchange for their own pick later that same round. In Elite Prospects‘ 2025 draft guide, they wrote on Barnett:

Bringing a little bit of everything defensively, Barnett wins his minutes with transition passing, physicality, and defensive details. He punishes net-front attackers with crosschecks and then detaches to intercept the puck carrier behind the net for a stop. He wins inside position, proactively engages opponents, and tips away passes – all key traits for strong off-puck defenders moving forward.

Originally from Chicago, Barnett brings presence on the blue line at 6-foot-1, 198 lb., still with size to gain. This season, Barnett began playing in the NCAA with the University of Michigan. In 18 appearances with the Wolverines so far, the 18-year-old has eight assists, playing on the third pairing and earning penalty-killing minutes.

Barnett has never played in the World Juniors before, but has appeared in multiple junior competitions with Team USA. In last year’s IIHF World U18 Championship, he put up two goals and four assists in seven games, as the US finished with bronze. After the tournament, Daily Faceoff’s Steven Ellis wrote the following on the young defender:

The Americans lack a high-end producer like the Hutson brothers of days past. But Barnett helped fill the gap at this tourney. He’s good as a distributor, and seems to always be looking to create something. He’s not big, but he’s got some muscle to him. The U-18 captain put up modest numbers with the USNTDP this year but this felt like some of his best hockey – especially against Switzerland where he looked unstoppable by the blueline. I could see a team banking on his upside in the middle rounds.

For more on Barnett, read Oilersnation’s Spencer Pomoty’s break down of his game and why he could be an asset for Edmonton down the line. The World Juniors kick off on Boxing Day from St. Paul and Minneapolis, Minnesota.


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Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/edmon...ted-preliminary-team-usa-world-juniors-roster
 
Oilersnation Radio: The Oilers home stand, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins’ return, and Connor Clattenburg

It’s Tuesday afternoon, and there’s a fresh episode of Oilersnation Radio set, which means the boys were back in the studio to recap the week that was. On today’s episode, the guys discussed the Oilers’ upcoming home stand, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins’ return, Connor Clattenburg sticking with the big club, and much more.

We kicked off the Tuesday episode of ONR with a delicious debate about what everyone needs to see from their five-game home stand. With some home games on the schedule for the next week and change, the guys walk through their expectations for this run and whether they can use it to turn the corner. Even if it’s not a specific win total, everyone on the podcast just wants the boys to play at a level they’re capable of.

Changing gears, we looked at Saturday’s win over the Seattle Kraken and how the Oilers’ big dogs made all the difference. Starting with Ryan Nugent-Hopkins’ impactful return, the Oilers’ longest tenured player was all over the place, and he made an immediate impact with the GWG and an assist while also playing in all situations. We also looked at Edmonton’s big four, all getting a goal and an assist in what was one of their most complete wins of the season.

Finally, we wrapped up the Tuesday episode of ONR with another round of Baggedmilk’s Trivia, including some Oilers vs. Minnesota-specific questions ahead of tonight’s game. If you listened to the last three editions of BM’s trivia, you’ll know that BM was way off on one of the questions, which prompted Liam to take on the role of trivia marshal and auditor. Did Baggedmilk get his questions right? You’ll have to listen to find out for sure.

Listen to the Tuesday 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...-nugent-hopkins-return-and-connor-clattenburg
 
Oilers silver linings, Jesper Wallstedt frustration, and bright spots from the 1-0 shutout loss

The Oilers had a fantastic afternoon in Seattle on Saturday, and that 4-0 shutout was probably their most complete effort at both ends of the rink that we’ve seen in a month or more. Now that the boys have a run of home games in front of them, we were all looking for them to build on that win. The problem is that the first team on deck was the red-hot Minnesota Wild. The second problem was that the Oilers were also facing a goaltender vying for his fourth shutout in his last six games. Wild take it by a 1-0 score.

JUST ONE MORE SILVER LINING?


As much as losses are nothing to celebrate, I don’t get nearly as frustrated by them when the Oilers put in an honest effort. I would say that was the case last night. Don’t get me wrong, getting shut out at home is incredibly annoying, but I would much rather watch a game like that than the debacles we’ve witnessed against the Avalanche and Stars. Those losses were disasters. Train wrecks you couldn’t look away from. What happened last night was a strong effort thwarted by strong defensive structure and a goaltender who is literally unbeatable right now… more on that later.

My point is that the Oilers put in the kind of effort that will result in wins more often than not if they can string them together consistently. Outside of the obvious problem of not scoring a goal, there were a lot of aspects of that game that I think we’d all like to see the boys carry forward. We’ve had plenty of nights where the Oilers bled goals, and I’m choosing to take it as a positive that they’ve only given up one in their last two games. Crawling off rock bottom might take some smaller steps before the Oilers get back up and running at full clip, and I’m hopeful these last two games are the start of a much tighter brand of defensive play. I know we’re all mad about where the Oilers are at in the standings, but I’m seeing brighter days if this newer version of the team can show up every night.

JESPER WALLSTEDT THROWS SAND IN OUR EYES


If there’s one thing that doing this job for this long has taught me, it’s that looking back at draft picks the Oilers missed on can be a painful exercise. It almost doesn’t matter the year, and it doesn’t matter the round, you can always find players who were better than the guy Edmonton picked in whatever slot they had. It’s torture. Don’t do it. But if you are in the business of punishing yourself, then why not be reminded for the 1000th time how the Oilers had the chance to draft Jesper Wallstedt with the 20th overall pick at the 2021 NHL Draft? Instead, they moved the 20th overall slot to the Wild for the picks that turned into Xavier Bourgault (#22) and Luca Muenzenberger (#90). If you’re reading this, you already know that neither of those players is still with the organization.

So to have Jesper Wallstedt roll into Rogers Place for his first career matchup with the Oilers and post a 33-save shutout was annoying on so many levels. First, the Oilers were the better team for wide stretches of that hockey game, and it sure would be nice if they could get rewarded for the effort. Second was the fact that Edmonton only gave up a single goal and still managed to lose the game. You win in that situation nine times out of ten. It’s a bummer. And finally, how can you not be annoyed by the aforementioned draft miss shutting the Oilers out at home? How can you not wonder what it would be like to see your goalie post four shutouts in his last six starts? Given all the noise about goaltending in the market these days, having Wallstedt throw down a performance like that was a handful of sand to the eyes that none of us needed. We’re already going through it enough with having to watch the sins of the last administration come back to kick us while we’re down.

STUART SKINNER WARMING UP?


I know everyone in the comments is going to tag me for asking if Stuart Skinner is heating up because he just gave up four goals on eight shots to the Dallas Stars, but I legitimately think it’s a worthy question. Including the .958 save percentage he posted last night against the Wild on 24 shots, Skinner has posted a .921 save% or better in three of his last four starts. Those are the numbers we want, and Skinner has a history of going on runs in the regular season where he looks like a top-10 goaltender. Could three quality starts in his last four be the start of something similar? Dare to dream? Regardless of whether you think our current tandem can get things done, this is the situation we’re in for the time being. And that has me Hope Will Never Dieing my way into looking for even the smallest of wins. I’m hoping I found one.

CONNOR CLATTENBURG MUST HATE BAKERSFIELD


Connor Clattenburg hasn’t planned a ton of minutes in his four games with the Oilers, but I’ll be damned if they haven’t been impactful. For the number of times you notice the kid when he’s on the ice, you’d think he was playing more than he is, but then you connect that he’s just making the most of his opportunities. Clattenburg plays like every shift is his last — you never know with a call-up like him — and I know I’m not the only one who appreciates the way he’s causing chaos. The Oilers need more shit disturbers in their lineup, and their fifth-round pick from 2024 seems more than willing to oblige. We’ve been begging for guys to play with emotion consistently, and I like having a guy around that you never have to ask.

THE SAUCE W/ RYDER AND LISA


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Wake up with Ryder and Lisa on The Sauce! Your new chaotic morning show streaming live from 8-10AM MST every weekday on The Sauce YouTube starting Monday November 3rd. It’s unpredictable, unfiltered, and totally them. Like, follow and subscribe to never miss an episode!

Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/edmon...dt-frustration-bright-spots-from-shutout-loss
 
Better Lait Than Never: No one wants to talk about Oilers silver linings after losses but I do

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 whether the Oilers are turning the corner, kept up with the goalie rumours, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins’ return, and much more.

Just when you might be reaching max frustration levels, I’m back with another round of wondering if the Edmonton Oilers are finally turning the corner. After a strong showing in Seattle on the weekend, the Oilers returned home to face the red-hot Minnesota Wild, and I’m wondering if I’m the only one who wasn’t overly pissed off about that loss. I also checked in on the latest round of goalie rumours after things had quietened down quite a bit in terms of Stan Bowman pulling the trigger to get one. Will we get a new goalie before the off-season? Is Stuart Skinner heating up, pushing off the decision for a while longer? Only time will give us the answers, but that didn’t stop me from wading in with my takes anyway.

Finally, I wrapped up this week’s episode of BLTN with a guest Righteous Sack Beating from Kyle, 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 to listen to. The voicemail is my favourite 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-edmonton-oilers-silver-linings-after-losses
 
Pre-Scout: Kraken coming off days of practice eyeing revenge against Oilers

Things have been quiet in Kraken land lately.

It makes sense why. Seattle hasn’t played since the Oilers shut them out 4-0 on home ice on Saturday.

Their power play went 0-6 on the day, and they were shut out for the second time in their last three games. That same PP is 0/14 in their last four games.

Head coach Lane Lambert has focused on special teams in practice lately, as the Kraken look to improve during this four-day break from games.

“The competition between the two is critical,” Lambert said about his top PP practicing against the top PK.
“If you have a good powerplay, it improves your penalty kill. If you have a good penalty kill, it improves your powerplay. We did a lot of film the last couple days, we did some work on the ice the last couple days on both things. We talk about our powerplay, our powerplay has won us some games this year. And you’re going to go through little stretches in the season, 82 games, where maybe the powerplay gets a little dry. It’s not like we didn’t have shots.”

Lambert added that the penalty kill allowing 24 goals this year is a “problem” and that the PK has to be better.

One element that may not carry over is the nastiness, because prime instigator Mason Marchment will not be on the flight to Edmonton. Lambert didn’t delve deeply into the nature of the injury, but he could be back in the Kraken lineup on Saturday.

This is a one-off road game for Seattle, before they begin a three-game homestand against Detroit on Saturday.

Jared McCann​


Jared McCann is still getting revved up after a long injury layoff.

The de facto franchise leader, McCann has led the Kraken in all four seasons of the Kraken’s existence. Playing just seven games so far this year for an offence-starved group, a healthy McCann is hoped to help this ailing squad.

“We’re getting shots to the net. We’re making the goalie make some tough saves. I feel like we’re making some plays too. But we got to stick with it…I think it comes down to shooting the puck more. Creating second chances off shots.”

Again, without leading point man Jaden Schwartz in the lineup, they are trying to find ways to score goals. But this is as much as scoring-by-committee as an NHL team gets.

Schwartz, Eberle, Beniers, Montour, Dunn, Stephenson, Marchment, Wright, and Tolvanen are all significant parts of the team’s payroll and have double-digit points, but no one has more than 15.

There’s so much emphasis on the power play, yet 5-on-5, no team in the league has scored fewer times than Seattle. Their 36 goals 5v5 is six fewer than the 31st-best, Los Angeles.

If their special teams don’t create, they don’t score all too often.

With all of this said, the Kraken are 11-7-6 and on the fringe of a playoff spot. It’s not doom and gloom in the near future if they can find some goals. But long-term, what is Seattle’s ceiling?

The ceiling doesn’t matter in the context of Thursday’s game specifically, one you have to expect the Kraken are going to come out with a dogged, determined effort.

Notes:​

  • The Oilers will be starved to score too, of course, after being shut out by the Wild, and the Kraken boast an impressive team save percentage.
  • SEA’s team save percentage 5-on-5 is second in the NHL, right behind the Wild, at .933. The Oilers will have to work themselves to get goals.
  • Off a regulation loss, the Kraken are 3-2-1 this season. The Oilers are 2-4-2 off a regulation loss.
  • Both the Oilers and Kraken have been past regulation 10 times this year. SEA is 4-6 past regulation, EDM is 5-5.
  • The Oilers are 13-4 vs the Kraken all-time, and 6-1 at home lifetime.

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Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/pre-scout-seattle-kraken-rested-revenge-against-edmonton-oilers
 
No revenge for Seattle as Oilers hammer Kraken 9-4: Recap, Highlights, and Reaction

The Edmonton Oilers are back.

On Thursday evening, the Oilers smashed the Seattle Kraken 9-4 in a much-needed win. The Oilers are now 12-11-5 this season with three more games on this five-game home stand.

Just over seven minutes into the game, the Oilers took a 1-0 lead thanks to a short-side shot by Connor McDavid at the faceoff dot. As that goal announcement was happening, the Oilers made it 2-0 as Leon Draisaitl found Vasily Podkolzin down low, who one-timed it past Joey Daccord. Usually, it’s Draisaitl scoring from that angle.

And just like that Podkolzin extends the lead to 2-0 for the Oilers!

📹: Sportsnet | #LetsGoOilers pic.twitter.com/yY8w1AiKwF

— Oilersnation.com, Oily Since ‘07 (@OilersNation) December 5, 2025

Midway through the first, the Oilers had a power play. It took just seven seconds for the Oilers to take a 3-0 lead, as Leon Draisaitl received a cross-ice pass in his spot, beating Daccord. The Kraken showed life toward the end of the second period, scoring twice to make it 3-2 heading into the first intermission.

Leon Draisaitl on the powerplay extends the Oilers lead to 3-0!

📹: Sportsnet | #LetsGoOilers pic.twitter.com/lAuGegkiHu

— Oilersnation.com, Oily Since ‘07 (@OilersNation) December 5, 2025

It was all the Oilers from there. Shortly before the Kraken’s second goal, Matthew Savoie was robbed on a breakaway. Early in the second period, he got a second chance on the penalty kill, making a nice move to lift it over Daccord’s pad.

Matt Savoie with the shorthanded goal!

📹: Sportsnet | #LetsGoOilers pic.twitter.com/Qtg8O9s2ts

— Oilersnation.com, Oily Since ‘07 (@OilersNation) December 5, 2025

McDavid scored his second of the game just over six minutes into the second period, as the Oilers’ captain caught Daccord sleeping, passing it off his pads and into the back of the net. That chased Daccord from the game, but the Oilers weren’t done, as Zach Hyman scored midway through the second period with a nifty backhander on a semi-breakaway.

SHAQ HYMAN EXTENDS THE LEAD TO 6-2!

📹: Sportsnet | #LetsGoOilers pic.twitter.com/pzNx6a7I3b

— Oilersnation.com, Oily Since ‘07 (@OilersNation) December 5, 2025

The Kraken scored; it didn’t matter. Early in the third period, the Oilers forced a turnover with their forecheck, with Mattias Janmark beating the Kraken netminder to give the Oilers a 7-3 lead. McDavid scored his hat trick with his second power play goal of the game, while Savoie scored his second of the game for his fifth of the season. The Kraken scored one with five seconds left, giving us a final score of 9-4.

Matt Savoie with his 2nd of the night!

📹: Sportsnet | #LetsGoOilers pic.twitter.com/w2MZysRzx2

— Oilersnation.com, Oily Since ‘07 (@OilersNation) December 5, 2025

Takeaways…​


As good as this game was (more on that soon), it didn’t come without some unfortunate news as Connor Clattenburg left the game with what appeared to be an eye injury. He was high-sticked in the third, and it didn’t look great. Hopefully, he’s okay.

Last Saturday, the Oilers defeated the Kraken 4-0, thanks in large part to their special teams. The Oilers killed off all six penalties they took, while scoring on the two power plays they received. On Thursday, they scored on their first four power plays, unfortunately failing to score on their fifth. The Kraken were 0/3, but scored their opening just after an opportunity ended.

With that win, the Oilers have played some pretty darn good games over the last two weeks, even if their record doesn’t reflect that. It all started with that 7-4 loss in Washington, as they played well on the second game of a back-to-back against the Tampa Bay Lightning. Then, they beat the Florida Panthers to force Game 8. Ignoring the 8-3 loss to the Stars, the Oilers then beat the Kraken 4-0, were goalie’d in their 1-0 loss to the Minnesota Wild, and then smashed the Kraken again.

It’s nice to be on the winning side of a blowout. In November, the Oilers fell 9-1 to the Colorado Avalanche and 8-3 to the Dallas Stars. They needed a game like this. It’s the third time since the 2004-05 lockout that the Oilers have scored nine goals. However, they still haven’t scored 10 since 1996.

Only three Oiler forwards didn’t register a point in this game: Trent Frederic, Curtis Lazar, and Clattenburg. Both Leon Draisaitl and Connor McDavid had four-point nights, with the latter scoring the hat trick. Ryan Nugent-Hopkins’ return cannot be understated, as he picked up three assists. Adam Henrique and Matthew Savoie each had two points, the latter scoring the first multi-goal game of his NHL career.

On defence, only the top pairing picked up points. Evan Bouchard had three assists and was a +2, while Mattias Ekholm had two assists. Darnell Nurse and Brett Kulak were both held pointless, as were Ty Emberson and Alec Regula, with the two right-shot defencemen finishing as a -1.

Calvin Pickard finished with a sub-900 save percentage, but that’s only due to the goal with five seconds left in the game. His stops went largely unnoticed because of the score, but he faced 32 shots and saved 28 of them. Solid game for the Oilers’ backup netminder.

The homestand continues on Saturday, as the Oilers host the Winnipeg Jets in the nightcap of Hockey Night in Canada. That game has a start time of 8:00 PM MT.



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-hammer-seattle-kraken-recap-highlights-reaction
 
The Day After 28.0: Oilers score nine and feel fine after offensive breakout

The Edmonton Oilers needed that.

They really needed that.

About everything that could’ve gone their way Thursday night did in their 9-4 walloping of the Seattle Kraken, as Connor McDavid notched his 13th career hat trick, four players posted three or more points, and many a milestone was hit.

For McDavid, he’s faced some criticism all season about his shot volume, which has seen his shots on goal per hour rate and shot attempt per hour rates near the lowest of his entire career. Three goals, seven shots and eight shot attempts later…

“As I said before, I thought I passed a couple away the other night and ultimately cost us losing a 1-0 game,” said the Oilers captain. “Who knows if I score on one of those? So definitely thought about shooting a little more.”

While McDavid’s four-point night was undoubtedly big for someone the Oilers need at his best every night, there were more than a few other players who could feel really good about their game. That’s because for just the third time in the past 35 years, four Oilers had three or more points.

Leon Draisaitl had a goal and four points, as Ryan Nugent-Hopkins and Evan Bouchard each put up a trio of assists. Meanwhile, Matt Savoie scored twice — once shorthanded and another on a late power play — Adam Henrique and Mattias Ekholm had a pair of assists, Andrew Mangiapane had an assist as Vasily Podkolzin, Zach Hyman and Mattias Janmark all scored.

The offence didn’t just come in bursts, however, as the Oilers had a trio of goals in each period — something the franchise hadn’t done in a game since Oct. 21st, 1986 when they beat the Chicago Blackhawks 9-1.

“We haven’t really had that all year, so (it) feels good to get a couple as a group and hopefully guys are feeling good about themselves and can build on it,” said McDavid.

Savoie is one of the players who was well deserving of the offensive night. While the numbers — both in boxscores and his analytics — haven’t fully represented the contributions he’s made early on in his rookie year, Savoie’s confidence has grown.

“I think as the season’s progressed, I’ve just got more confident, more comfortable with the puck on my stick, and I think just in all situations,” he said. “So definitely feel good out there right now, and I’m just looking to build off that.”

For the Oilers, they’ll be looking to carry forth the momentum from not just Thursday’s game, but from their last six. They’ve gone 3-2-1 in those games dating back to their 2-1 overtime loss to the Tampa Bay Lightning, with these games feeling like some of their best of the season.

Head coach Kris Knoblauch, meanwhile, isn’t quite ready to say the team has broken out.

“We’re getting there. I don’t think this is quite our team yet,” he said. “I think we still have things to work on.

“I don’t think Seattle was at their best tonight. I know they had a long break and I think we took advantage of that, but I’m starting to see a lot more things from our team that I like. It all starts with our compete and attention to detail in the defensive zone, and if you don’t compete and if you don’t defend well, you can’t win regularly… And I see, especially at the end of the road trip when we’re in Tampa Bay and Florida, we were a lot more dialed into playing better defensive hockey and that’s what we’re going to need to do.”

Edmonton’s schedule rolls along Saturday when the Connor Hellebuyck-less Winnipeg Jets roll into town, before the team closes out their five-game homestand against the Buffalo Sabres Tuesday, and Detroit Red Wings Thursday.



Zach Laing is Oilersnation’s associate editor, senior columnist, 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].


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Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/the-d...e-feel-fine-offensive-breakout-seattle-kraken
 
Oilersnation Radio: Oilers demolish the Kraken for their first blowout win of the season

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’ demolition of the Seattle Kraken, line combos, some injury updates, line combos, and much more.

We kicked off the Friday episode of ONR with a delicious debate about NHL players participating in the Olympics after a cryptic message from Bill Daly basically opened the door for missing the tournament unless Italy gets its rink done. Whether you’re hearing about the rink being too small or that it wasn’t even ready in the first place, there’s some smoke around the idea that the NHL doesn’t want its players to participate and is using this as an out.

Shifting gears, the guys looked at last night’s 9-4 win over the Seattle Kraken and how badly everyone needed that win. From the players to the fans, having the boys crank out their first massive win of the year gave everyone a chance to exhale a little bit. From the big dogs (McDavid, Draisaitl, Nuge, and Hyman) cashing in 12 points to the way Matt Savoie could have had a hat trick himself, there were plenty of of positives to take away from one of the most fun games of the season.

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 well underway, the guys spent the bulk of the Friday episode moving through a range of topics, some related to the Oilers and others not, but that’s what happens when the team is playing as poorly as they have been.

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...demolish-seattle-kraken-for-first-blowout-win
 
Five Oilers who are elevating their play in recent games

After suffering a 9-1 loss earlier this season, the Edmonton Oilers finally got to enjoy the other side of a 9-something beatdown, defeating the Seattle Kraken 9-4 in their most recent outing.

They battled their way through a tough start to the season with lengthy road trips, and now, with some time to settle in at home and get in some practice time, it seems like the team is finally starting to click, with Evan Bouchard saying after the last game against the Kraken, “We’re all on the same page.”

That said, while the team is playing better, a few Oilers are starting to stand out individually, with their play trending upward in recent games, and we take a look at five of them below.

Vasily Podkolzin​


If I were to summarize Vasily Podkolzin’s play in one word in his native Russian, Google Translate helped me translate the word I had in mind —‘Твёрдый,’ which simply means ‘solid.’

The 24-year-old forechecks hard, hits, and blocks shots, and on the recent road trip, he started to show leadership qualities by saying he’d have his leaders’ backs no matter what, after a tussle with Peyton Krebs on Nov. 17. And now, a new pattern is emerging — he’s starting to score goals from tough angles.

And just like that Podkolzin extends the lead to 2-0 for the Oilers!

📹: Sportsnet | #LetsGoOilers pic.twitter.com/yY8w1AiKwF

— Oilersnation.com, Oily Since ‘07 (@OilersNation) December 5, 2025

Last game against the Kraken, Podkolzin and his centerman, Leon Draisaitl, pulled off a bit of a role reversal. This time, it was Draisaitl who rented out his office around the net to Podkolzin. He found the rugged winger near the goal line, made the pass, and Podkolzin didn’t dust it off, he let it rip and snuck one past Joey Daccord.

Moreover, just five games ago, the Moscow, Russia, native sniped another one from a near-impossible angle, barreling down on Florida Panthers netminder Sergei Bobrovsky and ripped one high over him, with his skills coach Ned Lukacevic noting that Podkolzin “saw a spot and took the opportunity, and maybe a year ago, he might not even have shot that puck.”

Podkolzin ends Bobrovsky’s night with this absolute SNIPE 🎯 pic.twitter.com/4EmJOJDXNV

— Spittin' Chiclets (@spittinchiclets) November 23, 2025

That said, Podkolzin is feeling it, and while he’s currently on a 32-point pace, I’d guess that with the confidence that has him feeling good to shoot from any angle, ‘Pods’ will see an uptick in points soon — with Santa likely gifting him even more goals this holiday season.

Zach Hyman​


Zach Hyman missed the first 19 games of the season, and while that hard work and effort seem built into his genetic makeup, his scoring is now on the rise.

Hyman scored his first goal of the season against the Kraken on Nov. 29, when Draisaitl’s pass redirected off Hyman’s skate on the power play and in. That tally seemed to give him some jump because after that play, the 33-year-old got on his horse, won a race, and found his captain, who buried a goal, earning Hyman an assist, finishing the night with two points.

In the rematch against the Kraken on Dec. 4, Hyman once again got his wheels moving, chasing down a loose puck, creating separation, and roofed a wicked backhand over Phillip Grubauer, who was in net in relief after the Oilers chased Joey Daccord following the fifth goal.

SHAQ HYMAN EXTENDS THE LEAD TO 6-2!

📹: Sportsnet | #LetsGoOilers pic.twitter.com/pzNx6a7I3b

— Oilersnation.com, Oily Since ‘07 (@OilersNation) December 5, 2025

On Hyman’s two most recent plays that led to goals — one being the assist to his captain and the other his roofed goal — the standout trait was his wheels were moving fast, and after nine games to shake off the rust, the former 50-goal man looks like he’s found that extra gear.

Alec Regula​


Alec Regula missed time after taking a heavy hit from Evander Kane in early October, and when he returned on Nov. 4, it seemed to take him a while to regain the momentum he had heading into the season. At first, he looked a step behind, and his plays and passes weren’t as sharp as they were in the preseason; however, over the last few games, his play has noticeably taken a step forward.

Now Alec Regula and Tye Kartye go at it 👊👊👊 pic.twitter.com/oM9u1wyAeo

— Sportsnet (@Sportsnet) November 29, 2025

He dropped the mitts with the Kraken’s Tye Kartye three games ago, and I feel his game has been sharper ever since. In the rematch against Seattle last game, a common theme I had scribbled all over my notes was, ‘Regula makes a nice pass.’ The D-man threaded crisp passes all night, a few coming out of his own zone to kickstart the Oilers’ rush, and he also landed two hits, including a big one on Berkley Catton.

Additionally, the advanced metrics, according to Natural Stat Trick, over the last three games show that Regula has helped push the pace for the Oilers at 5v5, posting the following:

• 60.97 xGF% (3rd on the team)
• 60.98 SF% (5th best on the team)
• 55.26 SCF% (5th on the team)
• 56.41 CF% (7th best on the team)

He’s skated primarily with Darnell Nurse over the last three games, and with Nurse not giving up a goal at 5v5 during that span, they’ve been a surprisingly steady pairing. That said, when Jake Walman returns to the lineup from injury, the coaching staff will have some decisions to make about their blue line. But if Regula can keep the momentum going, we could be looking at a new candidate to slap the “Nurse Whisperer” tag on.

Matt Savoie​


Matt Savoie has played steady hockey all season, and now it seems the points are starting to come for the Oilers winger, who’s second among the team’s forwards in PK minutes.

On the recent seven-game road trip, he picked up four points in seven games, and he buried two beauty goals last game against the Kraken. That said, earlier in that same game, he had a breakaway and chose not to get fancy, opting for a simple five-hole shot that didn’t go in.

Matt Savoie with the shorthanded goal!

📹: Sportsnet | #LetsGoOilers pic.twitter.com/Qtg8O9s2ts

— Oilersnation.com, Oily Since ‘07 (@OilersNation) December 5, 2025

On that note, he mentioned in the postgame interview that he spent the entire intermission thinking about missing his golden first-period chance to bury. However, credit goes to Stuart Skinner, as Savoie said the netminder gave him advice to try a backhand on the next attempt, and wouldn’t you know it, he seized the next opportunity, adjusting the next period with a slick forehand-to-backhand deke to score the Oilers’ second shorthanded goal of the season. Moreover, he scored another goal on the power play later in the game, becoming the third youngest player in franchise history to record a SHG and PPG in the same game, behind only Glenn Anderson and Paul Coffey.

Matt Savoie is the 3rd-youngest player with a PPG & SHG in a game in #LetsGoOilers history:

Glenn Anderson – 20-183
Paul Coffey – 21-225
Matt Savoie – 21-337
Mark Messier – 21-352
Wayne Gretzky – 22-028 pic.twitter.com/ETbBY8IAIf

— Sportsnet Stats (@SNstats) December 5, 2025

With the 21-year-old’s recent tallies — true goal-scorer-type finishes — I can’t help but wonder if we’re on the cusp of a major Savoie breakout. Nevertheless, he has a fantastic opportunity in front of him to play alongside Draisaitl on the second line, a spot he’ll likely hold for the rest of the homestand. He needs to keep that confidence rolling, keep filling the net, and leave the coaching staff with a real dilemma about taking him out of the top six when Jack Roslovic is set to return to the lineup.

Connor McDavid​


No one on this planet is really in a position to tell Connor McDavid what to do on the ice. But if there’s one thing fans at Rogers Place have yelled louder than at a Dave Chappelle show in Edmonton, it’s ‘shooooot!’ Against the Kraken last game, he didn’t disappoint.

The captain led the way with seven shots on net last game against the Kraken, firing from any angle. No matter how near-impossible the shot, he took it and, as a result, recorded his 13th career hat trick — with the third goal coming from so far out he could’ve extended his hand and grabbed a handful of popcorn from the person in row 2, seat 3, in section 105 at Rogers Place.

McDavid Hat Trick!

📹: Sportsnet | #LetsGoOilers pic.twitter.com/YAHdG6lZO2

— Oilersnation.com, Oily Since ‘07 (@OilersNation) December 5, 2025

This comes after he didn’t register a shot on net against the Minnesota Wild in a 1-0 loss. After scoring a hat trick against the Kraken, the former Rocket Richard winner explained, “I felt I passed a couple away the other night; it ultimately cost us, losing a 1-0 game.” He added, “I definitely thought about shooting a little more.” That said, it feels a little funny to say Connor McDavid’s play is trending upward, because he’s almost always playing at a ridiculous level much higher than his peers. But from last game’s sample, it seems he’s finally following through on his preseason plan to shoot more.

All in all, the Oilers as a whole seem to be on the rise. They’re playing better defensively, working as a unit, and with the best player on the planet remembering he can torch goaltenders at will, Oilers fans might just find a few extra wins tucked in their stockings this holiday season.


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Source: https://oilersnation.com/news/five-edmonton-oilers-elevating-play-recent-games
 
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