logo
2025 NHL Draft Lottery takeaways: Who goes No. 1 and 2, trades, the Rangers' pick and more

2025 NHL Draft Lottery takeaways: Who goes No. 1 and 2, trades, the Rangers' pick and more

New York Times06-05-2025

The conclusion of U18 worlds and the drawing of the NHL Draft Lottery means that draft season is officially upon us.
The first-round order is taking shape, the playoff field is shrinking, league finals are underway or around the corner across the CHL and USHL, the men's world championships are starting, the Memorial Cup will follow suit in Rimouski, Quebec, and before we know it we'll be in Buffalo for the NHL Scouting Combine and Los Angeles for a new-look decentralized 2025 NHL Draft.
After another lottery night, here's everything I'm thinking about and hearing.
I worried that the NHL's live, four-ball drawing of the 14 numbered balls, with their 1,001 possible combinations, all assigned to the teams according to their percentages, would create for a convoluted, messy broadcast if not done well. And while I don't think they did a great job setting it up and laying it out for viewers off the top of the show, the updating odds, displayed on screens behind Gary Bettman and company, was well executed. Watching teams get eliminated — by being scratched off the graphic — as they ran out of potential winning number combinations, and seeing the odds of long shots like the Islanders (the eventual winner, moving up from No. 10 to No. 1), Flyers and Penguins grow, made for good suspense. Once they added the winning possible numbers before the final draw to the graphic, that last pull made for a really tense moment of live television. I thought they pulled it off for a first try, and it's nice to see the NHL trying new things.
Advertisement
And how about both draws being won by teams with among the lowest odds, with Utah moving up to No. 4 in the second lottery?
Matthew Schaefer feels like a no-brainer for the GM-less Islanders to me. They took scoring winger Cole Eiserman with their first-rounder last year, traded for a 2023 first-round center in Calum Ritchie at the deadline and have arguably the thinnest prospect pool in the league on defense. Schaefer would be a huge boon for them.
He would have also been a huge boon for the team that's now set to pick second. The Sharks drafted defenseman Sam Dickinson with the 11th pick in last year's draft, but their pool is stronger up front than on the blue line. If Schaefer goes first, that next group includes a quartet of centers (Michael Misa, James Hagens, Anton Frondell and Caleb Desnoyers) and winger Porter Martone. They've obviously also got natural centers Macklin Celebrini and Will Smith. There are camps that believe all of Smith, Misa, Hagens and Frondell may be better suited as wingers than centers (I think everyone expects Desnoyers to stick at center), though, so you can move Smith to the wing with Celebrini (where he already has chemistry) and slot this year's pick in as the team's 2C of the future, or do the reverse. That's a good problem to have with three high-end forwards to build around. Misa's probably still the front-runner to go No. 2 but I wonder about Desnoyers, who feels like a perfect 2C prototype behind Celebrini.
Every year, when I do Q&As and mailbags around this time, I get asked just as much about potential trades as I do the actual players. If you've followed my work, you'll know that almost always, my answers are a letdown. It's hard to make trades on draft day, especially in the first round. Top picks almost never get moved. Trade-ups and trade-downs are almost always in small increments.
Advertisement
But this year does feel like it's more ripe for action for a couple of reasons. For starters, the belief among teams I've talked to is that it's going to be easier to make trades happen in a decentralized format where there aren't prying eyes and listening ears. The guys like doing their business over the phone.
But there's also a higher concentration of picks among a group of teams, which always makes managers more inclined to take risks, be spicy with their picks and, yes, package them.
Seven teams have multiple first-round picks this year: San Jose (2), Chicago (2), Nashville (3), Philadelphia (3), Columbus (2), Montreal (2) and Calgary (2). The Sharks, Blackhawks, Predators and Flyers also have the first four picks of the second round on top of that. The Flyers have seven picks in the first three rounds. The Blackhawks, Preds, Sharks and Canadiens have two second-rounders as well.
Watch out for the Blackhawks, Flyers and Habs in particular. Kyle Davidson has too much quantity in his pool and has already shown a willingness to package picks to move up. The Flyers have the most to play with if they want to move up and will be every team that's open to moving back's first call. And the Habs have taken a step out of full-on rebuild and could put their picks in play to try to get better.
The Rangers have a decision to make. The quick refresher is that they traded a protected top-13 2025 first-rounder to the Canucks in the J.T. Miller trade, and as part of the protections of that pick (which now belongs to the Penguins after the Canucks flipped it) the Rangers retained the right to hold onto it and send an unprotected 2026 first-rounder instead.
Now that the Rangers know they'll be picking 12th in this year's draft, they have to decide whether they're going to hold onto it or take the risk that comes with giving up an unprotected pick next year. Anecdotally, the consensus online seems to be that they should give up this year's selection, that next year's draft is much stronger, and that it's not worth the risk of giving up a pick that could become Gavin McKenna.
Advertisement
I'm not sure I agree on multiple fronts.
First, I'm not convinced, outside of what McKenna represents at the top of next year's draft, that it's actually much stronger, and I'd caution you against trusting anyone who is declaring definitively that it is more than a year out. Keaton Verhoeff and Ivar Stenberg look like star prospects behind McKenna, there's an impressive group of WHL D and Swedish forwards, there's belief that guys like Czech forward Adam Novotny and Canadian forward Tynan Lawrence could be the real deal as well, but it's also another weaker class for USA Hockey and Finland, and it's a long, long way away.
Second, I'm not convinced that the Rangers can't make the playoffs next year and turn that puck into a late teens pick. And I'd sooner bet on them finishing where they did (just outside the playoffs with lottery odds in the single digits) or making the playoffs as a wild-card team that lowers the pick into the late teens than I would on them completely bottoming out and finishing low enough in the league standings to have double digit odds at winning the lottery.
Third, there's value in a prospect who is a year closer to you when you've got a veteran roster built around 30-somethings like Miller, Artemi Panarin, Mika Zibanejad, Chris Kreider and two late-20s superstars in Adam Fox and Igor Shesterkin.
If you made the move for Miller, you made it because you want to continue to make the playoffs and push. If you're Chris Drury, I think you have to believe that your guys, under a new coach, are more likely to take a playoff spot away from, say, the Montreal Canadiens or Ottawa Senators than they are to finish last or second-last in the Eastern Conference next year. I'd make the pick, even if it feels a little bold and risky, and trust that I'll be picking later than 12th in 2026.
Nobody's stock is hotter coming out of U18 worlds than the hard-hitting, ultra-intense center.
'I think he has a chance of sneaking inside the top five,' texted one OHL coach after the tournament. 'I think (the top 10) was happening prior to this but this definitely locks it in,' texted an OHL general manager.
Advertisement
I think he's in play starting as early as Utah at No. 4 (he's their type), and certainly the Flyers at No. 6 and the Bruins at No. 7. There's nobody like Martin in this draft class and he's not going to last long on draft night.
The Kraken have made four first-round picks in their franchise's history. They've taken a forward — Matty Beniers (No. 2, 2021), Shane Wright (No. 4, 2022), Eduard Sale (No. 20, 2023) and Berkly Catton (No. 8, 2024) — with each of them. They've made 14 picks in the first two rounds of the draft. They've taken a defenseman — Ryker Evans (No. 35, 2021) and Lukas Dragicevic (No. 57, 2022) — with just two of them.
They now hold the eighth pick in this year's draft and I'm not sure the best player available won't be another forward, too. There has been a lot of talk about who the second- and third-best D in this class are, but I think Radim Mrtka and Kashawn Aitcheson have separated themselves from Jackson Smith. Mrtka and Aitcheson aren't for everyone, though, and taking them at No. 8 would still be considered a little early relative to some of the players who are likely to be available. The Kraken have backed themselves into a bit of a corner, with a deep pool up front and a clear hole to fill in their pool on the back end. Last year would have been the year to take a D. One went with each of the next four selections after they took Catton (Zayne Parekh ninth, Anton Silayev 10th, Sam Dickinson 11th, Zeev Buium 12th). I love Catton as a player and prospect and had him ranked ahead of two of those four D on my list at the time, but they're in a challenging spot now. I'd be interested in being a fly on the wall during their final scouting meetings, because you can make a convincing case for a forward like Jake O'Brien over Mrtka (who played in their backyard with the Thunderbirds this year and I actually think would be a great fit for them) or Aitcheson.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Stanley Cup Final live updates: Florida Panthers vs Edmonton Oilers, Game 2
Stanley Cup Final live updates: Florida Panthers vs Edmonton Oilers, Game 2

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Stanley Cup Final live updates: Florida Panthers vs Edmonton Oilers, Game 2

Will the Florida Panthers even up the series? Or will they fall behind 0-2 in the Stanley Cup Final before they get to home ice? After an overtime defeat in the series opener against the Edmonton Oilers, the Panthers know they have to respond on Friday night to keep serious hopes of repeating as champions alive. Advertisement It's a tall task. Will they get it done? Puck drop for Game 2 from Edmonton's Rogers Place is at 8 p.m. The game will be broadcast on TNT and truTV and is available via stream on Max. Follow along throughout the game for live updates, news, analysis and commentary. Panthers win! Series tied on Marchand's double OT goal The Panthers and Edmonton head to Sunrise for Monday's Game 3 tied in the Stanley Cup Final after Brad Marchand's goal at 8:05 of double overtime gave the Panthers a 5-4 win in one of the best Stanley Cup Final games — ever. In a repeat of Marchand's second period shorthanded goal that gave the Panthers a 4-3 lead, Anton Lundell picked up the puck high in the Panthers zone and Marchand took off behind the Edmonton defense. Lundell fed Marchand again. Marchand fought off the tie up attempt his stick and nudged it through Edmonton goalie Stuart Skinner's pads. Advertisement The Panthers and Oilers will have two days off before Game 3, Monday, in Sunrise at Amerant Bank Arena. The game's last three goals were scored by Marchand, 37; Edmonton's Corey Perry, 40; and Marchand. Three regulation periods & one sudden death period down Game 2 remains 4-4. Edmonton outshot the Panthers, 14-9, but the Panthers had the two best scoring chances, Sam Reinhart's breakaway and Brad Marchand on the doorstep (see below). Panthers' defenseman Seth Jones (32:00) and Aaron Ekblad (29:45) lead the defending Cup holders in Game 2 ice time. Connor McDavid's 31:41 and defenseman Evan Bouchard's 31:23 lead Edmonton in ice time. Leon Draisaitl, who scored Game 1's overtime winner, has played 29:06. More overtime scoring chances The Panthers had their leading regular season goal scorer each of the last two years, Sam Reinhart, on an overtime breakaway. Reinhart tried to go low stick side on Edmonton goalie Stuart Skinner and missed the net. Advertisement On an odd-man rush, Edmonton's Evander Kane tried a pull-and-drag to give himself an open look in the slot, but a spinning snow angel move by Gustav Forsling stripped Kane and started a counter rush. Off a rebound with Skinner on the edge of his crease, Panthers winger Evan Rodrigues from low on the left side, backhanded it on the net and it went behind Skinner and across the goalmouth. Marchand almost wins it As the Panthers started to resemble their Game 1 overtime form — a fatigued team without physical and mental acuity — off a turnover, Brad Marchand nearly won it 8:17 into overtime. Marchand took a feed while cutting to the net, Edmonton's Stuart Skinner did the splits for the first save, Marchand's second rap got under Skinner's pad and hit the inside of the left post. The Corey Perry Zombie gets the Panthers. Overtime. Win a defensive zone face-off. Win a defensive zone face-off, clear the puck, maybe take a shot at an open net, but outlast an exhausted Edmonton group that was on the ice for almost the last three minutes of the game. Advertisement The Panthers couldn't do it. Game 2 is going to overtime, 4-4. Up 4-3 in the last minutes, the Panthers kept losing defensive zone face-offs until the Panthers Aleksander Barkov actually got something of a tie against Leon Draisaitl. Niko Mikkola couldn't control the puck, Edmonton got it and Jake Walman's wrister was kicked out by Sergei Bobrovsky. The rebound went past Barkov and Seth Jones to 40-year-old Corey Perry, who swatted it home while Eeto Luostarinen fruitlessly tried to tie him up. Perry's goal, with only 17.8 seconds left, was the latest tying goal in Stanley Cup Finals history, breaking the record of Toronto's Tod Sloan, who scored with 31 seconds left in Game 5 of the 1951 Stanley Cup Final. That final ended 2:53 into overtime when Toronto's Bill Barilko scored on a diving slapshot, the image immortalized in one of hockey's all-time photos. Barilko died that offseason in a plane crash. Edmonton pulls goalie Stuart Skinner With the Panthers up 4-3, Edmonton pulled goalie Stuart Skinner during a McDavid-Draisaitl shift. After the Panthers forced an offside call with 1:31 to go, the Oilers used their timeout to give their six on the ice a rest. Advertisement From the left circle, McDavid zipped a pass over to Draisaitl in the right circle but Bobrovsky got over on his one-timer with a minute left. The Panthers later iced the puck with 30.5 seconds left. Panthers still lead at the first third period TV timeout, but... Two ways to look at the first 8:20 of the third period, which ended with the Panthers still leading 4-3. Good for the Panthers: no penalties after starting the period finishing a penalty kill, only three shots for Edmonton. Good for Edmonton: after an early push by the Panthers, the Panthers seemed to forget about taking even token shots on goal or trying to create offense. The Oilers had four scoring chances and the Panthers zero before Leon Draisaitl skated through half the Panthers roster on a solo rush. Advertisement This is what the third period looked like in Game 1 before the Oilers tied it. End of two periods: Panthers 4, Edmonton 3. For the second consecutive game — and the third straight Finals game over the last two years — the Panthers took a one-goal lead into the third period. Want to know which team's speed and hitting dictates the play? Look at the giveaways, which are 12-6 in favor of the Panthers after two periods. The Panthers aren't owning the circle as they did in Game 1's first two periods, with only a 52-48 percentage advantage. Going into the third period, as far as how much Edmonton's Power Pair have played, Connor McDavid has been out for 15:04 of the first 40 minutes and Leon Draisaitl has played 14:02. Expect to see them double shifted if the Panthers still lead by the 10-minute mark. Advertisement As for the defensemen the Panthers like on the ice against McDavid and Draisaitl, Aaron Ekblad has played 15:27 and Gustav Forsling has been on the ice for 15:06. The Panthers' ice time leader is Seth Jones, 17:48. Among the forwards, center Aleksander Barkov has played 14:09. Panthers back in the take the lead Even the pterodactyl reach of Panthers defenseman Niko Mikkola couldn't prevent him from drawn into a hooking penalty by Connor McDavid. Remember what Gretz said between periods about the Panthers staying out of the box? Sure enough, there was a goal and a 4-3 lead. But, the Panthers got that goal and that lead. Advertisement As Anton Lundell foiled another Edmonton zone entry on a fantastic penalty kill, Brad Marchand took off and Lundell saw him. Lundell nudged the puck ahead and Marchand scored on the breakaway at 12:09. Panthers 4, Edmonton 3. Only a couple of moments of brilliance from Skinner kept the Oilers close over the next four minutes. Kulikov almost struck again when his slapshot hit an Edmonton defenseman and turned into a skipping stone, forcing a spectacular adjustment by Skinner. Second period replay halfway through, Panthers tie it Though Panthers goalie Sergei Bobrovsky had to make two fantastic saves on Oilers defenseman Evan Bouchard, the second on a two-on-one with Connor McDavid, the Panthers began to take over the game on the forecheck, as they did in Game 1's second period. Advertisement That grinding produced the game's tying goal, at 8:23 of the second. From Sam Reinhart, who had a few chances in the slot? Nope. Carter Verhaeghe, who also got couple of good looks? Nah, Stuart Skinner rejected him, too. No, silly, the goal came from the stick of dfenseman Dmitri Kulikov, he of two previous career playoff goals. Barkov lifted Ekholm's stick to prevent him from playing the dump-in and, soon after, Kulikov sent a wrister through a screen (and with Tkachuk crowding Skinner's workspace) to tie the game. First period thoughts from the press box What a period. Five combined goals. Fifty combined shot attempts. Eleven penalties leading to seven power plays and some time at 4 on 4 mixed in there as well. Only 8:09 of the opening 20 minutes was played at full strength. Advertisement Each team dominated for stretches of the period, as was the case throughout Game 1. A few thoughts as we wait for Period 2... ▪ Connor McDavid is special. That goes without saying. But watching him in person and up close gives an even better appreciation for his ability to make world-class plays. ▪ There was high-flying action in the opening frame, but will either team settle in when (if?) the game is able to get into an extended stretch at five-on-five? ▪ How about some love for Nate Schmidt? The Panthers' third-pair defenseman has assists on four of Florida's first five goals of this series, including three primary assists. Advertisement ▪ The goalie numbers: Sergei Bobrovsky is 11 for 14, including 3 of 4 on high-danger shots and 5 of 6 against Edmonton's power play; Stuart Skinner is 9 for 11. End of the first period: The Oil 3, Cats 2 'Was that the best period of hockey you've ever seen live in your life?' former NHL forward Anson Carter asked on the TNT broadcast after the first period. 'Probably,' former Rangers goalie Henrik Lundqvist said. 'I'm speechless.' A first period with more action than some entire Stanley Cup Final's games — and some entire Final series during the Dead Puck Era — ended 3-2, Edmonton after the Panthers survived a two-man down shorthanded situtation. Only 8:09 of the first period was played five-on-five. Between periods, Wayne Gretzky said the Panthers 'have no chance' if they can't stay out of shorthanded or four-on-four situations. Bennett in his office, McDavid does his work, Oilers lead again Edmonton wanted goalie interference on Bennett during the Panthers' first goal in Game 1, and not only didn't get the call on the challenge, but got a delay of game and the Panthers scored on the power play. But, they got the goalie interference call 12:04 into Game 2, even though, this time, Ekholm clearly pushed Bennett into Skinner and neither referee had signalled a penalty before Skinner was down for a bit with a twisted leg. Advertisement On the power play, the Panthers seemed to get a break as one of the Oilers went to the bench to get a new stick. But, the brief four-on-four provided McDavid room for a breathtaking stickhandling show. McDavid zigzagged by Barkov, sent Ekblad into a stumbling flop then slipped a pass by Anton Lundell to Draisaitl in the low right circle. Edmonton, 3-2. Draisaitl saluted the brilliant play by letting McDavid go first in dapping up the Edmonton bench, something usually reserved for the goal scorer. What is this, the 1980s? Panthers tie the game Is it Wayne Gretzky being in the house for TNT? Because the goals are coming at the rate that the 1980s Oilers, who averaged 5.0 goals per game for five consecutive regular seasons, used to score and allow. Advertisement Panthers defenseman Nate Schmidt jumped on a soft clearing attempt by Edmonton's Kaspari Kapanen just inside the left point and passed to Eetu Luostarinen in the right circle. With Kapanen still scolding himself high in the zone, Luostarinen saw wide open defenseman Sean Jones breaking through the left circle. Jones fired into a gaping net at 11:37: 2-2. Edmonton takes the lead Everybody in the NHL knows that four-on-four is not even strength against Edmonton because when, say Edmonton's Darnell Nurse and the Panthers Matthew Tkachuk go off cross checking and slashing each other, the Oilers throw out Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl with more room to work. Advertisement McDavid's speed pushed the Panthers into retreat as he hit the Panthers blue line, giving defenseman Evan Bouchard room to shoot. Bouchard's wrister was blocked right back to him, but his second shot got past Sam Reinhart, Aleksander Barkov and Sergei Bobrovsky (screened by Reinhart and Barkov). Edmonton's second goal in 1:40 gave them the lead, 2-1, 9:19 into the game. Kane redeems himself, ties the game, 1-1 From the Edmonton blueline, defenseman Evan Bouchard quickly headmanned the puck to Viktor Arvidsson, who turned it to a flying Evander Kane. Kane, named after 1990s world heavyweight champion Evander Holyfield, punched the Panthers the face with a whistling left circle wrister over Panthers goalie Sergei Bobrovsky's glove and off the right post. Advertisement Tie game, 1-1, 7:39 into the first. Panthers win the first shift, take a 1-0 lead The Panthers altered first line produced a scoring chance, Sam Reinhart from between the circles, less than 10 seconds into the game. Edmonton's Evander Kane reached back to deflect Reinhart's shot over the net, but took an offensive zone penalty 37 seconds into the game when he high sticked Carter Verhaeghe while finishing a check. Kane helped establish Edmonton's physical play in Game 1. On the Panthers power play, Sam Bennett mishit a one-timer off a pass from Nate Schmidt, but got enough for it to get by goalie Stuart Skinner 2:07 into the game. An infuriated Oilers bench wanted a penalty on Bennett, who, while turning to get into position for Schmidt's pass, skated Edmonton defenseman Mattias Ekholm's dropped stick away from him. Advertisement Panthers 1, Edmonton 0, as Bennett's 13th goal of this year's playoffs gave him an NHL single-playoff record 12 on the road and ended an Oilers run of scoring first in nine consecutive games. Moving people pieces For Game 2, Panthers coach Paul Maurice moved Carter Verhaeghe to left wing with center Aleksander Barkov and right wing Sam Reinhart and Evan Rodrigues down to the second line with Sam Bennett and Matthew Tkachuk. This puts three of the top four regular season scorers on the first line and adds even more bang and jam to Bennett's line, where Tkachuk's been laboring akin to a wounded bull throughout the playoffs. Maurice did this in the second period of Eastern Conference Final Game 5, when the Panthers trailed Carolina 2-0. The Panthers stormed back to clinch the series with a 5-3 win, Verhaeghe getting the game winner off a dazzling Barkov stickhandle-and-dish play. Getting back on the cycle A chart by NHL Network from stats by Sportlogiq said the Panthers ground out an 11-4 advantage in scoring chances off the offensive zone cycle in Game 1, 6-3 in slot shots and 5-2 in forechecking chances. That begat the Panthers first goal, Carter Verhaeghe's shot bouncing in off Sam Bennett as the center sprawled in the crease, as well as solid control of the second period and first minutes of overtime. Series schedule ▪ Game 1 — Oilers 4, Panthers 3 (overtime): The Panthers had a two-goal lead early in the second period but couldn't hold on as Edmonton tied the game early in the third and won it on a Leon Draisaitl power-play goal with 31 seconds left in overtime. Advertisement ▪ Game 2: Tonight ▪ Game 3: Monday, June 9, 8 p.m., TNT, truTV, Max, Sunrise's Amerant Bank Arena ▪ Game 4: Thursday, June 12, 8 p.m., TNT, truTV, Max, Sunrise's Amerant Bank Arena ▪ Game 5 (if necessary): Saturday, June 14, 8 p.m., TNT, truTV, Max, Edmonton's Rogers Place ▪ Game 6 (if necessary): Tuesday, June 17, 8 p.m., TNT, truTV, Max, Sunrise's Amerant Bank Arena ▪ Game 7 (if necessary): Friday, June 20, 8 p.m., TNT, truTV, Max, Edmonton's Rogers Place Pregame reading Need to catch up ahead of Game 2? Here are the highlights of the Miami Herald's coverage over the past few days. ▪ With margin for error thin in Cup Final, Panthers need to regroup after Game 1 overtime loss Advertisement ▪ With two goals in Game 1 of Stanley Cup Final, Sam Bennett makes Panthers history ▪ Maurice's message to Nosek after game-deciding penalty in Florida's Game 1 Cup Final loss ▪ Will Panthers make lineup changes for Game 2 of Stanley Cup Final? ▪ Joining the Florida Panthers 'revitalized' Seth Jones. The next goal: Win a Stanley Cup

Oilers' Leon Draisaitl Issues Warning to Panthers Before Stanley Cup Final
Oilers' Leon Draisaitl Issues Warning to Panthers Before Stanley Cup Final

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Oilers' Leon Draisaitl Issues Warning to Panthers Before Stanley Cup Final

Oilers' Leon Draisaitl Issues Warning to Panthers Before Stanley Cup Final originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The Edmonton Oilers are back in the Stanley Cup Final for the second straight year after falling to the Florida Panthers in a seven-game series last June. Advertisement The rematch begins Wednesday at Rogers Place, with Edmonton hosting the first two games after not having home-ice advantage in last year's finals. In the 2024 playoffs, Florida let a 3-0 series lead slip away before closing the finals out in Game 7. Edmonton, however, enters this year's series with strong goaltending from Stuart Skinner and arguably the most talented and motivated core in hockey. For Leon Draisaitl, there's no mystery about the opponent they will face during the next few days. The Oilers forward said after Sunday's practice that he's been keeping a close eye on Florida's run, sending the Panthers a warning before their rematch. Advertisement "Yeah, I like watching hockey at home," Draisaitl said. "So obviously I've been paying attention to their series, and you know, the way they play, it's not like anything new to us." The Oilers lost both regular-season meetings against Florida this season but enter the finals with momentum, having eliminated Dallas in five games and putting together a 12-2 record in their last 14 outings. Edmonton Oilers center Leon Draisaitl warms up before a game against the Florida Belski-USA TODAY Sports Draisaitl acknowledged that the Panthers' style won't catch them off guard this time. "They look to, you know, be in your face," Draisaitl said. "And, yeah, I mean again, nothing that we haven't faced already or nothing that we're not aware of." Advertisement The forward closed his remarks by hinting at unfinished business. "We know what they're about," Draisaitl said. "It's nice to get a shot at getting some revenge, but we're a long ways from that." Game 1 is Wednesday at 8 p.m. ET. It will air on TNT. Related: Oilers Get Definitive Injury Update on Top-Six Forward Before Stanley Cup Final Related: Connor McDavid Sends Clear Warning to Panthers Before Stanley Cup Final This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 2, 2025, where it first appeared.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store