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Extent of Zach Hyman's injury looms large for Edmonton Oilers

Extent of Zach Hyman's injury looms large for Edmonton Oilers

Ottawa Citizen28-05-2025

Edmonton Oilers winger Zach Hyman, No. 1 on the playoff hit parade with his series of loud and proud wallops, left a rockin' Game 4 Tuesday after a mild-looking, but sour-note hit by Dallas Stars' forward Mason Marchment.
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Now, one win from another trip to the Stanley Cup Final, it could be bad for Hyman, who only played five shifts and 3:11 of the Oilers 4-1 win at Rogers Place.
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When Oilers head coach Kris Knoblauch meets the media at 9 this morning, before the team flies to Dallas for Game 5, he may not divulge what body part Hyman damaged. It is playoff secrecy, after all, but he may say how severe the injury is.
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Day-to-day, or out indefinitely.
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While his teammates survived without their top right-winger in Game 4 for the last 50 minutes Tuesday, it's a body-blow injury for Hyman. He had two goals in Game 3 Sunday, including a back-breaker breakaway goal on Stars' Jake Oettinger, and he has 115 hits through his 15 playoff games. The Hyman mishap follows on the heels of another to third-line right winger Connor Brown, who didn't play Game 4 and may have a concussion after he was steam-rolled by Alex Petrovic in Game 3.
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The Oilers aren't losing games, but they are losing bodies, up 3-1 on the Stars.
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Hyman and Marchment came together in the neutral zone halfway through the opening period. Hyman, who is 15 hits behind Blake Coleman's all-time best 126 (Tampa Bay, 2020) in a playoff season, immediately dropped his stick after the drive-by. He skated to the bench and hustled down the tunnel, under the stands.
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TV cameras seemed to show Hyman favouring his right arm. It looked like it could be a shoulder or maybe a wrist.
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Certainly Hyman not returning in game after being hurt was a red-flag for a guy who has big pain threshold. Remember he took a deflected Evan Bouchard slap shot in the face in December and came back against Florida wearing a full visor after his mangled nose was reset. So while Hyman was outside the Oilers dressing room post-game to congratulate his teammates after the nail-biter, Hyman was hiding his pain.
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Knoblauch moved his forward chess pieces around the board expertly for the last two and a half periods, with players farther down the lineup like Kasperi Kapanen and Viktor Arvidsson, in for Brown, stepping up.

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