
Stuart Skinner will start for Edmonton Oilers in elimination game against Florida Panthers
Article content
It was always going to be Stu Skinner for Game 6 despite all the subterfuge from Oiler coach Kris Knoblauch, who is usually more firm and forthright.
Article content
All this talk Monday from Knoblauch, saying he was taking input from a long list, including his players, everybody offering up an opinion, short of owner Daryl Katz, was, frankly, idle chatter.
Article content
Article content
Even though Calvin Pickard has been a warm and fuzzy playoff story with his seven wins, winning six straight at one point until Tomas Hertl fell on his leg in the Vegas second-round series, he is still the backup. Skinner got the Oilers to Game 7 last June, losing 2-1 to Sergei Bobrovsky.
Article content
Article content
He got the hook in Game 4 here, but only because the Oilers were awful in the first 20 minutes, and Knoblauch wanted to wake up his team, so he tapped Pickard on the shoulder, and he was outstanding for 51 minutes in the Oilers' rally and OT win.
Article content
But Pickard lost Game 5 at Rogers Place in one of the Oilers' worst playoff games of this Cup run, when they once again fell behind early to the Panthers and chased the game and lost 5-2. Pickard was beaten four times on 18 shots. So, again, they were always returning to Skinner in the elimination game because he's their guy.
Article content
'He's played in a lot of high-pressure games and played well,' said Knoblauch. 'You look at the amount of elimination games he's been in. There was six last year and in every single game he was solid or put in spectacular performances.'
Article content
So, it's Stu vs Bob with the Stanley Cup in the house here.
Article content
'Definitely feels good and I have the confidence of my teammates,' said a calm, composed and often self-deprecating Skinner, who refreshingly always talks on Oiler game mornings, unlike so many goalies.
Article content
'We went to Game 7 of the Stanley Cup finals last year, and Stu was amazing. There's just a trust factor there; we have full belief in him. We know that he can get the job done for us and we're looking forward to getting back home (for a Game 7),' said Draisaitl, who finished the big rally to tie the series 2-2 when Pickard took over.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Winnipeg Free Press
13 minutes ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Blues sign forward Milan Lucic to professional tryout after year away from NHL
ST LOUIS – The St. Louis Blues have signed forward Milan Lucic to a professional tryout, the club announced Tuesday. Lucic last played in the NHL during the 2023-24 season with the Boston Bruins, the team with which he spent the first eight seasons of his 17-year career. He had two assists in four games. The 37-year-old took an indefinite leave of absence from the team in Nov. 2023 and later entered the NHL/NHLPA Player Assistance Program. Lucic has since completed the program and been reinstated by the NHL. The Vancouver native has 586 points (233 goals, 353 assists) in 1,177 career regular-season games, including time with the Los Angeles Kings, Edmonton Oilers and Calgary Flames. Thursdays Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter. The six-foot-three, 236-pound Lucic also has 77 points (29 goals, 48 assists) in 136 career playoff games, having also won a Stanley Cup with Boston in 2011. He was a second-round pick (50th overall) in the 2006 NHL draft by the Bruins. This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 19, 2025.


Edmonton Journal
12 hours ago
- Edmonton Journal
Edmonton Oilers in trade talks for Boston Bruins 1st round winger? Hmm
Article content This in from hockey writer and analyst Dominic Tiano of a rumour that the Boston Bruins and Edmonton may be cooking up a deal involving Boston moving former first round draft pick winger Fabian Lysell to the Oilers. Article content Said Court Lalonde of the Bruins Diehards podcast: 'When the Boston Bruins used their first round pick in the 2021 NHL draft to select Fabian Lysel, fans saw a glimpse of the type of player the franchise rarely has a chance to draft. A pure offensive talent with blazing speed, elite hands, and top six potential. Fast forward to today and instead of talking about him becoming a fixture in the Bruins lineup, the conversation has shifted. Rumors are swirling the Bruins may be dangling Lysel in a trade with the Edmonton Oilers … Dominic Tiano suggested in my Discord (digital chat) that the Bruins and the Oilers have been in conversations.' Article content Article content 1. Tiano has the reputation in Boston of being a good source of news on Bruins prospects. I can't speak conclusively to Tiano's credibility, but he's well regarded in Boston and this rumour makes sense from the Boston perspective, though maybe not so much from the Edmonton perspective. Article content 2. It makes sense that the Bruins would be thinking of trading off Lysell, even as he was their first round pick in 2011, 21st overall. Boston grabbed him one pick before the Oilers took Xavier Bourgault, who was traded away by the Oilers last summer after two unimpressive years in the AHL. Lysell has been a much more successful AHLer than Bourgault. He's known for his speed and skill passing. But he's failed to make the Bruins after three AHL years and his point production in the AHL trended down sharply last season. He's in the final year of his Entry Level Contract. Article content Article content 3. This past March, Boston coach Joe Sacco said of him: 'The reports from Providence are all positive as far as his game down there. Not just offensively but his 200-foot game, his play away from the puck, his ability to stay on pucks, the things that we need to see from some of the young players. It's good that he's getting an opportunity. At some point we'll see him in the line-up here…' Article content 4. It's not a good signal if a prospect takes a step back as a player in the AHL. This doesn't mean Lysell can't become a competent NHL, or even a Top 6 option for some team. But those Top 6 possibilities aren't screaming out from his statistical drop this past year. He's also a smaller forward and the Oilers are already well stocked with that kind of player in newcomers Ike Howard, Matt Savoie and veteran Andrew Mangiapane. Article content 5. The Bruins Diehards postcast mentioned Savoie and winger Vasily Podkolzin as possibilities in a Lysell trade, but it's hard to imagine either player makes sense from an Oilers perspective. Savoie is a year younger than Lysell, a higher draft pick, and had a better year in his first AHL season than Lysell did in his thrid AHL season. The one year they played in the same league, 2021-22 in the Western Hockey League, the younger Savoie had 90 points in 65 games, Lysell 62 points in 53 games. Savoie has two more years of being waiver ineligible, and two more years on his lower ELC salary, Lysell just one year.


Edmonton Journal
16 hours ago
- Edmonton Journal
Oilers notebook: Keith Acton fondly recalls 'resilient' Mark Kirton who died after fight with ALS
Former Edmonton Oilers Stanley Cup winner and associate coach Keith Acton fondly remembers his friend and ex-NHL forward Mark Kirton, who fought the bravest of fights with ALS before dying Sunday in Ontario. Article content 'It's so sad…he really dedicated himself in every way to generate resources to fight this for others, you know, coming down the pipe, making people aware (ALS),' said Acton, who played three years of OHL junior hockey in Peterborough with Kirton, who was diagnosed with the awful disease in 2018 and died at 67. Article content Article content 'He gave a message on video for (former NHL goalie and TV broadcaster) Greg Millen's funeral (April). Mark was always thinking of others. He was a good player, a good person and so resilient,' said Acton, who was successfully treated for testicular cancer when a Maple Leafs' assistant coach to Pat Quinn. Article content Article content No disrespect to Kirton's 266 NHL game career after being a second-round Toronto draft pick in 1978—it's not easy making the best league in the world—but he got more interest for his ALS battle and raising money to draw awareness to the insidious disease. He founded ALS Action Canada with PALS (Patients with ALS), a patient-led alternative to find a cure in 2020. Article content Article content Article content Five years is usually the high bar with people with ALS and Kirton lived seven. In December, 2023, after Kirton spearheaded the effort, the seven Canadian teams got together to help raise funds and reached $1 million. Article content Article content 'He was a dedicated hockey player who loved the game but his dedication to this (ALS) was a whole other level,' said Acton, who won a Cup ring here in 1988, and later was on Dallas Eakins' staff, along with owning a Boston Pizza franchise for about 20 years in Stouffville, Ont. and currently on city council there. Article content Kirton and Acton played three years together in Peterborough, the first season for Roger Neilson, who later would coach the Leafs and Canucks. Acton would go on to play 1,023 NHL games, and Kirton had stops with Toronto, Detroit and Vancouver, becoming an NHL role player, lessons learned from Neilson. Article content 'Mark was strong for his size and he did the basics…he was a Roger (Neilson) kind of player, disciplined and dedicated the defensive side of the game. Good on face-offs, a good penalty-killer and he could score. He wasn't flash and dash but he was a very serviceable player. I'm sure Roger was instrumental in Mark being drafted to the Leafs because, and deservedly so, Roger held Mark in high regard,' said Acton.