
Oilers' killer instinct buries Dallas, books spot in Stanley Cup Final
The Edmonton Oilers turned their killer instinct loose on the Dallas Stars and that was the end of it.
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There was no escape.
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There almost never is when the Oilers smell blood in the water.
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In closing the coffin lid on Dallas Thursday with a 6-3 victory that captured a second-straight trip to the Stanley Cup Final, the Oilers improved to 9-1 in the last four years when they have a chance to put an opponent out of its misery.
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The only team to survive an elimination game against Edmonton was the Florida Panthers in Game 7 last year, a loss the Oilers are now in a position to avenge in the first Cup Final rematch since 2009.
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'It's amazing,' said Leon Draisaitl. 'We put in a lot of work over the year and a lot of guys stepped up at different times. We just found our game, we found our pieces in the right spot. We're starting to find our stride.'
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Brace yourselves for Oilers-Panthers II. The Stanley Cup Final opens Wednesday in Edmonton.
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'We're going up against a great team, the Stanley Cup champs from last year,' said Oiler captain Connor McDavid. 'It's their third finals in a row. There's not much you can say about them; they're great.
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'We'll have our hands full, but we're a good team, we're a special team. We feel good about our game.'
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The Oilers are a machine right now, improving to 12-2 in the last 14 games after overcoming the 0-2 deficit to beat Los Angeles in six and taking Vegas and Dallas down in five games each.
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And Game 5 against the Stars was a master class in taking life away from your opponent.
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They were up 2-0 on goals from Corey Perry and Mattias Janmark and chased Dallas goalie Jake Oettinger from the game after just two shots. One minute after that, Jeff Skinner made it 3-0 on backup goalie Casey DeSmith.
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It was such a catastrophic start to a big game by Dallas that the Toronto Maple Leafs and Carolina Hurricanes wanted royalty payments.
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And every time the Stars got it in their heads that they might be coming back, Edmonton delivered another fatal gut punch.
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This was as complete a series as any coaching staff could have asked for. The Oilers outscored Dallas 19-5 in the last four games and held the Stars to four shots in the third periods of Games 3, 4 and 5.
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CTV News
4 hours ago
- CTV News
Marchand says he's going to savor this trip to Cup final, knowing the chance isn't guaranteed again
Florida Panthers center Brad Marchand (63) drives against Carolina Hurricanes defenseman Alexander Nikishin (21) and goaltender Frederik Andersen (31) during the first Period in Game 5 of the NHL hockey Stanley Cup Eastern Conference finals Wednesday, May 28, 2025, in Raleigh, N.C. (AP Photo/Chris Seward) FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — Brad Marchand won the Stanley Cup with the Boston Bruins when he was 23. He and the Bruins played for it again when he was 25 and 31. He wondered if he would ever return to the title round. At 37 — and with the Florida Panthers — he's gotten there. And this time, Marchand is making sure he savors the chance. Over 1,274 games in his career, including playoffs, there are some memories that escape Marchand now. There are some moments that he acknowledges taking for granted, moments where he didn't use an extra second or two to appreciate being part of. That won't happen now, he insists, since Marchand knows he's much closer to the end of his career than the beginning. 'It's more like enjoying each day like, having fun when you come to the rink,' Marchand said. 'It can be stressful when you start overthinking things, start looking ahead or the pressure sometimes you put on yourself. This time around, I'm coming to the rink every day and just having fun and trying to live in the moment. You know, not taking anything too seriously.' Except the hockey, that is. Marchand is incredibly serious about the task at hand — which resumes Wednesday night when Marchand and the Panthers open the Stanley Cup Final at Edmonton. It's a rematch of last season's Panthers-Oilers series, one that Florida won in seven games. It wasn't difficult to envision a rematch when that series ended. But there's probably nobody on the planet who would have thought the rematch would include the former Boston captain playing for Florida. 'This is special,' Marchand said. 'You don't get a lot of opportunities to be part of something like this.' The Panthers are 8-2 in the playoffs when Marchand gets a point, 4-3 when he doesn't. They're 9-1 when he logs at least 15 1/2 minutes of ice time in the playoffs, 3-4 when he doesn't. It's clear: At his age, he still impacts winning with his hands and his voice. 'Guys that are vocal and intense sometimes will get up and down your bench screaming at your bench, right? They just get so wired in the game and he never does that. It's always positive,' Panthers coach Paul Maurice said. 'It's always, 'Stay in there, hang in there.' ... It's bordering on legendary status at this point. He's pumping their tires and he's just, every day, excited. It's his personality.' There is a very clear silly side as well. Marchand made a trip to Dairy Queen on an off day with teammates essentially become a three-day story by saying he had one of their desserts between periods of a game against Carolina. (He didn't, the snack was honey, not a Blizzard.) He has been chirping teammates from the day he arrived in Florida. He embraces how teammates shoot the toy rats — a Panthers tradition that goes back to 1996 — at him after games, even calling it a family reunion once in a subtle nod to his 'rat' nickname. He keeps it light, until it's time not to. If there's a scrum on the ice, he'll be involved. If a teammate needs backup, he'll be there. A chance at the Cup might not come again, and Marchand — who came to Florida at the trade deadline in a stunner of a move — is vowing that this opportunity won't be wasted. 'I may never get back this late in playoffs ever again in my career,' Marchand said. 'To be one of the last teams standing and being part of a great group of guys, these are memories that I want to remember and enjoy. I don't remember some of the series that I played and I know that there's moments that I missed out on or didn't really appreciate because I was worried about other things or stressing about other things. I'm not going to do that to myself this time around.' Tim Reynolds, The Associated Press


National Post
4 hours ago
- National Post
A look at Brad Treliving's work two years into his tenure as Maple Leafs GM
Article content Happy anniversary, Brad Treliving. Article content In the two years since the Maple Leafs hired Treliving to be the 18th general manager in franchise history, the 55-year-old has set the team on a new course, one that took greater shape when head coach Craig Berube was brought on board last spring. Article content In a perfect Treliving world, the Leafs will be a team that evolves into one of the top defensively responsible outfits in the National Hockey League, to the point that it becomes an annual Stanley Cup contender. In the wake of another frustrating exit from the playoffs, this time culminating in a Game 7 loss to the Florida Panthers in the second round, the Leafs aren't there yet. Article content 'We fell short of where we wanted to be, and we fell short of where I thought we could be,' Treliving said on Thursday at his end-of-season availability. 'There was a style of play I felt we needed to get to (in hiring Berube). It's a style of play that I feel gives you the best chance to have success. We're seeing it. Article content 'You see it prevalent in our division. It's a direct style, it's a style that you have to be a heavy, forechecking team.' Article content The loss to Florida aside, the Leafs have taken strides in Treliving's two years in the GM chair. Article content Let's take a look at the past 24 months: Article content Of the trades that Treliving has made, including a couple of draft deals that included only picks, one stands out above the rest. Article content We take you back to last June, when Treliving sent minor-league forward Max Ellis (who played this past season in Finland) and a seventh-round choice in 2026 to the Dallas Stars for the rights to free agent defenceman Chris Tanev. Article content Treliving has earned a reputation as a GM whose curiosity has him checking in on just about every player who may be available. Yet his pursuit of Tanev was unwavering. Treliving coveted a reunion with Tanev after working with him with the Calgary Flames. And after he was unable to trade for Tanev at the 2024 trade deadline, Treliving made it work a few months later. Article content Article content Within days, Tanev put his signature on a six-year contract with an average annual value of $4.5 million and the Leafs officially had their defensive linchpin. Article content Tanev quickly established himself as being representative of just about everything Treliving wants in his defencemen. When Tanev isn't blocking shots, he's sharp in the D zone and rarely gets caught out of position. Moving the puck is done with ease. Article content Tanev will turn 36 in December, but there wasn't one instance in his first season with the Leafs where his age was a detriment. Article content Treliving gave an indication of the longer, bigger defencemen he envisioned as being the poster boys of the Leafs blue line when he acquired Ilya Lyubushkin and Joel Edmundson at the '24 deadline. Both moved on in free agency last summer, but Treliving had laid the groundwork for his vision. Article content included saying goodbye to 2017 first-round pick Timothy Liljegren. Failure to adjust to the physical nature now required by Leafs D-men led Liljegren to being traded to the San Jose Sharks last October. A couple of draft picks and depth defenceman Matt Benning, who spent the rest of the season with the Toronto Marlies, were fetched by Treliving in the trade.


Toronto Sun
4 hours ago
- Toronto Sun
A look at Brad Treliving's work two years into his tenure as Maple Leafs GM
Get the latest from Terry Koshan straight to your inbox Toronto Maple Leafs GM Brad Treliving addresses media at Etobicoke's Ford Performance Centre in Toronto on Thursday May 29, 2025. Photo by Ernest Doroszuk / Toronto Sun Happy anniversary, Brad Treliving. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account In the two years since the Maple Leafs hired Treliving to be the 18th general manager in franchise history, the 55-year-old has set the team on a new course, one that took greater shape when head coach Craig Berube was brought on board last spring. In a perfect Treliving world, the Leafs will be a team that evolves into one of the top defensively responsible outfits in the National Hockey League, to the point that it becomes an annual Stanley Cup contender. In the wake of another frustrating exit from the playoffs, this time culminating in a Game 7 loss to the Florida Panthers in the second round, the Leafs aren't there yet. 'We fell short of where we wanted to be, and we fell short of where I thought we could be,' Treliving said on Thursday at his end-of-season availability. 'There was a style of play I felt we needed to get to (in hiring Berube). It's a style of play that I feel gives you the best chance to have success. We're seeing it. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. 'You see it prevalent in our division. It's a direct style, it's a style that you have to be a heavy, forechecking team.' The loss to Florida aside, the Leafs have taken strides in Treliving's two years in the GM chair. Let's take a look at the past 24 months: THE TRADES Of the trades that Treliving has made, including a couple of draft deals that included only picks, one stands out above the rest. We take you back to last June, when Treliving sent minor-league forward Max Ellis (who played this past season in Finland) and a seventh-round choice in 2026 to the Dallas Stars for the rights to free agent defenceman Chris Tanev. Treliving has earned a reputation as a GM whose curiosity has him checking in on just about every player who may be available. Yet his pursuit of Tanev was unwavering. Treliving coveted a reunion with Tanev after working with him with the Calgary Flames. And after he was unable to trade for Tanev at the 2024 trade deadline, Treliving made it work a few months later. Your noon-hour look at what's happening in Toronto and beyond. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. Please try again This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Within days, Tanev put his signature on a six-year contract with an average annual value of $4.5 million and the Leafs officially had their defensive linchpin. Tanev quickly established himself as being representative of just about everything Treliving wants in his defencemen. When Tanev isn't blocking shots, he's sharp in the D zone and rarely gets caught out of position. Moving the puck is done with ease. Tanev will turn 36 in December, but there wasn't one instance in his first season with the Leafs where his age was a detriment. Treliving gave an indication of the longer, bigger defencemen he envisioned as being the poster boys of the Leafs blue line when he acquired Ilya Lyubushkin and Joel Edmundson at the '24 deadline. Both moved on in free agency last summer, but Treliving had laid the groundwork for his vision. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. included saying goodbye to 2017 first-round pick Timothy Liljegren. Failure to adjust to the physical nature now required by Leafs D-men led Liljegren to being traded to the San Jose Sharks last October. A couple of draft picks and depth defenceman Matt Benning, who spent the rest of the season with the Toronto Marlies, were fetched by Treliving in the trade. At the deadline this past March, Treliving continued the theme in acquiring Brandon Carlo from the Boston Bruins. Treliving on Thursday referred to centre depth and right-shot defencemen as being 'the spine' of a winning team, and with Tanev and Carlo, the Leafs have a couple of integral pieces on the back end. Considering the package that Treliving sent to the Bruins, Carlo has little choice but to go up a notch next season. We can agree that centre Fraser Minten has a bright future in the NHL, and he's bound to become a thorn in the Leafs' side in future Atlantic Division clashes. And a conditional first-round pick (top-five protected) in the 2026 draft puts more pressure on the shoulders of Carlo, who has two years remaining, to excel. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Of the trades that Treliving has made involving the acquisition of forwards, the one that takes precedence is the most recent, getting Scott Laughton from the Philadelphia Flyers in a package that included prospect Nikita Grebenkin and a conditional first-round pick in 2027 (top-10 protected). Though the Leafs also received a 2025 fourth-rounder and a 2027 sixth-rounder, it was a steep price to pay for Laughton, who didn't make the kind of impact the Leafs desired. The Flyers retained 50% of Laughton's salary, so he's going to cost the Leafs just $1.5 million in 2025-26 before his contract ends. He has to find improvement in his overall game next season. THE SIGNINGS Whether he would acknowledge it in a public forum, every GM has signed players to contracts that he comes to regret. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. A month after he was hired, Treliving retained centre David Kampf with a four-year contract and an AAV of $2.4 million. It was a mistake, certainly a lot of money for a fourth-line centre, even with a rise in the salary cap. Before two years expired, Kampf was a healthy scratch in the 2025 playoffs. There has been speculation that he might be bought out. If so, the Leafs will manage to find a way without him. Of the four players signed on July 1 two years ago, winger Ryan Reaves and defenceman John Klingberg were the biggest and neither panned out. The latter played in just 14 games before a hip injury ended his season. Reaves got three years with an AAV of $1.35 million. He played in three games after January this past season and with one year left, he probably has played in his last game with the Leafs. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Forwards Tyler Bertuzzi and Max Domi were signed a day later. Bertuzzi mostly was a disappointment and the Leafs had little inclination to re-sign him before he landed in Chicago. Domi? Well, we have another three years to learn if he can become a bigger factor. He got a four-year deal with a $3.75-million AAV last summer after recording 47 points in 80 games in 2023-24 on a one-year pact. This past season was not a good one for Domi, as he finished with 33 points in 74 games. In the summer of 2023, Treliving's biggest signing splash came toward the end of August when Auston Matthews signed a four-year extension with an AAV of $13.25 million. That made Matthews the highest-paid NHL player for 2024-25, though he will fall to second next season when the extension of Edmonton's Leon Draisaitl, with an AAV of $14 million, kicks in. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Playoff-wise, when it matters most, the Leafs are waiting on their return. Named captain last August, Matthews has three years remaining. Less than five months after Matthews signed an extension, Treliving locked up another core piece when William Nylander signed early in January 2024 for eight years and an AAV of $11.5 million. It's a good contract and one that will be more team-friendly as the cap continues to rise. Nylander is coming off a career-high 45 goals. He's capable of 50. With July 1 last year came the additions of goalie Anthony Stolarz and defenceman Oliver Ekman-Larsson. Little more needs to be said about what Stolarz did in the first year of his two-year deal. He will be the No. 1 goalie going into camp. Ekman-Larsson proved to be a steady veteran presence on the blue line. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Goalie Joseph Woll signed a three-year extension on July 1. In total, the Leafs will be paying their goalies, both better than capable, $6.1 million in 2025-26. That's good management. Forwards Steven Lorentz and Max Pacioretty each made an impact after attending camp on a professional tryout, though Pacioretty couldn't stay healthy. Lorentz is bound for free agency, though it would be prudent for the Leafs to re-sign him. Treliving during the season locked up defenceman Jake McCabe (five years, $4.513 million AAV), a year after retaining D-man Simon Benoit (three years, $1.35 million AAV). We wouldn't argue with either contract. THE HIRINGS Upon firing Sheldon Keefe just more than a year ago, Treliving said the players needed a 'new voice' behind the bench. They certainly got one in Berube. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. The latter's reputation as an NHL lifer — first as a player with more than 1,000 games on his resume, then as an assistant coach and finally as a head coach, guiding the St. Louis Blues to the Stanley Cup in 2019 — preceded him. In his first season as Leafs coach, Berube demonstrated an ability to walk a fine line with his players. He's not a taskmaster who browbeats them into submission. At the same time, he keeps it tight and there aren't many days when his players wonder about their status. It was clear that Berube had the respect of the room from the get-go and that carried through the season to 108 points and an Atlantic Division title. Convincing a talent-laden group to play a heavier, north-south game didn't take much time. As Berube has said, when the top players bought in early, the group followed. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. The whispers regarding Treliving's interest in Berube started in the hours after Keefe was dismissed. The Leafs are in good hands with Berube. With Berube came new coaches on the staff, including Lane Lambert as an associate and Marc Savard as an assistant. Gone were Guy Boucher, Manny Malhotra and Dean Chynoweth. Lambert will have to be replaced after he was hired on Thursday by the Seattle Kraken to be its head coach. Less than two weeks after Treliving became GM in Toronto, he brought aboard Shane Doan as a special adviser. With Brendan Shanahan out of the picture and not to be replaced, you would think that Doan, Mr. Arizona Coyote, will become more of a sounding board for Treliving. The 2025 draft, meanwhile, will be the first with Toronto for Leafs director of amateur scouting Mark Leach. Treliving added Leach, who spent the previous 11 years in various scouting roles with the Dallas Stars, last July following the departure of Wes Clark to the Pittsburgh Penguins. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Leach will have six picks at his disposal — two in the fifth round and one in each of the second, third, sixth and seventh rounds. 'He puts value on every pick,' Treliving said. 'I know everybody should, but whether it's a pick in the fourth or a pick in the seventh, or whatever you've got, his feeling is there are players to be found in every round.' WHAT'S NEXT? We don't want to oversell the summer of 2025, but it's kind of big for Treliving, isn't it? If the team gets the DNA change that Treliving figures it needs, he's going to have to properly use the money that otherwise would have gone to Mitch Marner (assuming, as many do, that Marner departs). The DNA change apparently is unlikely to include John Tavares, as both sides want to maintain the working relationship. We agree with what Treliving said about Matthew Knies on Thursday — the sooner he gets that deal done, the better. The trade market could bear fruit as the free-agent pool at forward is not brimming with high-end talent. The challenge is that Treliving doesn't have many trade chips. If teams ask for Knies or top prospect Easton Cowan, what's the point? One way or another, Treliving, who likes his goaltending and defence, will have to invest in veteran forwards who know what is required to win and also can make an impact on the scoresheet. tkoshan@ X: @koshtorontosun Toronto & GTA Canada World Toronto & GTA World