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With Edmonton Oilers going downhill fast, can the series be saved?

With Edmonton Oilers going downhill fast, can the series be saved?

Vancouver Sun24-04-2025

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Well, it didn't get any better in Game 2.
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It got worse. A lot worse.
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A night that was supposed to mark the return to form of the high-flying, playoff-proven Edmonton Oilers deteriorated into the same keys to defeat that buried them in Game 1.
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It starts with a penalty kill that is being eaten alive (five goals on L.A.'s first nine power plays). Plus defensive breakdowns and mistakes that look straight out of the Decade of Darkness play book. Then goaltending that isn't delivering the big save when they need it. And finally dead hands from the goal scorers.
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Basically everything that could go wrong in a 6-2 kick in the groin went wrong Wednesday in Los Angeles. Offence, defence, goaltending, power play and penalty kill, the Oilers were let down by all of it and now they're in big, big trouble.
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And the Kings, after being eliminated by Edmonton three years in a row, can smell blood and see the frustration. All teams want to win a playoff series, but this one has been burning in L.A.'s gut for three years.
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'There is hunger on their side, of course, you can sense that, but it's not anything we're not able to match,' sighed Leon Draisaitl, after one of the most humbling defeats he's ever had to explain. 'We just have to find it and we have to find it quick. We have to start playing here. Obviously it hasn't been good enough.'
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Being down 2-0 in a series after giving up 12 goals against in two games is something nobody expected from an Oilers team that was supposed to be preparing all year for this moment.
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For them to come unglued like this is deeply concerning and the stats back it up — teams that fall behind 2-0 on the road have an 11 per cent chance of coming back to win the series. And unless we see a vastly different Oilers team on Friday in Edmonton, you can cut that number down to zero.
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'We're not happy with the position we're in at all,' said defenceman Darnell Nurse. 'But this group has been through a lot, we know what it takes and how much we have to step up in the next game.'
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The objective coming in was to keep the Kings to two or fewer goals against given that Los Angeles is a remarkable 43-0-2 when scoring three or more goals in a game this year.
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So giving up six a night is pretty much the equivalent of tying a brick to your ankle and jumping off a bridge.
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'You don't have much chance of winning,' said head coach Kris Knoblauch, who didn't get a big game from anyone Wednesday. 'Especially against a team that's very good defensively and doesn't give up many goals against.'
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Even Edmonton's big guns were invisible. Putting Connor McDavid and Draisaitl together and playing the heck out of them was supposed to be Edmonton's nuclear weapon, but it blew up in their face. While Anze Kopitar and Adrian Kempe combined for three goals and five assists in the win, McDavid and Draisaitl combined for one point in the loss.

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‘That's hockey': Oilers lose capitalizing-on-chances battle, Game 2 of Stanley Cup Final to Panthers
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‘That's hockey': Oilers lose capitalizing-on-chances battle, Game 2 of Stanley Cup Final to Panthers

Florida Panthers players celebrate the win as Edmonton Oilers' Leon Draisaitl (29) skates past during the second overtime period in Game 2 of the NHL Stanley Cup final in Edmonton, Friday, June 6, 2025. Somebody had to win. The defending champs did. Both the Florida Panthers and the Edmonton Oilers had their chances – and made mistakes – but the visitors made the most of theirs Friday at Rogers Place, including Brad Marchand's second breakaway goal of the night in the second overtime to lift them to a 5-4 victory and tie the Stanley Cup Final at one game apiece. 'That's hockey,' Oilers forward Corey Perry, who sent the game to extra time when he scored with 17 seconds left and Edmonton with an empty net for an extra attacker. 'We lost with 24 seconds left a couple series ago (against the Vegas Golden Knights.) Those are tough ... Yes, you can think about it, but tomorrow, you get some rest, get on the plane and get ready for Game 3. They're a good team. They're going to push to the max.' Brad Marchand scores in 2OT Florida Panthers' Brad Marchand (63) scores on Edmonton Oilers goalie Stuart Skinner (74) as Oilers' Leon Draisaitl (back right) defends during the second overtime period in Game 2 of the NHL Stanley Cup final, in Edmonton, on Friday, June 6, 2025. (DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS) Momentum swung between the two sides, but just like in Game 1, the Oilers sagged in the second period and the Panthers – ever relentless on the forecheck – took advantage, with Marchand giving Florida a 4-3 lead at 12:09 of the second period while shorthanded. That gave the defending champions a boost and saw them dominate play the rest of the frame, although Oilers goalie Stuart Skinner once again bailed out his team and stopped eight shots in the final 7:53 of the second with the Panthers controlling play much of the time in the Oilers' end. 'We weren't as quick to recover pucks, and they're going to have their push, of course,' a contrite Leon Draisaitl told reporters in the dressing room following the game. And though the Oilers perked up in the third period to generate several scoring chances and eventually Perry's game-tying goal to force overtime, the game came down to who would get a break. Oilers vs. Panthers Edmonton Oilers' Leon Draisaitl, centre, reaches for the puck after being checked to the ice behind Florida Panthers goalie Sergei Bobrovsky (72) as Aleksander Barkov (16) and Evan Rodrigues (17) defend during the first overtime period in Game 2 of the NHL Stanley Cup Final, in Edmonton, on Friday, June 6, 2025. (DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS) It came on the winning goal, of course, starting with a shot by Oilers defenceman Mattias Ekholm that went wide. Panthers forward Anton Lundell recovered the puck and quickly lobbed it ahead to a streaking Marchand, who put the puck between the pads of Skinner on a partial breakaway for the winning tally. 'Those counter attacks often happen,' Oilers head coach Kris Knoblauch told reporters after the game. 'We're on the attack, we got a great look. (Ekholm) comes in there, takes a slap shot. If he hits the net, we're celebrating. Unfortunately, it goes around and it's a difficult read. Everyone's going one direction, then it's coming back the other way. 'It's just unfortunate it worked out that way.'

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