
Oilers gladly touched West trophy ahead of Cup rematch. It was hands off for Panthers in the East
DALLAS (AP) — Edmonton Oilers captain Connor McDavid wasn't keeping his hands off the Western Conference championship trophy this time.
McDavid gladly touched the Clarence S. Campbell Bowl when accepting it after the Oilers' 6-3 win over the Dallas Stars in Game 5 on Thursday night that sent the Oilers to a Stanley Cup Final rematch against the Florida Panthers.
'It's pretty obvious I think,' McDavid said about what was different from the end of last year's West final. 'Don't touch it last year, you don't win. Touch it this year, hopefully we win.'
Most NHL teams avoid touching the conference championship trophy, with their goal instead to hoist the Stanley Cup.
And Florida didn't touch the Prince of Wales Trophy after wrapping up the East final with a Game 5 win at Carolina on Wednesday night. The Panthers are going to their third Stanley Cup Final in a row.
The Panthers touched the Prince of Wales Trophy after winning the East in 2023, and lost the final. They didn't last year and then won the Stanley Cup in a seven-game series over McDavid and the Oilers.
Edmonton hasn't won a Stanley Cup since all five of the Oilers' titles came during a seven-season span from 1984-90. They also made it back to the Cup Final in 2006.
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USA Today
2 hours ago
- USA Today
Lakers 2024-25 season player grades: Dalton Knecht
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New York Times
2 hours ago
- New York Times
The Oilers' tweak that could change Stanley Cup Final rematch vs. Panthers
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How to overcome the Panthers, who are as close to the 1970s Philadelphia Flyers 'Broad Street Bullies' as we're likely to see in the modern hockey era. What can the Oilers do in order to defeat the Panthers' suffocating forecheck and fantastic skill on quick turnovers? The key to winning is already evident. The Oilers are enjoying an impressive run at five-on-five during this spring's playoffs. The SA-60 numbers in the game state are almost identical to last spring's playoffs, and the expected GA-60 is slightly higher than one year ago. With those facts in play, one would expect a higher GA-60, but the results in this year's playoffs are running counter to prevailing wisdom: All numbers five-on-five, via Natural Stat Trick There are a few reasons this could be happening. Luck is often overlooked, and impossible to accurately measure, but it's important to acknowledge it exists and may skew the math. If regression hits during the Stanley Cup Final against Florida, we can safely credit luck and the natural order of things (regression) for it. The eye test suggests the Oilers are defending less, and more specifically, are running around in their own zone less often during this spring's postseason. The team's save percentage year over year has improved markedly, but there's reason to believe (visually) the Oilers are doing a better job in puck retrieval and breakouts. Advertisement Why are the Oilers better at five-on-five goal suppression this spring? After Game 3 of the series against Dallas, Meghan Chayka of Stathletes published some powerful numbers. Ignoring the outstanding offensive numbers on the Edmonton side, Chayka pointed to the Stars' inability to get shots, scoring chances and goals off the rush. The Stars thrived in this area of the game during the regular season and have several proven drivers in this area of the game. The Oilers' SA-60 numbers at five-on-five haven't changed much since last year, but the club is surrendering fewer goals. The Chayka numbers tell us that while Dallas was shooting the puck, the Stars were not, in fact, making the goalie move, nor scoring goals. Low percentage shots from opponents and Edmonton playing less in its defensive zone are keys. Both innovations are helping the goaltenders. The year-over-year save percentage for the Oilers: .896 in 2024's playoffs, .922 this season. Stuart Skinner and Pickard are (as Chayka describes in her graph) in motion far less than last year. The Oilers invested $3.6 million of the overall cap in goaltending in 2024-25. That's the lowest among true Stanley Cup contenders. When general manager Stan Bowman arrived, he didn't look for an upgrade in net (although there were calls for it from many fans and media). Instead, he addressed defence, and added men who could handle the puck. One of his first moves came when he acquired Ty Emberson. During the regular season, Bowman signed veteran John Klingberg, who struggled early but has emerged as a playoff giant in puck retrieval, outlets and finding seams for passes. It is Klingberg who gives the Oilers' second pairing a dangerous offensive edge. Finally, at the deadline, Bowman acquired Jake Walman, who has a complete skill set. Walman is a puck mover, passer and creative thinker offensively, and has grown over the years as a coverage defenceman. Edmonton's defence is better for his presence, and the second pairing (Walman-Klingberg) has often been the best one during this year's playoffs. All numbers five-on-five, via Natural Stat Trick The top three unduplicated pairings (in blue) show exceptional goal suppression. The formula Edmonton is currently using for retrieval and outlets, matched to the defensive pairings that are doing well (as above), gives the Oilers an advantage fans did not see one year ago. Advertisement That advantage should be on display against the Panthers in the final. Ekholm's presence will also be felt. Ekholm and Evan Bouchard played 10 clean minutes defensively at five-on-five against Dallas on Thursday night and were on the ice for one Oilers goal. The idea of moving the puck expertly and deploying veteran defencemen isn't new to Edmonton management. The same summer the Oilers drafted Connor McDavid, new (at the time) general manager Peter Chiarelli signed veteran two-way defenceman Andrej Sekera. He was a perfect fit for the organization, and with young and astute puck movers like Oscar Klefbom in the system, the club appeared set for the next several years. Injuries had an impact, but Edmonton managers could never find enough of this player type, let alone get ahead of the problem. Chiarelli added Adam Larsson, who was a quality shutdown type but not a pure passer. Nurse had passing issues. When Ken Holland arrived in 2019, he immediately went to work on the problem. His solutions were expensive (Duncan Keith) and too old to have a sustained impact (again Keith). Once the organization signed Brad Holland as pro scouting director, and the analytics department held more sway, more capable names (specifically Ekholm) were added. It should be noted that Bouchard was an astute draft selection by Chiarelli and his scouts in 2018. His growth in all areas over the last two seasons, and especially the playoffs, has been a key element in Edmonton's success in puck moving. The Florida forecheck is suffocating. Stuart Skinner has improved as a puck handler, and that may come into play in an effort to aid the defencemen. Using the middle of the ice for outlets has been effective for the Oilers, but Florida will have scouted Edmonton, and new wrinkles may be required. Advertisement The bottom line for the Oilers: Bowman's acquisition of puck movers, specifically Walman and Klingberg, has tilted the ice in the Oilers' favour through three rounds of the postseason. Will it work against the Panthers? Stay tuned. (Photo of Roope Hintz and Jake Walman: Steph Chambers / Getty Images)


New York Times
2 hours ago
- New York Times
Five lessons the Winnipeg Jets can learn from the Stanley Cup finalists
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Meanwhile, the Panthers open the Cup final with a roster that costs roughly $8 million more than the Jets team that lost to Dallas in Game 6. Edmonton will open the final spending $4 million less than Winnipeg's Game 6 roster — but only because Zach Hyman, $5.5 million, is injured. Spending money just to spend money is not the goal, while it's worth noting that this year's trade deadline was a seller's market, based on the prices teams paid for lesser players — including Tanev and Schenn. The Jets' lack of pivot after Nelson fell through may reflect good sensibility regarding asset prices as opposed to a lack of judgment on their part. Advertisement But the Oilers and Panthers were a little more desperate than Winnipeg was — even at the cost of that sensibility. In the salary-cap era, winning is an efficiency contest. If everybody has the same payroll, then the team that spends its money the most efficiently will have the best collection of players. Those are the obvious basics, but there are wrinkles that develop throughout a season. Teams don't do all of their spending at once, and opportunities to spend efficiently don't all present themselves at once. The Jets' cap efficiency gave them an advantage over other teams when the season began. They're cap efficient again as the offseason begins, particularly with Blake Wheeler's buyout coming off the books. But Winnipeg didn't need to be cap efficient at the deadline — it needed more threats against a Dallas team that had been aggressive in its own right. Winnipeg didn't need to bring in a $5 million player performing at a $5 million level for its cap space to have been useful; anybody performing at a higher level than Winnipeg's 12th forward or sixth defenceman would have been an upgrade to the talent pool. Edmonton built various forms of salary-cap prison from drafting McDavid in 2015 through its back-to-back Cup finals. As it's escaped from inefficient money spent on Milan Lucic, Jack Campbell, Mikko Koskinen and company, it's thrown more and more darts — not all of them sensible — in the name of building a roster that can win when McDavid and Leon Draisaitl are on the bench, too. The misconception about Edmonton is that the Oilers didn't attain their level of success because McDavid and Draisaitl cost too much money. The reality is that the Oilers wasted years with a brutally cap-inefficient middle class. Now that Edmonton's non-superstars are finally winning their minutes, the Oilers are a contender. An update on the Oilers' 5v5 goal differential without McDavid and Draisaitl. Incredible. — Sid 🇨🇦 (@NHL_Sid) May 30, 2025 These numbers track with Florida's performance without its top two centres, Aleksander Barkov and Sam Bennett, on the way to the Panthers' 2024 Cup win. Yes, one takeaway on everybody's minds when it comes to Edmonton and Florida is 'acquire superstars.' But Winnipeg got outscored 17-5 at five-on-five without Mark Scheifele or Adam Lowry on the ice during these playoffs. Advertisement Meanwhile, superstars are hard to come by, while depth players can be approached with trial, error and creativity. The Oilers pulled off three-team trades in consecutive seasons to find the cap room for Adam Henrique and Trent Frederic. The Panthers signed Carter Verhaeghe for $1 million in 2020 after Tampa Bay didn't give him a qualifying offer, and picked Gustav Forsling off waivers for free in 2021. If they hadn't worked, they'd be gone. The Oilers have also taken swings at Viktor Arvidsson, Henrique, Connor Brown, Jeff Skinner, Corey Perry and John Klingberg in recent seasons. Not all of them have hit at a high level, nor did they come without cost; Dylan Holloway and Philip Broberg signed offer sheets in St. Louis that the Oilers couldn't match. But it's another case of a desperate team acquiring players by any means available — and being fully prepared to move on if they didn't work out. Only four Panthers who have played in these playoffs were Florida draft picks. Winnipeg had 10, from Scheifele and Connor Hellebuyck at the top of the roster through backup goaltender Eric Comrie. Does this mean the Jets draft well and the Panthers are free-agent poachers, basking in Floridian sunshine? Not at all. Just ask Jonathan Huberdeau, MacKenzie Weegar, Cole Schwindt, Devon Levi, Spencer Knight and Emil Heineman. All of these were Panthers picks, with NHL careers ranging from dominant to nonexistent, who Florida moved to acquire Matthew Tkachuk, Sam Reinhart, Seth Jones and Bennett. The goalies stand out — two budding stars, each traded before establishing themselves as a starter — as does Florida's willingness to move on from a 115-point scorer like Huberdeau. In Jets terms, the Tkachuk acquisition was akin to sending Kyle Connor and Dylan Samberg away and ending up with the most important player in the trade. Winnipeg would never dream of it — nor would the Jets have been an option for Tkachuk, whose list of preferred teams included Florida, Tampa Bay, Carolina and St. Louis. It must burn Panthers management that the team drafted as well as it did and stepped up like it did, making the final in back-to-back-to-back years after such a bold move — only for people to scream 'state tax.' The NHL's recent obsession with state tax rates is shortsighted. By virtue of no state income tax, Florida, Tampa Bay, Vegas, Dallas and Nashville do enjoy a slight competitive advantage, but the first 14 Cup champions of the cap era didn't share that same edge. This includes the Kings and Ducks, who are meant to be at the biggest disadvantage, given California's income tax rates, but they won three Cups in eight years, all the same. Advertisement This is not the same thing as saying taxes have no influence on players' decision-making, but the Panthers have 11 UFA signees on their roster. Of those, the biggest impacts come from Sergei Bobrovsky — a clear win — and then Verhaeghe, who they picked up for $1 million, and Evan Rodrigues, who they got for $3 million. This is not a case of a team running rampant through the free-agency market, nor are we meant to believe that the Panthers' 11 UFA signees are the only good players available in the NHL. The Jets do not have Floridian sunshine, surf or tax advantages, nor do players disappear into anonymity in Winnipeg the way they do in bigger American markets. On the opposite side of the same coin, the Jets do boast Winnipeg's tight-knit community. They do benefit from stable ownership that gets the emotional moments right. It builds community when True North makes the decisions to charter Jets players and staff to Kitchener to attend Brad Scheifele's funeral — and to do the same for Minnesotan players for Adam Johnson — or gets less tragic, personal details right, like making time for Schenn to see his family during road trips. It builds community when a guy like Alex Iafallo arrives from Los Angeles to find a group of Jets stars like Hellebuyck and Connor, who spend almost as much time outdoors as he does. If Winnipeg is small, then it can be tight-knit. If its top players decompress in an icefishing shack, then it can be a top destination for players who love the outdoors. If it is loyal to a fault, then it is a place where career Jets like Hellebuyck, Scheifele and Lowry can establish unique legacies. There is no salary cap for efforts made to make players' families feel at home. The Jets do appear to have their room in order, with team culture as a strength. Does this give them the opportunity to sign Samberg, Perfetti and Vilardi to long-term deals that age well as the cap rises, continuing team culture while giving Winnipeg tangible advantages? It's worked for Scheifele, Connor, Nikolaj Ehlers, Hellebuyck, Lowry and Josh Morrissey when they were restricted free agents. It also seems to be an advantage now that Jonathan Toews is a UFA — if the 37-year-old Toews can achieve a level of performance that helps in a middle-six role. (Photo of Gabriel Vilardi and Connor McDavid: Codie McLachlan / Getty Images)