logo
Oilers beat Stars 4-1, take a commanding 3-1 lead in Western Conference final series

Oilers beat Stars 4-1, take a commanding 3-1 lead in Western Conference final series

Fox Sports7 days ago

Associated Press
EDMONTON, Alberta (AP) — The Edmonton Oilers are one win away from a return trip to the Stanley Cup Final.
Leon Draisaitl and Corey Perry each had a power-play goal and an assist and the Oilers took a commanding lead in the Western Conference final series with a 4-1 victory over the Dallas Stars on Tuesday night.
Kasperi Kapanen and Adam Henrique added empty-net goals, and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins and Connor McDavid each had two assists for the Oilers took a 3-1 lead in the series by winning three consecutive games after a third-period collapse cost them the opening game in Dallas. Since that game, Edmonton has outscored Dallas 13-2.
Draisaitl said it was far from easy in Game 4.
'There are going to be some swings in a series. They're one of the last four teams standing, so they're going to have their push, and there's going to be periods where they control the play. That's just the way it is,' Draisaitl said.
'But I think we've managed it really well. (goalie Stuart Skinner) has been incredible when we needed him to be, and our third period was really well played.'
The Oilers are now 9-0 in Game 4s over their past three playoff runs.
Skinner continued to shine in the Edmonton net, making 28 saves in the win.
'How we all played as a team was fantastic and shows a lot of courage, the way that guys are blocking shots,' Skinner said. 'For myself, it definitely felt good out there. I'm just trying to give my team the best chance that I possibly can every night.'
Jason Robertson scored for the Stars, who are in danger of being eliminated in the West final by the Oilers for the second year in a row.
'It's time to reset again, it's not over until somebody wins four games,' said Stars forward Mikko Rantanen, who has been held scoreless for seven straight games after scoring nine goals in the six previous games. 'So, now we go on home ice and it's just one game at a time. I mean, I don't even think really what the series is, it's just try to win one game and come back to Alberta.'
Jake Oettinger recorded 29 stops while taking the loss in the Dallas net, falling to 5-11 in his career in West final contests.
After surviving a flurry of Dallas chances to start the game, the Oilers started the scoring on the power play with 8:37 to play in the opening period as Nugent-Hopkins kept up his hot play in the series, feeding it to Draisaitl who beat Oettinger with a one-timer from a bad angle for his seventh of the playoffs.
There was some cause for concern for Edmonton in the first frame, however, as forward Zach Hyman took an open ice hit from Mason Marchment and left the game with an upper-body injury and did not return.
The Stars tied the game at 1-1 seven minutes into the second period on a nice power-play passing play as Robertson picked the top corner on Skinner for his second goal of the playoffs in as many games.
Edmonton regained the lead on another power play as Nugent-Hopkins made a perfect pass to Perry for an easy tap-in for his sixth, making him just the fifth player aged 40 and older to score in a conference final.
It was Nugent-Hopkins' fourth consecutive multipoint performance, becoming the first player in 35 years to accomplish that feat in a conference final, and the first Oiler to have nine or more points through the first four games of a conference final since Wayne Gretzky 37 years ago.
Stars forward Roope Hintz returned to the lineup after missing a game. He was helped off the ice late in the third period of Game 2 after being slashed on the top of the left foot by Oilers defenseman Darnell Nurse.
___
AP NHL playoffs: https://apnews.com/hub/stanley-cup and https://apnews.com/hub/nhl
recommended

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Miguel Vargas scores on Michael A. Taylor's walk
Miguel Vargas scores on Michael A. Taylor's walk

Yahoo

time37 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Miguel Vargas scores on Michael A. Taylor's walk

Tyler Seguin Can Play Role Of Spark Plug To Counter Edmonton Stars The Dallas Stars currently find themselves ahead after the Western Conference Final kicked off on Wednesday night. The Stars came out of the gates of their series guns blazing as they out played the Edmonton Oilers, 6-3. Dallas not held Edmonton's stars in check, they also received help from one of their own, Tyler Seguin. Coming into Wednesday's Game 1 matchup, Seguin was riding an 11-game scoreless streak that he broke with a pair en route to victory. 1:38 Now Playing Paused Ad Playing

WNBA Preview: Commissioner's Cup 101, Mercury/Lynx lead key matchups for the week
WNBA Preview: Commissioner's Cup 101, Mercury/Lynx lead key matchups for the week

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

WNBA Preview: Commissioner's Cup 101, Mercury/Lynx lead key matchups for the week

The Commissioner's Cup, the WNBA's mid-season competition, officially tipped off this past Sunday. For those who need a refresher, the Commissioner's Cup was established in 2020, which came from the league and the players union's latest Collective Bargaining Agreement. The intent was to provide players with more opportunities to earn money while also developing conference-based storylines and potential rivalries especially since the WNBA playoffs don't take conferences into account. With a global pandemic jolting the entire world in 2020, the Cup didn't officially debut until 2021 when the Seattle Storm defeated the Connecticut Sun 79-57. The formatting for the WNBA Commissioner's Cup is as follows: each team plays one game against each team in their conference, and whichever team has the highest winning percentage makes it to the Commissioner's Cup Final. With the Golden State Valkyries now in the fold as the WNBA's 13th team, Western Conference teams by default will play six Cup games rather than five, and teams in the Western Conference will have an even three-game split of road and home Cup games. While teams in the Eastern Conference will play fewer games, some will have fewer home games than others. For example, the Atlanta Dream will play three of their five Cup games on the road while the Indiana Fever will play three of their Cup games at home. Advertisement If teams are tied by the time the Cup games are completed, the WNBA has three tiers of tiebreakers. The first is decided by the average point differential in all Cup games which the league tracks , and then the second tiebreaker is determined by head-to-head matchups. For instance, if the Minnesota Lynx and Las Vegas Aces are tied in overall winning percentage, but the Lynx defeated the Aces during one of previous Cup games, then the Lynx break the tie and advance to the Final. The third tiebreaker is a coin flip, which hasn't yet been used in the four-season history of the Cup. What makes the WNBA's Commissioner's Cup unique from the NBA's in-season tournament the NBA Cup is how each WNBA team is partnered with a local charitable organization of their own choice and with each Commissioner's Cup game a team wins, money is awarded to the team's chosen partner. This season some franchises have chosen their local ACLU branches, while other teams have chosen organizations that aim to tackle issues such as youth criminalization, mass incarceration, women's mental and physical health and hate speech. Charities are awarded $3,000 for each team's Cup wins, $1,000 for each Cup loss and then an additional $10,000 is provided to the Cup Final's winner, while the runner-up's charity receives $5,000 in addition to all the other earnings that were accumulated from the previous Cup games. SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - JUNE 01: Ezi Magbegor #13 of the Seattle Storm shoots over A'ja Wilson #22 and Kiah Stokes #41 of the Las Vegas Aces during the first quarter of a 2025 Commissioner's Cup game at Climate Pledge Arena on June 01, 2025 in Seattle, Washington. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by) (Rio Giancarlo via Getty Images) undefinedundefinedundefined Advertisement Teams that make it to the final, which will be held on July 1, will be hosted by the team with the highest winning percentage will have the chance to win a $500,000 prize pool in addition to $120,000 in cryptocurrency that includes $5,000 for each player in the Commissioner's Cup Final. Last week ended with some early Commissioner's Cup victories for the Minnesota Lynx, Las Vegas Aces and Phoenix Mercury and the New York Liberty, who had a historic 100-52 beatdown of the Connecticut Sun. Starting on Tuesday night teams like the Washington Mystics, Fever, and the Dallas Wings will begin their Cup games while the Dream and the Sky will start them more toward the end of the week. The Dream are riding a four-game winning streak, only second to the 7-0 starts of the Liberty and Lynx. The Los Angeles Sparks, Seattle Storm and Fever have all struggled last week and are currently riding three-game losing streaks. The month of June has brought multiple hardship contracts into the league as teams have dealt with unforeseen injuries and will continue to deal with more absences as players leave for FIBA tournament EuroBasket. The following matchups to watch below this week are all Commissioner's Cup games, and all games through June 17 will also have that designation. Advertisement undefined Washington Mystics @ Indiana Fever (Tuesday June 3 at 7 p.m. ET on NBA TV) The Indiana Fever have been without star point guard Caitlin Clark for just two games and as a result the Fever have lost both contests. In the first against the Washington Mystics, the Fever had zero fastbreak points, a key part of their offensive identity that's usually spearheaded by Clark. And then days later lost to the Sun 85-83 in a game where both Sophie Cunningham and Sydney Colson left the game with leg injuries. Cunningham re-injured her right ankle that she banged up previously in a May 10 preseason game. She won't play on Tuesday. Now with veteran guard Aari McDonald signed on an emergency hardship contract , the Fever will have a two-way point guard who can play with pace and can put pressure on the rim. While Colson will play on Tuesday night after she too left the Sun game with a leg injury, the Fever can use her as a 3-and-D guard rather than a floor general. How will McDonald fit on the Fever? For that uncertainty alone this game is worth watching. Phoenix Mercury @ Minnesota Lynx (Tuesday June 3 at 8 p.m. ET on ESPN3) Advertisement The Mercury lost 74-71 to the Lynx at home on May 30 at almost the last second on a clutch three-pointer from Natisha Hiedeman. Now Phoenix gets another crack at the Lynx on the road this time but now the stakes are even higher as both teams are looking to stay undefeated in the Western Conference for Commissioner's Cup play. With MVP front-runner Napheesa Collier playing in the rematch after missing the first game with a knee injury, how will the Mercury's much-improved defense adapt? And without Alyssa Thomas, Kahleah Copper and Natasha Mack available, does latest addition Haley Jones get more run? How does Megan McConnell, who Phoenix signed after waiving guard Sevgi Uzun because of her EuroBasket commitments, do after re-joining the roster? McConnell, a former Atlantic 10 Defensive Player of the Year in college, was with the Mercury in training camp and the preseason. Atlanta Dream @ Connecticut Sun (Friday June 6 at 7:30 p.m. ET on ION) The Sun were absolutely embarrassed this past Sunday by the Liberty, and star guard Marina Mabrey is still embarrassed after posting the worst plus/minus in league history. Mabrey told Lynx guards Courtney Williams and Hiedeman on a Twitch livestream how she's still embarrassed by the loss. 'Do you know how embarrassing that was?,' she told Williams and Hiedeman. 'That s*** hurt the inside of my soul. I'm still angry.' How angry will Mabrey and her team be when they play the Dream, the third-best offense in the league, four days after being blown out by New York? Atlanta also attempts the third-most threes in the league behind Golden State and New York. That will be a lot to handle for the Sun, although the Dream also have the sixth-worst defense in the league. I expect this one to be much closer with pride on the line. Las Vegas Aces @ Golden State Valkyries (Saturday June 7 at 3 p.m. ET on ESPN+) Advertisement The Aces are getting on track after an embarrassing 102-82 loss to the Seattle Storm on May 25. Since then the Aces have won two straight including a 96-81 beatdown of the Sparks, spoiling Kelsey Plum's return to Las Vegas for the first time since she was traded. A'ja Wilson scored 35 points, had 13 rebounds and six assists in a performance that earned her a Western Conference player of the Week award, the 23rd time she's won the award. The Aces sought their revenge on the Storm a couple of days later, defeating them narrowly 75-70. While the Valkyries have lost three straight, this will be the first time head coach Natalie Nakase faces off against her former team and mentor in Aces head coach Becky Hammon. Nakase knows how the Aces play like the back of her hand, and I expect the Valkyries to be hungry for a third win. Golden State consistently plays hard regardless of the outcome and could give the Aces some trouble in their first game playing in the Bay Area. Indiana Fever @ Chicago Sky (Saturday June 7 at 8 p.m. ET on CBS)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store