logo
Oilers are unfazed in the face of defeat: ‘This was always going to be a long series'

Oilers are unfazed in the face of defeat: ‘This was always going to be a long series'

New York Times9 hours ago

EDMONTON — It wasn't quite the famous Mark Messier guarantee, but Jake Walman's words after a dreadful loss in Game 5 of the Stanley Cup Final had the same sentiment.
'This was always going to be a long series,' the Edmonton Oilers defenseman told The Athletic after a 5-2 home-ice defeat to the Florida Panthers left his team on the brink of dropping a second straight Final.
Advertisement
'We're going to come back here after a game there, and that's it. There's no doubt.'
Walman, Edmonton's key trade-deadline acquisition, had perhaps his worst performance as an Oiler. His team was caved in when he was on the ice, and he was schooled by Brad Marchand before a goal that stood as the game winner.
His subpar play mirrored that of most of his teammates.
The entire group was as flat as a pancake for most of the game, only finding some life when Connor McDavid scored his first goal of the series 7:24 into the third to put the Oilers within two. Sam Reinhart then replied 46 seconds later, quashing whatever faint hopes existed of a victory.
Watching the Oilers bumble around the ice on Saturday night leaves little optimism that a championship is even close to a possibility.
Then again, the way the Oilers have responded magnificently throughout the playoffs when they've looked dead and buried is reason enough to change that viewpoint and subscribe to Walman's.
'Knowing that we're in a difficult situation, win our last two games, is something that we're confident that we can do,' said coach Kris Knoblauch. 'We've been through difficult situations before, and it's just another one that we'll overcome.'
That the Oilers are bold and brazen makes sense.
After all, these are the same Oilers who trailed the Los Angeles Kings 2-0 in their opening-round series and heading into the third periods of the next two games at home. They charged back to knock off the Kings with relative ease.
These are the same Oilers who gave the Vegas Golden Knights life with a last-second own-goal in Game 3 of the second round, a result that could have shell-shocked them. They proceeded to drop the hammer, shutting out the Golden Knights in back-to-back games to close them out.
These are the same Oilers who collapsed in the third period of the Western Conference final opener against the Dallas Stars by allowing five unanswered goals. They then mopped the floor with the Stars, handling them while claiming the next four games.
Advertisement
And these are the same Oilers who, after a terrible 6-1 loss in Game 3 to the Panthers, overcame a three-goal deficit in Game 4 to even the series. That was their eighth comeback win of the playoffs.
Count these Oilers out at your peril.
'We know that we can get it done,' said Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, the longest-serving Oiler. 'It's just a matter of going out there and finding a way to do it. It's going to be our hardest challenge yet.'
That's the case because of the way they played for most of Saturday's contest. Save for little spurts that were few and far between, the Oilers were awful.
Walman and Mattias Ekholm struggled mightily in what was their second attempt at a partnership after a mere 1:31 together at five-on-five during the regular season, per Natural Stat Trick.
The Oilers were outshot 4-1 and out-attempted 10-2 in the 5:09 Ekholm and Walman shared the ice at five-on-five in the opening frame.
Ekholm had his worst performance since returning from a lower-body injury for the West final climax. He was on the ice for both of Florida's first-period goals against and was a team-worst minus-3. Walman was on with Ekholm for the second of those tallies.
The Oilers have now allowed 11 goals against in the first period in this series, at least two in every game.
'It's frustrating when you come into the (dressing) room and you're down,' Walman said. 'We're struggling to get to our game right away. It takes us a little bit. I don't know what the reasoning is.
'We have it in us to play the way that we want.'
Ekholm was back with his regular partner, Evan Bouchard, for the second. Walman's night, meanwhile, was bookended by being walked by Marchand.
'That's a good player,' Walman said. 'S—-y feeling as a defenseman. I want to have that one back. I've just got to play everybody hard. It doesn't matter who they are.'
Advertisement
The Oilers had little offensive pop and went the final 11:10 of the first period without a shot on goal.
Knoblauch leaned into his nuclear option of McDavid and Leon Draisaitl in the second but had to rotate in wingers Evander Kane and Viktor Arvidsson to spell off elder statesman Corey Perry.
Zach Hyman's absence was never felt more. The superstars didn't have their ace complementary winger, and the lineup seemed thinner than ever. McDavid was tasked with playing 25:49, for instance.
To the surprise of no one, Calvin Pickard got the start after making 22-of-23 saves in relief of Stuart Skinner from the second period onward of a 5-4 overtime win in Game 4.
Pickard's magic ran out as he suffered his first loss in eight decisions in these playoffs after allowing four goals on 18 shots. That calls into question whether he or Skinner should get the call for the pivotal Game 6, the first time all postseason the Oilers are facing elimination.
'From what I saw, Picks didn't have much chance on all those goals,' Knoblauch said. 'There was nothing saying that it was a poor performance.'
Given all that happened with the Oilers on Saturday night, it could feel like the Oilers' season might as well be over.
Just eight teams have overcome a 3-2 series deficit to win the Stanley Cup, none since the Boston Bruins in 2011, back in Marchand's first full NHL season.
The Oilers have a herculean task ahead of them: being the first to beat the defending champs in their own barn and, if they manage that, to then beat them at home. The Panthers just earned their 10th road win, tying an NHL record.
'At this time, it's more about looking forward. I'm not too big on looking in the rearview mirror,' Ekholm said. 'We've just got to go down to Florida and win a game.'
The Oilers must be considerably better than they were in Game 5 if they want to get revenge in this matchup and win the first Stanley Cup by a Canadian club in 32 years and end a 35-year franchise drought.
Advertisement
But if there's a team that can do this, it just might be this one. This Oilers club has leapt over just about every hurdle they've faced over the last two months.
What's one more?
'We have confidence in ourselves that we can get the job done,' Nugent-Hopkins said. 'What's left is easier said than done. You've got go do it, so we'll look forward to that.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Final group tees off
Final group tees off

New York Times

time25 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Final group tees off

Burns has a one-shot lead over Spaun and Scott at Oakmont with Viktor Hovland the only other under par Getty Images Sam Burns backed up his second-round 65 with a 69 in the third round of the U.S. Open, and he has a one-shot lead over J.J. Spaun and Adam Scott. Burns will enter the final round at 4 under. Follow live coverage here. Spaun also shot a 69 in the third round, while Scott fired a 67 and will play in the final group with Burns on Sunday. Viktor Hovland is the only other player under par at 1 under after a third-round 70. Carlos Ortiz shot a 67 and is at even par. World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler is tied for 11th at 4 over after a third-round 70. Get involved: live@ GO FURTHER Who can still win the 2025 U.S. Open? Analyzing the field at Oakmont Connections: Sports Edition Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms The unlikely final group of Sam Burns and J.J. Spaun tees off in the third round at the U.S. Open. Spaun lands in the right fairway after hitting 307 yards off the tee. Burns. who is the 36-hole leader at 3 under, just clips the right rough off the tee. Getty Images Rory McIlroy has spoken to the media after his round of 74. He was — naturally — asked why he has decided to skip his last six post-round media obligations at major tournaments. When quizzed on whether his silence was down to his frustrations with the course, he replies: 'No. It's more frustration with you guys.' 💬 Asked to elaborate, he says: 'I've been totally available (with the media) for the last few years. Maybe (the frustration is not with) you guys … Maybe it's the whole thing. '(The driver controversy) was a part of it, yeah. That was a part of it. But at Augusta I skipped you guys on Thursday. It's not out of the ordinary, I've done it before. I'm just doing it a little more often. 'I feel like I've earned the right to do whatever I want to do. I hope the PGA doesn't change (the rules on speaking to the media) because it's a nice luxury to have. And we have the option not to (speak to the media).' You can watch the full interview below. There's a lot of interesting stuff in there. Viktor Hovland hits his third shot off the muddy cart path. It clips a leaf off the tree and lands it on the green somehow. What a golf shot! The Norwegian will take his bogey and RUN to the second hole if that's all the damage done. Getty Images Two-time U.S. Open winner Brooks Koepka has two bogeys in the first three holes after losing a shot on No. 3. He's already at 2 over for the day, which drops him 4 over for the tournament. Viktor Hovland finds his ball in the trees to the right of the cart path on the first hole. He is talking with the rules official about taking an unplayable and measuring the two club lengths. Not an ideal start for the Norwegian. The penultimate group is off and running on Saturday at the U.S. Open. Adam Scott, who is even for the tournament, blazes a drive up the left side of the fairway, going 313 yards. Viktor Hovland, who begins the day at 1 under, hits the cart path on the right and lands in the trees. The search is on with a likely unplayable as Hovland hits a provisional ball in the fairway. Wowza! Getty Images … I think I cursed Matt Wallace. Since declaring the Englishman to officially be 'In The Mix', he has bogeyed two of his last three holes. He's dropped back to +4 and likely needs a birdie (or two) on the final two holes. Getty Images Bob MacIntyre has been playing so well all week but today looks like it could be his best round yet. He was -2 when he hit the turn and he has just birdied the big par-five 12th to claw back another shot, moving to +1 for the tournament. Very few have played the hole better this week. His drive split the fairway and then he reached the green with his second shot, an absolute belter of an approach considering he was still over 300 yards back. One tidy two-putt later and he's only four shots off the lead. Getty Images Scottie Scheffler has back-to-back bogeys after making one on the difficult par-4 ninth hole. That's his 14th bogey of the tournament. Scheffler is at 1 over for the day and 5 over for the tournament. He's really in the danger zone of being out of the hunt. Getty Images Thomas Detry has birdied the second to move back into the top ten. Detry was right near the top of the leaderboard for much of yesterday's second round, until a truly horrible finish saw him make three double bogeys on the last five holes. But the Belgian is already back to +1 and only trails Sam Burns by four. (I still think it's a truly horrific glove, however.) Imagn Images That was not what Brooks Koepka was looking for to start this round. He was just fine after two shots, on the front of the green. But he three-putted for bogey and dropped to 3 over, six shots off Sam Burns' lead. The first hole is getting a lot of players today. It looks tame enough, but we all know it's not. Imagn Images Just when it looked like Scottie Scheffler had a little momentum, he missed a four-foot par putt on the eighth hole. That one certainly could hurt when we look back on it. Imagn Images Xander Schauffele and Rory McIlroy finish up their rounds without much going on during moving day. Schauffele shot a 1-over 71 and is at 7 over for the tournament. McIlroy shoots a 4-over 74 and is at 10 over. Brooks Koepka's opening tee shot leaks left and looks as though it's headed for the really juicy stuff, only to come down in the first cut. Fortunate. Less fortunate for Koepka is the fact the pin is placed in the middle of the green today, which will make his approach shot more tricky than it would have been Thursday or Friday. Brooks Koepka's putter might have cooled off a bit yesterday, but he will start his round today just five shots off the pace. In Round 1, despite missing seven greens in regulation, Koepka was able to successfully get up and down five times. Friday, he was just 2-for-9 scrambling, leading to a round with eight bogeys. Koepka trailed by multiple strokes entering the third round in three of his five major championship victories. Brooks Koepka is making his way to the first tee. He's playing alongside Si Woo Kim. Getty Images Marc Leishman's third round is starting to fall apart. He just carded his second consecutive bogey after missing a 16-foot putt for par. Leishman was once 4 under for the day. Now he's 2 under, sitting at +4 for the tournament. The move is going in the opposite (wrong) direction for the Aussie. Imagn Images Scottie Scheffler was left off the tee in a bunker on No. 7 and had to pitch out into the fairway on his second shot. But he hit a beautiful third shot and made the par putt. Scheffler heads to the difficult eighth and ninth. Two pars there would be certainly appreciated. Getty Images Englishman Matt Wallace is currently -3 for the day, without a single bogey on his scorecard. That means he's +3 for the tournament with five holes left to play today. Wallace has one PGA Tour victory on his record, at the Corales Puntacana Championship in the Dominican Republic in 2023. His best finish at a major came four years before that, when he enjoyed a share of third at the PGA Championship. But if he can maybe make another birdie or two before heading to the clubhouse he could well find himself in the mix tomorrow.

Oilers dealing with Stanley Cup Final goalie debate heading into Game 6
Oilers dealing with Stanley Cup Final goalie debate heading into Game 6

NBC Sports

time31 minutes ago

  • NBC Sports

Oilers dealing with Stanley Cup Final goalie debate heading into Game 6

When the Edmonton Oilers face elimination in Game 6 of the Stanley Cup Final on Tuesday night against the Florida Panthers, either Stuart Skinner or Calvin Pickard will lead them on to the ice as their starting goaltender. The defending champion Panthers have no such debate. Two-time Vezina Trophy winner Sergei Bobrovsky has started 63 consecutive playoff games going back to early in the playoffs in 2023, and he is a big reason they are on the cusp of winning a second consecutive title. 'He puts so much time into his focus and his ability and then the experience that he has, so there's a calmness that comes with Sergei that's spread throughout the team,' coach Paul Maurice said Sunday. 'He's the incredible, elite player that gets totally underappreciated: taken for granted, I guess, by us because he's so consistent with his game.' Bobrovsky has stopped 165 of the 181 shots on net during the final, allowing 16 goals with a save percentage of .912. Skinner and Pickard have combined to stop 141 of 163, allowing 22 with respective save percentages of .860 and .878. Many of those goals scored by Florida and allowed by Edmonton had more to do with the skaters in front of whoever is in the crease, hence a rotating door at hockey's most important position in the final. Skinner started the first four, Pickard entered Game 4 and won in relief, then lost Game 5. Skinner will probably get the nod in Game 6, but coach Kris Knoblauch is not saying which way he's leaning. 'It's not an easy decision,' Knoblauch said. 'We've got two goalies that have shown that they can play extremely well, win hockey games and we feel that no matter who we choose, they can win the game.' That confidence is even stronger around the Panthers, given how steady Bobrovsky has been. Even though Game 5 turned into a rout, Maurice credited the goalie known as 'Bob' for a handful of important early saves to make it possible. It is something Bobrovsky has done all series, all playoffs and all season for a long time. 'He keeps us in the game so many times at key moments and is making huge saves,' top defenseman Gustav Forsling said. 'He always gives us a chance to win every night. He's been amazing for us.' Bobrovsky at 36 is adored by teammates. Aaron Ekblad, who has played with him for six seasons, called him simply the best. 'We love him,' Ekblad said. 'There's no doubt about it.' That admiration has been earned. Bobrovsky has developed a reputation for his tireless work on dry land and the practice habits on the ice that have translated into results: a lot of winning. It's no coincidence the Panthers have won 10 of 11 playoff series since Bobrovsky took over for Alex Lyon three games into the first round in 2023. 'He just sticks kind of to the same routine, and his preparation is unlike anything I've ever seen while being in this league,' forward Evan Rodrigues said. 'It almost becomes routine some of the incredible saves he makes.' There is nothing routine about how the Oilers' goaltending has developed over the course of the final. Skinner and Pickard have each been hung out to dry by turnovers, mistakes and missed coverages. They have also made some unexpected stops along the way to keep this series going. 'They've both been amazing,' veteran winger Corey Perry said. 'It doesn't matter who's in the net or who's back there. We have trust in both of them.' Maurice, who has coached more games in the NHL than anyone but nine-time Stanley Cup champion Scotty Bowman, has made it clear he knows nothing about goaltending and has no interest in learning about it. But he has defended all the goaltenders in this final between 'two really powerful offensive teams' with plenty of star power. Still, Bobrovsky has the ability to swing it in Florida's direction with another of the performances his team has come to expect from him. 'His ability to focus is trained — maybe it's a talent,' Maurice said. 'If one gets by him that he doesn't like, it has nothing to do with what's going to happen next.'

Caitlin Clark Bracing for Tough Situation After Return From Injury
Caitlin Clark Bracing for Tough Situation After Return From Injury

Yahoo

time40 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Caitlin Clark Bracing for Tough Situation After Return From Injury

Caitlin Clark Bracing for Tough Situation After Return From Injury originally appeared on Athlon Sports. There was a lot of anticipation leading up to Saturday's showdown between the Indiana Fever and the New York Liberty. This is after the Fever announced that Caitlin Clark was set to return after a five-game injury absence in Indiana's home matchup against the defending champs. Advertisement Clark proved on Saturday that she lives for the big moments. With the spotlights all over her, the 23-year-old turned in her best performance of the campaign. Clark dropped a season-high 32 points on 11-of-20 shooting, while also knocking down seven triples on the evening. The reigning WNBA Rookie of the Year also registered eight rebounds, nine assists, a steal and a block, as she led the Fever to a massive 102-88 victory against a previously undefeated Liberty side. Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark (22) during a game. Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images After the game, Clark spoke openly about how good her body felt during the game. Clearly, the quad injury that kept her out for the past three weeks was a non-issue against New York. Advertisement "My legs felt really strong, I felt in good shape," Clark said, via Michael Voepel of ESPN. "A lot of that is credit to our medical team. They have kept me in shape." "Now for me, it's just how I recover, especially with the schedule that we have coming up." Clark revealed that she is currently still on the road to full recovery after missing an extended period. The next couple of weeks will be a tough stretch for Indiana as they play six games in the span of 11 days. Clark and the Fever's medical team will use the next two days to make sure that Clark is able to recover well ahead of their next game, which is on Tuesday against the Connecticut Sun. Advertisement After all, Clark will still need to shake off some of that rust and get her conditioning back up to 100% following a lengthy spell on the sidelines. This is despite the fact that her performance on Saturday night seems to indicate otherwise. Related: Pat McAfee Had One Word for Caitlin Clark on Saturday Related: Pacers Get Unfortunate Caitlin Clark News on Friday Related: Sophie Cunningham Left Speechless by Statement From Indiana Fever President This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 15, 2025, where it first appeared.

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