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Edmonton Oilers try to reclaim home-ice advantage in Stanley Cup Final

Edmonton Oilers try to reclaim home-ice advantage in Stanley Cup Final

National Post4 hours ago

Home-ice advantage can be a fickle fiend in the NHL playoffs.
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Finish the 82-game regular season with a better record than your opponent and, voila, you get to open and potentially close the best-of-7 game series in your own town.
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Think it doesn't make that much of a difference? Try selling that to an Edmonton Oilers team that lost by one goal in Game 7 of last year's Stanley Cup Finals to the same Florida Panthers they are up against a year later.
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That one was played in Sunrise, Fla., in front of a crowd so hostile Oilers captain Connor McDavid wanted no part in coming back out in front of to accept the Conn Smythe trophy as playoff MVP.
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If he would have skated up to shake the hand of NHL commissioner Gary Bettman and fight up a smile for a photo mere moments after suffering the toughest loss of his career, you would likely still be able to hear the boos and heckles echoing 4,800 km across the continent.
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Last year, the Panthers held home-ice advantage, jumping out to a quick 2-0 series lead inside the friendly confines of Amerant Bank Arena, before taking a stranglehold on things with a win in Game 3 in Edmonton.
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But that didn't stop the Oilers faithful from turning out in droves once again for Game 4, on the way to a convincingly complete 8-1 win that turned the tide for an Oilers comeback to even the series 3-3 heading back to Florida for Game 7.
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This time, if the series once again goes the distance — which all signs suggest, given how the two teams played almost three periods of overtime on the way to splitting Games 1 and 2 — the rubber match would be held at Rogers Place.
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And that can be a challenge, given how the Panthers wrested home-ice advantage from the Oilers by winning Game 2 on the road. That gives them three of the remaining five games in the series at home, beginning with Game 3 on Monday (6 p.m., CBC, Sportsnet), as well as Game 4 on Thursday and Game 6 on June 16.
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That means all Florida has to do is win their remaining home games to repeat as Stanley Cup champions, while the Oilers have to do at least what the Panthers did to open the series and hope for a split on the road to get back in the driver's seat if they want the best chance at avoiding another miserable off-season.

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