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As the Edmonton Oilers prepare for a cup run, what has their GM done to ensure this happens again and again: 9 Things
As the Edmonton Oilers prepare for a cup run, what has their GM done to ensure this happens again and again: 9 Things

Yahoo

time20-04-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

As the Edmonton Oilers prepare for a cup run, what has their GM done to ensure this happens again and again: 9 Things

The Edmonton Oilers have taken a decidedly more circuitous path to the Stanley Cup Playoffs. But the road begins anew, Monday comes. In the meantime, General Manager Stan Bowman has been busy ensuring that this franchise is in the same position to 'go for it' every April, for as long as the jerseys 97 and 29 are in Oilers colours. That and more in this playoff edition of… 9. It took just one night of watching games on Saturday to reinforce my opinion that no other sport's post season surpasses or even equals the Stanley Cup Playoffs. 8. Noah Philp had a hat trick on Saturday night as the Bakersfield Condors wrapped up their season. Philp was 19-16-35 in 55 GP. Stick taps to Seth Griffith who ended up just a single point shy of the AHL scoring title. I fully expect Philp, Matt Savoie and Olivier Rodrigue to be Black Aces in Edmonton. 7. The Ty Emberson extension announced Saturday is a solid bit of business by Stan Bowman. I had suggested back in January that an AAV around $1.5m would probably be in order for that player. Others pegged it higher. But the final deal ended up being a two-year deal with an AAV of $1.3m. Extremely good value. 6. More than a few people were wringing their hands on Friday when Josh Brown was slotted at the six on the Oilers blueline. I like the physicality he brings. But while John Klingberg is the superior skater and playmaker, I like Troy Stecher better than both. Stecher is skating back in Edmonton but will be ready to play in this series. 5. Evander Kane is really close to being game-ready. The fact that he did not take the optional on Saturday is probably an indication that he is just a shade back of Trent Frederic, who I expect will play Game One. But Kane is likely to return no later than Game Three back in Edmonton. The only question remains is which version of Kane will we get? 4. Three Oilers have scored the most points of any NHL player since 2022: Connor McDavid at 95, Leon Draisaitl at 81 and Evan Bouchard at 58. Those stats courtesy the blue-chip Oilers play-caller Jack Michaels. He and Louie DeBrusk will call the series on TV. That allows Cam Moon to join Bob Stauffer on the radio call, thus serving both audiences well. 3. The Los Angeles Kings are a good club and will be a tough out. But I do not see them as that much better equipped to beat the Oilers than they were last season. I respect the hell out of Drew Doughty but he is thirty-five. Anze Kopitar is still a terrific two-way player at thirty-seven. But they are still the Kings best players. I think it will take big series by the likes of Quinton Byfield and Darcy Kuemper to conjure a different result. Edmonton's best has to be better than L.A.'s. 2. I agree that the Oilers have been inconsistent this season. But they did not end up in a much different place than they have the past four years. Consider the point totals from those seasons: 104, 109, 104, and in 2024-25…101. The regular season result is not particularly different. And none of it matters much at all if you win in the playoffs. Oh yeah, and Edmonton is the only team in the NHL that has both Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl on their roster. I will take those odds. Edmonton Oilers are in a much different place at this point in 2025 than they were in 2024, from an organizational standpoint. Readers of this column will know that I felt Ken Holland did a lot of the right things to stabilize this organization and get it to Game Seven of The Stanley Cup Finals. That included spending a lot of draft capital. But when you have a chance to win it all, that is the price you need to pay. Leave it all out there. And to his credit, Holland did. What Mr. Holland did not do sufficiently in my eyes, however, is back-fill. Having spent the picks he needed to be more proactive in replenishing the young, budget-friendly depth than any good organization needs. And between that and the loss of Philip Broberg and Dylan Holloway to offer sheets (I assign blame to Holland on both counts, but particularly Broberg), the cupboards were relatively bare. Free Agency alone can not make up that much of a deficit. But Stan Bowman has come in and (like Jeff Jackson with Analytics) rebuilt and restructured the entire development side of the organization. And it needed it. Strategic changes were made to scouting in particular. An those moves have resulted in those cupboards suddenly stocked with exciting young talent. Talent that has already had a chance to mature far past most eighteen-year-olds they might have nabbed in the draft. They can impact your lineup, in most cases, faster. That is because Bowman made it his focus to farm the NCAA and Europe for the very best unsigned talent that he could find: David Tomasek, Josh Semanski and Atro Leppanen all had multiple NHL suitors….as did amateur gets such as Quinn Hutson and Samuel Jonsson. They all had ample opportunity elsewhere but chose Edmonton. An important part of the equation here is Bowman's willingness to role up his sleeves and work. I understand the General manager personally travelled to Europe to scout both Tomasek and Semanski in person. And his rock-solid reputation in the NCAA helped tilt things in Edmonton's direction there. This major shift in doing business also required the willingness of ownership. With fully staffed and re-designed Analytics and Development Departments, the Oilers are now a more expensive franchise to Run. Like any owner, Daryl Katz needs to say yes to those costs. And while others have not, Katz has. My strong guess would be that Mr. Katz, like other businessmen at his elite level, understands that capital investments and R&D are critical to success. It is all too easy to be penny-wise but pound foolish. The landscape is littered with failed ventures (and hockey teams) who did not understand that. Now on Bluesky @ Also, find me on Threads @kleavins, Twitter @KurtLeavins, Instagram at LeavinsOnHockey, and Mastodon at KurtLeavins@ This article is not AI generated. LEAVINS: The Edmonton Oilers hold their big guns out of a Saturday optional ahead of Game 1 STAPLES: Controversial moves that give the Oilers an edge over the Kings In memory of Bruce McCurdy, 1955-2025. Don't miss the news you need to know — add and to your bookmarks and sign up for our newsletters here.

‘It's a piece of history and it belongs to this family': A Bakersfield Army veteran's quest to return a piece of World War II history back home
‘It's a piece of history and it belongs to this family': A Bakersfield Army veteran's quest to return a piece of World War II history back home

Yahoo

time11-03-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

‘It's a piece of history and it belongs to this family': A Bakersfield Army veteran's quest to return a piece of World War II history back home

BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (KGET) — It's a mystery: how did Vinson Paul Haralson's enlistment card from more than 80 years ago land on a Bakersfield bus bench? The card was found by a fellow veteran, and bus driver, Jeremy Bagby. 'This person joined a Navy a month after they bombed Pearl Harbor. I want to try to get it back to their family,' Bagby said. We met Bagby a few months earlier when he was given a car at a Bakersfield Condors hockey game. The former Army sergeant had been biking through the streets of Bakersfield. That Toyota Highlander was a well-deserved gift for a veteran who fell on hard times after his service. 'I could've made a lot of better decisions in life, I guess,' said Bagby. 'This is going to change everything.' Then, he mentioned he found the card tossed on a bench by a man digging through the trash. That card belonged to a World War II veteran. 'My niece called and said 'look at the news.' And it just shocked me that we saw that name,' said Sandy Haralson Tiner, Vinson Paul Haralson's last surviving relative. She's the only one still alive who actually knew the man. 'There was three boys and a girl,' said Tiner. 'They farmed in Arkansas, but when the crash happened, they all moved to California like in 'The Grapes of Wrath' and lived in Arvin and farmed, lived in tents.' Vinson was a Navy deep-sea diver in Pearl Harbor after the Japanese attack in 1941. 'Good-natured, hard workers,' said Tiner. 'That's the way they were brought up.' Vinson survived the war although, he contracted a lung disease in the 1960s. He died in 1971, and was buried at North Kern Cemetery in Delano. 'We have his birth certificate, his driver's license, all his pictures that he had,' said Tiner. 'I inherited it from my dad. And he got it from his sister. I thought I had it all.' One more piece of family history missing, but not for much longer. 'I think I found something that belongs to you,' Bagby said, making his way to Tiner's front door where she awaited for her uncle's return. 'I can't even explain it. It's very surreal,' said Tiner. 'Nice and kind, I'm glad he did that. Because it needs to be passed down to my children.' 'I'm happy, I'm very happy. That's where it belongs,' said Bagby. 'It's not an ordinary, everyday card. It's a piece of history and it belongs to this family.' After more than 80 years, Bagby made sure another piece of Vinson Haralson's life is home, fulfilling the code of no man left behind. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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