NHL Thread Because There Isn't An NHL Thread

The Jets bounced the Oilers from the North Division playoffs early Tuesday morning by winning 4-3 in triple overtime. Here are four reasons Winnipeg cruised to a first-round sweep.

Winning plays > losing plays​

Two true statements: Edmonton got rocked in this series, and the series was close, more so than the idea of a sweep suggests. Each Winnipeg victory was settled late in regulation or in OT, and puck battles, turnovers, extra efforts, and split-second choices all were magnified in the meantime, as happens in tight games.

By Natural Stat Trick's count, the Oilers attempted 72 high-danger shots in the series to Winnipeg's 48. They led the Jets in total expected goals, 14.98 to 11.45. These advantages were hollow. Edmonton wasted Connor McDavid's marvelous season - easily his greatest yet - by finding ways to lose, and Winnipeg accomplished the reverse.


Think back to last week at Rogers Place. Because the Jets' stickwork and positioning thwarted McDavid and Leon Draisaitl in Games 1 and 2, they didn't require many highlight-reel saves - though Dylan DeMelo, as he killed a penalty from his back, denying McDavid with his hovering wrist sure qualifies. Sturdy, suffocating defense held Edmonton's big guns pointless for half the series.

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Jonathan Kozub / NHL / Getty Images
Discounting Winnipeg's Game 1 empty-netters, the aggregate scoreline was 12-8, the difference being one Jets goal per game that smart thinking or dirty work set up. Tucker Poolman and Blake Wheeler scored by slipping away from defenders on cuts to the net. During Winnipeg's Game 3 comeback, Kyle Connor and Adam Lowry forced turnovers that wound up behind Mike Smith within seconds. Connor got to clinch the series because Neal Pionk, 107 minutes into Game 4, knocked down McDavid's attempted flip-in and sprung his teammate on a partial break.

The opposite of the winning play is the backbreaking error, Edmonton's domain in this series. Dmitry Kulikov and Adam Larsson lost track of Poolman in Game 1 and screened Smith on Paul Stastny's Game 2 overtime winner. Up 4-1 late in Game 3, Josh Archibald clipped Logan Stanley and the Oilers didn't kill the minor, unlike the Jets six minutes earlier when DeMelo was dinged for airing the puck over the glass.

As for Game 4, there was Ethan Bear's intercepted breakout pass in the third period, the steal that Wheeler fed to Connor as the defense scrambled and left Mark Scheifele open to pot the tying goal. Sportsnet cameras panned throughout the night to McDavid barking on the bench. After that play, he wore a dazed, disbelieving half-smile.

Every team makes mistakes, and one that boasts McDavid and Draisaitl has extra leeway to cover them up. That's why losing by sweep is galling. This defeat wasn't akin to Colorado's first-round romp; the Avalanche outscored St. Louis 20-7 in four games. Edmonton was more dangerous than Winnipeg throughout the series, but plays matter most when they lead to goals or save them, and that's where the Jets manufactured the decisive edge.

Hellebuyck was brilliant​

That Connor Hellebuyck headlines this rundown's second section probably is a slight to him. Log a .950 save percentage for the series and you deserve top billing. There's this, too: Hellebuyck didn't start on back-to-back nights all season, and then he went out Sunday and Monday and stopped 81 pucks across Games 3 and 4.

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Jonathan Kozub / NHL / Getty Images
Unbeatable to open the series in Edmonton, Hellebuyck had to battle at home to stake his team to a sweep. In Game 3, Draisaitl solved him twice in the first 10 minutes, but Hellebuyck made 15 first-period saves and 44 total, affording the Jets the time they needed to rally back. In Game 4, McDavid and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins scored on two of Edmonton's first seven shots; Hellebuyck stoned 32 of the remaining 33 he faced, including every attempt that originated beyond the foot of the crease.

The consensus in hockey is that no goalie, and perhaps no skater except McDavid, is single-handedly as capable of stealing a game as Hellebuyck. He proved as much this series and set an unjustly high standard for Smith, who looked impenetrable at times - including in Game 4's OT periods - but not consistently and never outplayed his Jets counterpart.

Hellebuyck saved 6.82 goals above expected in the series, per Evolving Hockey, easily the postseason's top such number so far. Maintain this form in the North Division final and he'll enter Round 3 as the Conn Smythe Trophy front-runner.

Jets' depth reigned supreme​

Poolman, the third-pairing defenseman with five career goals and none this regular season, was the first Jet to score on Smith in Game 1. Dominic Toninato, a fixture of Winnipeg's 2020-21 taxi squad, bagged his own first goal of the year later that night. Bolstered by their respective breakthroughs, 10 Jets tickled twine in the series all told.

A few telltale stats, moments, and decisions illustrate the depth imbalance at play in this matchup, starting with the cold streak that helped doom the Oilers: they scored twice in four games when McDavid was on the bench. Nikolaj Ehlers matched that in his Game 3 debut alone, his dynamism and lethal release combining to produce two snipes.

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Darcy Finley / NHL / Getty Images
Once his usual top three lines were intact, Paul Maurice capitalized on Ehlers' return from injury by making a vital tweak. Confident that Lowry, Andrew Copp, and Mason Appleton could curtail McDavid, he relieved Scheifele's line of the responsibility late in Game 3. Galvanized, both lines created goals during the comeback, and then they accounted for all of Winnipeg's offense in Game 4.

Dave Tippett's corresponding adjustment was to partner McDavid and Draisaitl with a rotating cast of wingers - Jesse Puljujarvi, Zack Kassian, Kailer Yamamoto - from Game 2 onward. Pairing the superstars got them on the scoresheet, but limited the Oilers' creativity and finishing ability to a single line.

Draisaitl exits the playoffs with five points and McDavid with four, while Jujhar Khaira beat Hellebuyck on a Game 3 tip and Nugent-Hopkins retrieved his own rebound to score in the series finale. That was the sum of Edmonton's offense when McDavid took breathers, belated signs of life from the bottom-three forward units that amounted to almost no help at all.

The regular season doesn't matter​

Not if you no-show in the playoffs, anyway. Edmonton had losing records against Toronto and Montreal this season, but pumped Winnipeg for 34 goals in nine games, seven of them Oilers wins. McDavid dominated everyone but especially the Jets, the only opponent that never held him pointless as he breezed to the Art Ross Trophy.

Rightfully, highlights of McDavid's 105-point year will be everywhere when voters award him the Hart Trophy. That said, it's worth restating here what he achieved - adjusted for era, it was the NHL's best individual season since Wayne Gretzky and Mario Lemieux's 1980s heyday - to emphasize how little it meant the past six days. Because of COVID-19 delays to Vancouver's season, the North Division playoff matchups were the latest to start, but Edmonton's cameo came and went so fast that five series are still happening.

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Jonathan Kozub / NHL / Getty Images
Game 3 marked the first time Edmonton lost in 2021 when McDavid and Draisaitl each recorded three points, a fitting prelude to this franchise's fourth consecutive end-of-year letdown. The Oilers beat San Jose in Round 1 in 2017 and then pushed Anaheim to seven games, but hadn't returned to the playoffs since. (Counting 2020, when 12-seed Chicago ousted them from the Western Conference's bubbled play-in bracket, wouldn't exactly strengthen the club's resume.)

Draisaitl and McDavid are signed through 2025 and 2026, but down the depth chart, there's a chance this veteran batch of underperformers looks a fair bit different next training camp.

Edmonton has 11 pending unrestricted free agents on the roster, ranging from Nugent-Hopkins to Tyson Barrie to Larsson to Smith, whose resurgent season at age 39 the Oilers just squandered, too. Down the stretch of Game 4, Tippett only trusted four defensemen, and Darnell Nurse had to shoulder 62:07 of ice time. (Genuinely, props to him; only Seth Jones and Sergei Zubov have ever played more.) Evidently, general manager Ken Holland and his players have soul-searching to do.

Meanwhile, the Jets motor on to face Toronto or Montreal, having relegated their downcast April and May to the rearview. They went 8-10-1 to end the regular season, amassing 10 fewer points than Edmonton across those final months to finish nine points back in the division.

That sentence reads as ancient history now, as irrelevant to the ongoing playoff conversation as McDavid's amazing year.

Nick Faris is a features writer at theScore.
 
Connor McDavid isn't going anywhere.

The Edmonton Oilers captain reiterated his commitment to the franchise after the Winnipeg Jets swept the club in the first round of the playoffs.

"That's not the case at all. We have a great core," McDavid said of the outside chatter of him potentially leaving Edmonton, according to The Athletic's Daniel Nugent-Bowman. "We want to see this thing through together."


McDavid put together one of the most dominant regular-season performances of all time this year, recording 33 goals and 105 points in 56 contests. He amassed one goal and three assists in the four postseason games.

The phenom inked an eight-year, $100-million contract with the Oilers in 2017 and is signed until 2026.

Teammate Leon Draisaitl, who finished second in scoring in the NHL this season with 84 points in 56 games and notched five points in the postseason, echoed a similar sentiment.

"No one in our dressing room is thinking about stopping," Draisaitl said. "We know we're on the right track."

The Oilers placed second in the North Division with a 35-19-2 record. Edmonton also finished second in its division last season but failed to make it past the qualifying round in the league's return to play.

Since McDavid joined the Oilers in 2015, the club has missed the playoffs entirely three times and made it to the second round just once. The 24-year-old leads the league with 574 points in 407 games since his NHL debut - 43 ahead of Patrick Kane in second.
 
Wayne Gretzky is departing the Edmonton Oilers for a TV job.

He will be a lead analyst on TNT's studio show beginning next season, reports the New York Post's Andrew Marchand. Gretzky will earn around $3 million per campaign.

The 60-year-old relinquished his role as Oilers vice chairman earlier Tuesday.


"Given the pandemic and other life changes, I realize I will not be able to dedicate the time nor effort needed to support this world-class organization," he wrote on Twitter.

ESPN reportedly approached Gretzky recently about a broadcasting role. His level of interest was unclear at the time. One day later, it was reported ESPN was out of the running for his services and that he could still land at TNT. The latter is the other network taking over the NHL's U.S. TV rights next season.

TNT's parent company, Turner Sports, followed the Walt Disney Company's lead by inking a seven-year contract with the NHL in late April. Turner then reportedly agreed in principle to deals with play-by-play broadcaster Kenny Albert and analyst Eddie Olczyk - both of whom currently call NHL games for NBC, whose broadcast rights expire at this season's end.

ESPN, which is owned by Disney, has reportedly hired Leah Hextall to do play-by-play. The company has also brought on Ray Ferraro and Brian Boucher to serve as analysts.

Gretzky rejoined the Oilers as a partner and vice chair in October 2016, many years after achieving legendary status with the club as a player. He worked closely with team owner Daryl Katz and CEO Bob Nicholson during his latest tenure with the team.
 
Connor McDavid isn't going anywhere.

The Edmonton Oilers captain reiterated his commitment to the franchise after the Winnipeg Jets swept the club in the first round of the playoffs.

"That's not the case at all. We have a great core," McDavid said of the outside chatter of him potentially leaving Edmonton, according to The Athletic's Daniel Nugent-Bowman. "We want to see this thing through together."


McDavid put together one of the most dominant regular-season performances of all time this year, recording 33 goals and 105 points in 56 contests. He amassed one goal and three assists in the four postseason games.

The phenom inked an eight-year, $100-million contract with the Oilers in 2017 and is signed until 2026.

Teammate Leon Draisaitl, who finished second in scoring in the NHL this season with 84 points in 56 games and notched five points in the postseason, echoed a similar sentiment.

"No one in our dressing room is thinking about stopping," Draisaitl said. "We know we're on the right track."

The Oilers placed second in the North Division with a 35-19-2 record. Edmonton also finished second in its division last season but failed to make it past the qualifying round in the league's return to play.

Since McDavid joined the Oilers in 2015, the club has missed the playoffs entirely three times and made it to the second round just once. The 24-year-old leads the league with 574 points in 407 games since his NHL debut - 43 ahead of Patrick Kane in second.
Meh, I’ll believe it when I see it. No way he hasn’t considered it and I’d imagine there is only so much lack of success someone with his potential can tolerate. I’d be shocked if the team doesn’t go into rebuild mode.

So baffling for a team to have so many 1st draft picks to not have built a more competitive team.
 
Meh, I’ll believe it when I see it. No way he hasn’t considered it and I’d imagine there is only so much lack of success someone with his potential can tolerate. I’d be shocked if the team doesn’t go into rebuild mode.

So baffling for a team to have so many 1st draft picks to not have built a more competitive team.
Some of those Chiarelli contracts are killers..
Its not gonna get much better in the next 2 years or so.
 
Washington Capitals general manager Brian MacLellan said the club could trade forward Evgeny Kuznetsov this offseason if it finds the right deal.

"I think we're always open to trading people if it makes sense for what's going on," MacLellan said Wednesday when asked about potentially trading the Russian pivot, per Stephen Whyno of The Associated Press. "If it's going to make our team better, I think we're open to it."

Kuznetsov has been the subject of trade speculation this season. However, following the Capitals' five-game drubbing at the hands of the Boston Bruins, MacLellan admitted Kuznetsov isn't the only player that could be moved.


"I don't think anybody's off the table," he said. "We're not going to trade (Alex Ovechkin) or (Nicklas Backstrom) and those type of people, but I think you have to be open on anything. We would talk to anybody about any player."

Kuznetsov is coming off a difficult season. He registered 29 points in 41 contests - his worst per-game rate since 2015 - and averaged his lowest ice time (16:34) since 2017. The 29-year-old also contracted COVID-19 twice, and he was scratched for being late to a team function earlier this month.

Kuznetsov has four seasons remaining on his current contract, which has an average annual value of $7.8 million. His deal includes a 15-team no-trade list, although it shrinks to 10 in 2022, according to CapFriendly.
 
Washington Capitals general manager Brian MacLellan said the club could trade forward Evgeny Kuznetsov this offseason if it finds the right deal.

"I think we're always open to trading people if it makes sense for what's going on," MacLellan said Wednesday when asked about potentially trading the Russian pivot, per Stephen Whyno of The Associated Press. "If it's going to make our team better, I think we're open to it."

Kuznetsov has been the subject of trade speculation this season. However, following the Capitals' five-game drubbing at the hands of the Boston Bruins, MacLellan admitted Kuznetsov isn't the only player that could be moved.


"I don't think anybody's off the table," he said. "We're not going to trade (Alex Ovechkin) or (Nicklas Backstrom) and those type of people, but I think you have to be open on anything. We would talk to anybody about any player."

Kuznetsov is coming off a difficult season. He registered 29 points in 41 contests - his worst per-game rate since 2015 - and averaged his lowest ice time (16:34) since 2017. The 29-year-old also contracted COVID-19 twice, and he was scratched for being late to a team function earlier this month.

Kuznetsov has four seasons remaining on his current contract, which has an average annual value of $7.8 million. His deal includes a 15-team no-trade list, although it shrinks to 10 in 2022, according to CapFriendly.

Kuznetzov for Duchene or Johnasen straight up.
 
Edmonton Oilers general manager Ken Holland wants to re-sign veteran goaltender and pending unrestricted free agent Mike Smith this offseason, he told reporters during his end-of-season media availability Wednesday.

Holland added he'll meet with Smith within the next few weeks.

Smith has signed back-to-back one-year deals with the Oilers, with this past season's pact carrying a $1.5-million cap hit. The 39-year-old enjoyed a terrific campaign in 2020-21, going 21-6-2 with a .923 save percentage and 13.9 goals saved above average. It marked a major turnaround after he posted severely underwhelming stats in the previous two seasons.


The Oilers are projected to have $22 million in cap space this summer, according to CapFriendly. The team has multiple key players set to hit unrestricted free agency, including Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, Adam Larsson, and Tyson Barrie. Kailer Yamamoto and Dominik Kahun are notable restricted free agents in need of new deals.
 
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