Edmonton Journal

OILERS WIN IN THE ALLEY AND ON SCOREBOARD, TOO

Victory over Flyers improves club’s point total to 70, matching all of last season

- TERRY JONES

It’s too bad the Edmonton Oilers have to go out on the road for six games after what we watched Thursday night at Rogers Place.

A lot of messages were delivered in a 6-3 win over the Philadelph­ia Flyers.

There was the one Patrick Maroon delivered to the face of Brandon Manning with hockey’s best jab and a variety of rights.

That message was also delivered by Maroon to the rest of the NHL, re: Messing with Connor McDavid. It seemed there was a lineup of Oilers who wanted a piece of the Flyers defenceman who cost McDavid half a season last year, either by accident or otherwise, and decided to chirp McDavid about it on the Oilers’ visit to Philadelph­ia earlier this season.

There were other messages delivered and received this night.

There was the one on the scoreboard, where the Oilers have scored 11 goals over their last five periods after going five games getting only five goals.

But the most significan­t message of all, it says here, was in the standings, where the Oilers reached the 70-point plateau.

Last year, Edmonton finished the season with 70.

The Oilers have survived both the all-star break skid, the CBA-mandated five days off skid and, just for good measure, a bonus day off Wednesday while the major junior Western Hockey League’s Oil Kings were playing a Hockey Hooky game during their normal practice slot.

They’re now back on track to end up with close to 100 points in the final standings (they’re currently on pace for 99.) The last time the Oilers recorded a 100-point season was 1986-87.

The Oilers are tied with the Anaheim Ducks for second place in the Pacific Division. Repeat. Tied with Anaheim.

Same number of games played. Same number of points. One more win. An Anaheim-Edmonton playoff matchup is looking more and more like an automatic. Over the last two dozen games, the fans should start getting dialed into a race for second place and wrap their heads around the concept of opening the playoffs at home.

With the result Thursday night, maybe now everybody has climbed down from the ledge again? Or should the sentries stay on alert through the coming six-game road trip just to make certain the sky is still not falling?

Hey, it was only a game ago that head coach Todd McLellan had to convince his players of the same thing.

Instead of peeling paint off the dressing room walls after a pathetic first period, McLellan decided to convince them that they were a top-10 team.

When McLellan removed the booster cables and sent them out on the ice for the second period, the Oilers used the vote of confidence to look like they did in those last three games on the road before the all-star break.

Thursday night, they showed up looking like that top-10 team from the get-go.

Hey, there’s still plenty of room for the analytical, critical purveyors of puck to do their thing.

General manager Peter Chiarelli basically told everybody he’s going to stick with this team that put up the 70 points so far this season to find out who will play prime-time hockey and who won’t.

Remember the battle cry for most of the last decade: Play meaningful games in March?

Well, here we are. And Thursday night’s game was an interestin­g study on that front as well.

There are players here, a lot of them, who have never played a Stanley Cup playoff game or a meaningful NHL game in March: Jordan Eberle, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, Oscar Klefbom, Darnell Nurse, Matt Benning, Drake Caggiula, Jujhar Khaira, Iiro Pakarinen, Tyler Pitlick, Anton Lander, Anton Slepychev, Brandon Davidson, Jordan Oesterle.

Even goaltender Cam Talbot has never started a playoff game (although he finished up a couple.)

McDavid and Leon Draisaitl, of course, haven’t played any of those games either. But there are no question marks there.

Adam Larsson has played only five. Andrej Sekera has played 623 NHL games, but only eight playoff games. Eric Gryba has played 10. Mark Letestu has played 454 NHL games and only played 17 in the playoffs.

Are these guys going to embrace the games at this time of year or disappear?

For those of you scoring, Eberle and Nugent-Hopkins in particular looked like prime-time players Thursday night. That will be an interestin­g scorecard by the end of the season.

 ?? JASON FRANSON/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Edmonton Oilers left-winger Patrick Maroon feeds the fisticuffs to Philadelph­ia Flyers defenceman Brandon Manning during the Oilers’ 6-3 win Thursday night at Rogers Place.
JASON FRANSON/THE CANADIAN PRESS Edmonton Oilers left-winger Patrick Maroon feeds the fisticuffs to Philadelph­ia Flyers defenceman Brandon Manning during the Oilers’ 6-3 win Thursday night at Rogers Place.
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