Penticton Herald

Oilers’ season went downhill after Day 1

Lots of ‘what-ifs’ as Edmonton plays out the string on campaign that had big expectatio­ns

- By The Canadian Press

VANCOUVER — Veteran left-winger Milan Lucic considered the question a moment. Would the Edmonton Oilers’ season have gone differentl­y if the team had lost its opening game against the Calgary Flames?

“Could have been,” Lucic answered with a chuckle.

There hasn’t been much to smile about for the Oilers this year. Back in October, expectatio­ns were high with some hockey observers even predicting that Edmonton could battle for the Stanley Cup.

Heading into their game tonight against the Flames, the Oilers were 13th in the Western Conference standings with a 34-38-6 record for 74 points.

Edmonton has four games left and will miss the playoffs.

“It hasn’t gone our way,” sighed captain Connor McDavid, a splash of colour in an otherwise dark Oilers picture.

“We haven’t been good enough. That’s what it comes down to,” he said.

The Oilers dropped a 2-1 decision to the Vancouver Canucks — another team out of the playoff picture — on Thursday night. It was Edmonton’s second consecutiv­e loss after going 3-0-1 in its previous four games.

It’s hard to imagine any team’s season hinging on what happened in the first game, but head coach Todd McLellan traces some of the Oilers’ problems back to a 3-0 win over Calgary on opening night.

“We had concerns coming into the season that we would be forced to deal with high expectatio­ns, something the organizati­on hadn’t dealt with for over a decade,” said McLellan. “I thought the training camp went off fairly well. The first game was very good against Calgary.

“I think at that point, that’s where we began to relax when we didn’t need to relax. We needed to push a little more. Once you begin to spiral, it’s hard to come out of it.”

The Oilers followed that win with a fourgame losing streak, dropping seven of their first 11 overall.

Edmonton won four straight before the Christmas break to improve to 17-17-2 before fading in the new year.

Second-year defenceman Matt Benning said it was like trying to climb a mountain but constantly slipping and losing ground.

“The first game we played really well,” said Benning. “After that, we would have some winning streaks, but then we’d follow that with an even bigger losing streak.

“We just couldn’t put an end to the losing streaks.”

Last season, Edmonton finished fourth in the West with 103 points from a 47-26-9 record. That ended an 11-year playoff drought.

Edmonton beat San Jose in the first round of the playoffs before losing to Anaheim in seven games in the second round.

Several factors contribute­d to the Oilers’ downturn this season.

Entering Friday’s games, Edmonton’s power play was ranked last in the NHL, while the penalty kill was fourth-worst overall.

Goaltender Cam Talbot had a 2.39 goalsagain­st average and .919 save percentage over 73 games last season. In 63 games this season, Talbot’s numbers are 3.02 and .907.

Edmonton had five players who scored 20 or more goals last season. Two of those players, Jordan Eberle (traded to the New York Islanders) and Patrick Maroon (traded to New Jersey), are no longer with the team.

This season only McDavid, Ryan NugentHopk­ins and Leon Draisaitl have 20 or more goals.

Draisaitl’s numbers (24 goals, 44 assists) are similar to last season (29-48), but Lucic has struggled. He had 50 points (23-27) last season but has just 34 points (10-24) in this campaign, with only one goal in the last 42 games.

“After the Christmas break, I can’t really put a finger on what has gone on as far as not being able to produce,” said Lucic, who won a Stanley Cup with Boston in 2011. “At the Christmas break, I was on pace for a career high in points and assists.

“Everything seemed to be going in the right direction as far as my game individual­ly. After that, it has gone a complete opposite way.”

McDavid, meanwhile, is in the hunt for his second Art Ross Trophy as the league’s leading scorer. He scored against the Canucks for his 41st goal of the season and an NHL-leading 103 points. He’s also chasing Washington’s Alex Ovechkin for the Rocket Richard Trophy as the top goal-scorer.

In trying to analyze what went wrong, McLellan keeps returning to the first game of the season.

“After that game, I think we took our foot off the gas, not thinking it was going to be easy, but just thinking we could play at a lower level than what we needed to have success,” he said.

“That doesn’t happen in this league. Lesson learned, I hope.”

MAPLE LEAFS 5, ISLANDERS 4

Auston Matthews scored with 3:58 left, lifting playoff-bound Toronto to the road win.

Mitch Marner and Nazem Kadri each had a goal and an assist, and Nikita Zaitsev and James van Riemsdyk also scored for Toronto. Frederik Andersen stopped 29 shots to help the Maple Leafs win for the eighth time in 10 games and extend a franchise record with their 47th win.

 ?? The Canadian Press ?? Edmonton Oilers goaltender Cam Talbot allows the game-winning goal to Vancouver Canucks defenceman Derrick Pouliot during third-period NHL action in Vancouver on Thursday night.
The Canadian Press Edmonton Oilers goaltender Cam Talbot allows the game-winning goal to Vancouver Canucks defenceman Derrick Pouliot during third-period NHL action in Vancouver on Thursday night.
 ??  ?? McDavid
McDavid
 ??  ?? McLellan
McLellan

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