The Province

WHEELING IT

McDavid, Draisaitl are still driving the bus for the Oilers

- TERRY JONES

When Wayne Gretzky was in the process of rewriting the NHL record book, he was often a post-game study in the Edmonton Oilers dressing room.

No. 99 would often wait until after a teammate, who had scored a key goal or registered a significan­t achievemen­t, had been thoroughly interviewe­d before he made himself available to talk about his routine night of two goals and an assist.

On such a night, if the three-star selector had chosen to give the teammate one of the star selections ahead of him, as was the case with Sportsnet selecting Mikko Koskinen first star in Friday’s 4-1 win over Philadelph­ia, he’d let the selector know he thought he made the right call.

If Mark Messier was ignored in the star selection, as was Leon Draisaitl, who had three assists Friday, in order to select Alex Chiasson the third star to celebrate his career-high 14th goal of the season, the response would be the same.

To some, there may be the thought that Edmonton is starting to take their superstars for granted with the way the city is getting giddy celebratin­g Koskinen and Chiasson at the moment. But one look at all those orange Oilers jerseys in Rogers Place that have “McDavid 97” and “Draisaitl 29” on the back, makes that a ridiculous suggestion.

Yes, Koskinen is one of the best stories in the entire NHL right now with his 11-3-1 record this season.

His save percentage coming out of the Friday win is now .930. That’s tied for third in the league. His 2.12 goals-against average also ranks him third in the NHL.

And he’s tied for second in shutouts with three.

His record at home is the story within the story, 7-0 with all of those three shutouts and only seven goals against leaves him with an insane 0.92 goals-against average and .970 save percentage at home where the Oilers will play five consecutiv­e games — against St. Louis, Tampa Bay, Vancou- ver, San Jose and Winnipeg to complete the calendar year.

It’s not as if McDavid and Draisaitl aren’t still leading the Oilers charge as they’ve gone 8-1-1 in their last 10 and 9-2-2 since the arrival of Ken Hitchcock as head coach.

McDavid has scored goals in four straight Oilers home games and is on an eightgame run in which he’s produced 15 points. And Draisaitl is on a five-game point streak with three goals and nine assists.

McDavid with his three points Friday moved into second in the league, tied with Nathan MacKinnon and five points back of his Colorado Avalanche teammate Mikko Rantanen who is attempting to prevent the Oilers captain from winning a third straight Art Ross Trophy.

After 33 games, McDavid has 48 points and is on pace for a 119-point season to follow his 100 and 108-point seasons of the last two years.

My pre-season prediction that McDavid would score 50 goals and produce 125 points isn’t drawing the social media abuse it once was and with his 18th and 19th goals of the season, the 50-goals suddenly has become something to track for the rest of the season.

McDavid goes into Sunday’s game in Vancouver needing two assists to join five players — Gretzky, Sidney Crosby, Mario Lemieux, Dale Hawerchuk and Ron Francis — to reach 200 points before his 22nd birthday.

That birthday comes on Jan. 11 and there’s another stat out there to follow in the meantime — most game-winning goals before turning 22: Gretzky 24, McDavid 23, Steven Stamkos 21, and Pierre Turgeon 21.

The other day, in his 240th game, McDavid became the second fastest player to reach 300 points in Oilers history. Only Gretzky did it faster (159 games) with Glenn Anderson (242), Jari Kurri (245) and Paul Coffey (294) following.

McDavid also became second youngest to Gretzky to do it, with Coffey dropping to third and Mark Messier to fourth.

Draisaitl, meanwhile, used his three points against Philly to move into the top 10 tied with Alex Ovechkin and Johnny Gaudreau for seventh going into Saturday’s slate of games, all with 42 points.

Draisaitl is suddenly on a pace for a 104-point year.

The last time the Oilers had two 100-point players was during their five Stanley Cup wins between 1984 and 1990.

There is no suggestion in Edmonton that the Oilers aren’t getting full value from McDavid’s $12.5 million per year deal and that Draisaitl so far this season has stepped forward to also be fairly compensate­d at $8.5 million per year. Indeed, when compared to Toronto’s John Tavares and his $11 million per year deal and the 33 points he’s produced so far this season, Draisaitl looks like a steal of a deal.

As much as Koskinen and Chiasson deserve to be the toast of the town during the Oilers current charge into contention, it seems like a pretty good time to remind one and all of two things: McDavid is signed to be an Oiler for seven and a half more seasons, while Draisaitl is under contract with Edmonton through the 202425 season.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Edmonton forwards Leon Draisaitl, left, and Connor McDavid celebrate a goal against the Montreal Canadiens last month. The two have been on a tear recently with McDavid producing 15 points in his past eight games and Draisaitl collecting three goals and nine assists in his past five contests.
THE CANADIAN PRESS Edmonton forwards Leon Draisaitl, left, and Connor McDavid celebrate a goal against the Montreal Canadiens last month. The two have been on a tear recently with McDavid producing 15 points in his past eight games and Draisaitl collecting three goals and nine assists in his past five contests.
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