The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Oilers, Sabres sagging despite star power

- By John Wawrow

BUFFALO, N.Y. >> While keeping open the possibilit­y of a late playoff push, Edmonton Oilers captain Connor McDavid acknowledg­ed how much losing has worn on him this year. In Buffalo, Sabres captain Jack Eichel grew irritated when asked about his team’s inability to win consecutiv­e games in nearly three months.

“I don’t have an answer for you right now,” Eichel said following a 5-2 loss at Toronto on March 2, a day after beating Pittsburgh.

What’s becoming abundantly clear since McDavid and Eichel were selected with the top two picks in the 2015 draft is it takes more than the arrival of a so- called “once-in-a-generation” star to transform a losing team into a con- tender.

“It’s a team sport. Things don’t get fixed with one player,” Sabres forward Kyle Okposo said before Buffalo hosted Edmonton on Monday night. “They can certainly help. But it’s a collective effort.”

Individual­ly, McDavid and Eichel are the faces of their respective franchises based on both production and salary. The 22-year-old McDavid is in the first season of an eight-year, $100 million contract, and the 22-year-old Eichel is in the first season of an eight-year, $80 million deal.

Collective­ly, their respective teams have barely made a dent in the standings, with both entering the final month of the season in jeopardy of missing the playoffs.

The comparison­s are striking.

The Oilers have advanced to the playoffs just once with McDavid, in 2016-17, when they were knocked out in the second round by San Jose. Buffalo is in the midst of a franchise-worst sevenyear playoff drought, and finished last overall twice with Eichel.

Both teams also have changed GMs and coaches since 2015. The Oilers fired general manager Peter Chiarelli and coach Todd McLellan in separate moves this season. The Sabres dismissed GM Tim Murray and coach Dan Bylsma in April 2017.

It doesn’t come close to the expectatio­ns right after the 2015 draft in Florida, where the Canadianbo­rn McDavid was picked first and the American Eichel second, to the delight of each team’s respec- tive fan base.

As much as McDavid and Eichel dislike the comparison­s to each other, they’re in agreement in saying how unfair the expectatio­ns were.

“I don’t think that’s possible at all,” McDavid said of one player changing a franchise’s trajectory. “I don’t think in this league, where it’s so competitiv­e each and every night, that one guy can change it.”

McDavid has won two scoring titles and was the league’s MVP in 2017.

Overall, McDavid’s 346 points (120 goals, 226 assists) in 270 games are tied for third with Sidney Crosby among NHL players since 2015-16. Eichel has 247 points (96 goals, 151 assists) in 271 games, and is tied with Steven Stamkos for 30th over the same span.

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