The Daily Courier

Oilers can’t get off the mat

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Edmonton Oilers GM Peter Chiarelli says there’s ‘no easy answer’ to fixing woes

EDMONTON — This NHL season has felt like “death by a thousand cuts” for Edmonton Oilers general manager Peter Chiarelli.

And there is no magic pill to cure the team’s troubles, he said Tuesday.

In a frank conversati­on with reporters before the club’s game against the Arizona Coyotes, Chiarelli acknowledg­ed a lack of scoring and subpar defending, goaltendin­g and special teams have all contribute­d to the Oilers’ woeful start that has seen team has tumble down the standings to 27th among 31 teams.

It’s not what was expected of the promising young squad that boosted beleagured fans’ hopes by making the playoffs last season after an excruciati­ng 10-year drought.

The Oilers, led by scoring champ Connor McDavid, came within one game of the NHL’s final four last spring, and pre-season forecasts this year have them breaking through and challengin­g for the Stanley Cup.

“I’m disappoint­ed as to where we are,” said Chiarelli. “There are a number of areas. It’s a little bit of a death by a thousand cuts right now, so when you’re patching up one area another area opens up.”

Heading into Tuesday’s game, the Oilers were 9-13-2 on the season, but had only been able to string together back-to-back wins once.

“There are a lot of things that aren’t going right at this point and we’re trying to work our way through it,” he said.

“You have to let these things play out to a certain degree. You have to act when you think that they’re not getting fixed.

“How do you fix it?” Chiarelli continued. “You have to look externally, you have to look internally, you have to look at your coaching staff you have to look at your management staff. You look at a lot of different things. There’s no easy answer.”

At this early stage of the season, Chiarelli remained optimistic.

“I do believe that this team has the ability to get out of it,” he said. “That doesn’t mean we won’t look at making moves.”

Consistenc­y has been among the many challenges for the Oilers.

“There’s been a lot of up-and-down to our game,” Chiarelli said. “There are a lot of little things that compound. You can look at each of them and try and fix each of them. Collective­ly they create a problem and put us in the position we’re in.”

Heading into Tuesday’s play, Edmonton’s penalty-kill was ranked 30th in the league.

“There has been a level of improvemen­t,” Chiarelli pointed out.

Chiarelli also said “subpar” goaltendin­g — only four teams had given up more goals than the Oilers’ 78 allowed — and the lacklustre play of top-line defenceman Oscar Klefbom has made matters worse.

“If those things were fine, we’d be better,” Chiarelli said. “But they’re not fine at this point.”

Starting goalie Cam Talbot, who shone last season, had a .901 save percentage and a 3.07 goals-against average heading into Tuesday’s game.

Some of the team’s consistenc­y problems are also mental, said Chiarelli.

“Things can spiral a little bit mentally,” he said. “You have a real good game ... and you consciousl­y or subconscio­usly you get into a comfort level.” Chiarelli cautioned against overreacti­ng. “You can’t just blow things up,” he said. “We’re trying to figure it out,” he added. “We’d like to see some traction somewhere and if we don’t we’re going to have to take a different tack. I don’t know when that is.” PENGUINS GOALIE MATT MURRAY PLACED ON INJURED RESERVE CRANBERRY TOWNSHIP, Pa. (AP) — The Pittsburgh Penguins will have to try to shake out of their early season funk without goaltender Matt Murray.

The two-time defending Stanley Cup champions placed Murray on injured reserve Tuesday with a lower-body injury.

Coach Mike Sullivan called Murray “week to week” after the 23-year-old left Monday night’s 5-4 overtime win over Philadelph­ia in the second period following a collision with Flyers forward Jakub Voracek.

Tristan Jarry came in and stopped 8 of 10 shots as the Penguins rallied from a two-goal deficit to win.

Jarry, a 22-year-old rookie, is 2-0-2 with a 2.83 goals-against average in limited play this season. Pittsburgh begins a home-and-home series with Buffalo on Friday.

 ?? The Canadian Press ?? Detroit Red Wings defenseman Nick Jensen pins Edmonton Oilers left wing Jujhar Khaira against the boards last Wednesday in Detroit.
The Canadian Press Detroit Red Wings defenseman Nick Jensen pins Edmonton Oilers left wing Jujhar Khaira against the boards last Wednesday in Detroit.

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