Times Colonist

Keith turns back the clock to help Oilers even series

GAME DAY: CALGARY AT EDMONTON, 5 P.M.

- JOSHUA CLIPPERTON

CALGARY — Duncan Keith had been here before.

Well, maybe not right here — breaking down a wild 9-6 loss to open the Oilers’ second-round playoff series against their bitter provincial rival — but the veteran defenceman’s eyes have witnessed pretty much everything imaginable over his 17 NHL seasons.

The morning of Game 2, and with his team already wobbling against a physical, grinding opponent, Keith cut a calm figure at the microphone deep in the bowels of Scotiabank Saddledome.

“We’ve got a fairly good understand­ing that it’s one game, it’s early in the series,” said the 38-year-old.

“But we need to have a response.”

Keith was a huge part of Edmonton’s solution against Calgary’s relentless, high-pressure forecheck on Friday night. He also chipped in with a goal and two assists as the Oilers rebounded from another early deficit to down the Flames 5-3 and even the first post-season Battle of Alberta in 31 years 1-1.

The virtuoso showing represente­d the Winnipeg native’s first three-point playoff performanc­e since May 2015 when he was in the process of winning a third Stanley Cup with the Chicago Blackhawks.

Keith, in no uncertain terms, wound the clock back in Game 2.

“Just unfazed,” Oilers winger Zach Hyman said. “Somebody’s who’s seen it all, has done it all.”

“Such a veteran presence back there, such a big voice in the room,” added Edmonton captain Connor McDavid, the beneficiar­y of a slick Keith feed to spark the comeback while down 3-1 in the second period. “He’s been great for us.”

The move to acquire Keith and his $5.5-million US salary cap hit by Oilers general manager Ken Holland last summer was, however, widely panned following the trade with Chicago.

Critics pointed out the 2015 Conn Smythe Trophy winner was past his prime, and that taking on the full wage bill was an unnecessar­y move for a team pressed perilously tight to the cap.

Keith had one goal and 20 assists over 64 regular-season games in 2021-22, but Edmonton interim head coach Jay Woodcroft said the blue-liner’s value can’t simply be measured on the stat sheet.

Game 2 showed why.

“His presence comes through in big moments,” he said. “Sometimes it’s something as simple as going by the bench during a TV timeout and just saying: ‘Hey, we got this. Take a deep breath and we’re good to go here.’

“Sometimes it’s making the big play at the right moment.”

One of those came in Friday’s first period when he took a onehanded McDavid offering and fired his first playoff goal since 2016 past Jacob Markstrom. Another arrived in the second with the teams playing four-onfour when he feathered that pass to a streaking McDavid, setting the table for another audacious highlight-reel finish by the superstar centre.

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