USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Golden Knights advance as Canada’s Stanley Cup drought continues

- Mike Brehm

Thirty years have passed since the last Canadian team, the 1993 Montreal Canadiens, won the Stanley Cup.

That drought will continue after the Vegas Golden Knights knocked out the Oilers in Edmonton with a 5-2 victory in Game 6 on May 14 to reach the Western Conference final. A Canadian team had reached at least the third round in the last two postseason­s.

The Golden Knights, who missed the playoffs last season, are heading to the third round for the fourth time since they joined the league in 2017-18.

Jonathan Marchessau­lt scored three consecutiv­e goals in the second period as the Golden Knights rallied after Edmonton had taken a 2-1 first-period lead on goals by Connor McDavid and Warren Foegele.

“We definitely have a good thing going on. We’re just halfway through our goal here,” Marchessau­lt told ESPN. “We got the win here against probably one of the best teams in the league and we’ve got to keep it going.”

What’s next for Las Vegas?

They’ll have home-ice advantage against the Dallas Stars or Seattle Kraken, who played Game 7 after press time.

The Golden Knights missed the postseason last season because of major injuries. This season, they were the Western Conference’s top team despite major

injuries in net. Adin Hill, who made 38 saves on May 14 and is 3-1 with a 2.19 goals-against average and .934 save percentage, will be the goaltender in the conference final after replacing injured Laurent Brossoit in the second round.

Jack Eichel is the team’s leading scorer in his first appearance in the playoffs. Captain Mark Stone has been a force after returning from injury. Marchessau­lt scored all five of his goals in the second round and has six points in his last two games. The Golden Knights are a deep, dangerous team.

What’s next for Edmonton?

They took a step back after reaching the conference final last season.

“Obviously when you start a season, you’re in it to win it … and if you don’t complete that, it just feels like a failure or a wasted year almost,” Oilers forward

Leon Draisaitl told reporters. “Yeah, it hurts.”

But the Oilers will remain a force because of the presence of Hart Trophy finalist McDavid, who had the league’s best season since the 1990s, and Draisaitl (13 playoff goals). The team had three 100-point scorers (also Ryan Nugent-Hopkins), plus a record-setting power play.

Defenseman Evan Bouchard will get a big raise after taking the point on that power play after the trade of Tyson Barrie and getting 17 points in 12 playoff games. Trade deadline acquisitio­n Mattias Ekholm is signed for another three seasons.

Unrestrict­ed free agents include Nick Bjugstad and Mattias Janmark.

Jack Campbell struggled in net after arriving as a free agent, but that allowed Stuart Skinner to emerge as a rookie of the year finalist.

 ?? WALTER TYCHNOWICZ/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Golden Knights right wing Jonathan Marchessau­lt scores one of his three second-period goals Sunday against the Oilers.
WALTER TYCHNOWICZ/USA TODAY SPORTS Golden Knights right wing Jonathan Marchessau­lt scores one of his three second-period goals Sunday against the Oilers.

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