Thursday, 4 December 2025

Revisiting the Canucks’ early-season moves under Rutherford and Allvin

Ahead of the 2024-25 season, the consensus around the Vancouver Canucks was that there was positivity and potential — two things that weren’t exactly present by the end of the previous campaign. The team’s health and tone had improved from just months earlier, and while no one was necessarily projecting it to win a Presidents’ Trophy or Stanley Cup, there was realistic hope and belief it could improve upon its last result — a 90-point finish that left the Canucks two spots out of a wild card — and get back into the playoffs.

But 27 games into the season, the Canucks are not on track to get where they want to be. A lacklustre first quarter (and a bit) has seen the club go 10-14-3 for a .426 points percentage, sitting second last in the Pacific Division and 30th overall. Vancouver is also dead last in goals allowed and hasn’t strung together two consecutive wins since the middle of October.

Although a plethora of injuries taking out chunks of the lineup at times and the adjustment to a new head coach’s system could be considered factors in their poor results, it’s still just not good enough. Especially when the Canucks find themselves at a critical juncture in their history, with generational star defenceman Quinn Hughes becoming extension-eligible in the summer of 2026, all while speculation persists surrounding his desire to play with his brothers in New Jersey.

The Canucks have repeatedly dismissed the notion of a tear-it-all-down rebuild, including recently when team president Jim Rutherford told Sportsnet it’s “not something that we’re going to look at doing,” even if Hughes were to leave, instead referring to the team as being “in transition.”

And while they may be averse to the idea of taking the time and patience required for a rebuild, Rutherford and general manager Patrik Allvin have shown they don’t shy away from making big moves when needed. Rutherford, in particular, has built a reputation over his 30-year career of jumping the market and completing blockbuster deals. That was reaffirmed last week when Elliotte Friedman reported the Canucks have made it known they are willing to listen to offers on veteran players, excluding Hughes, and that their goal is to get younger. 

Since then, a handful of names have been speculated upon as possible trade pieces, with Kiefer Sherwood and Conor Garland emerging as the leading rumoured candidates. During his Saturday Headlines segment on Hockey Night in Canada this past weekend, Friedman noted that “there’s nothing imminent in Vancouver” but added that “there’s some teams who are very interested — like Minnesota, Boston, potentially Philadelphia (and) others.” He also said the Canucks appear content to let the market come to them and are “more than comfortable to take their time.”

So, while we’re in watch-and-see mode for what Rutherford and Allvin might have up their sleeves in the near future, let’s take this opportunity to review the most notable early-season deals the duo has orchestrated ahead of the NHL trade deadline during their tenure in Vancouver.

Jan. 30, 2023
To Vancouver: Anthony Beauvillier, Aatu Raty and a 2023 conditional first-round pick
To NY Islanders: Bo Horvat

Why it happened: Bo Horvat, the Canucks’ former captain, and J.T. Miller were due to become UFAs at the same time (2023 off-season). With both due major extensions, it was believed one would have to be re-signed at the expense of the other. While the initial consensus was that it would be Horvat who re-signed, J.T. Miller signed first and entered the 2022-23 season with an extension signed that would start the following year. Horvat’s future remained uncertain and a career year further priced him out, so the Canucks opted to trade him to secure something in return rather than letting him walk in the summer for nothing.

How it’s turned out: Beauvillier spent parts of two seasons in Vancouver before being sent to the Chicago Blackhawks for a 2024 conditional fifth-round pick in another early-season move in November 2023. Raty remains in the organization and has had stints in both the AHL and NHL, winning a Calder Cup with Abbotsford in 2024-25, but has emerged as a full-time NHLer this season. The pick Vancouver acquired in the Horvat trade was later flipped, when the Canucks acquired defenceman Filip Hronek from the Detroit Red Wings in March, just days ahead of the 2023 trade deadline, an elite-level defenceman to partner with Hughes on the top pairing.

Nov. 30, 2023
To Vancouver: Nikita Zadorov from the
To Calgary: 2024 fifth-round pick and a 2026 third-round pick

Why it happened: At the time of the trade, Vancouver was sitting second in the Pacific, primed for a playoff push, and injuries to defencemen Carson Soucy and Guillaume Brisebois (their fifth and sixth options) made blue-line depth an area of need. As Allvin described him then, “Nikita is a big, strong and mobile two-way defenceman who will bring more physicality to our backend.” After shedding Beauvillier’s $4-million cap hit, the Canucks had the means to acquire Zadorov, who had publicly requested a trade from the Flames. 

How it’s turned out: In the 54 games Zadorov played for Vancouver, he recorded 14 points, was a plus-six, posted 102 penalty minutes and 124 hits. In 13 playoff games as the Canucks advanced to Game 7 of the second round, he added another eight points, was plus-three, and chipped in 26 penalty minutes and 45 hits. His shooting percentage jumped from 8.2 per cent in the regular season to 19 per cent in the post-season, and his average ice time climbed from 17:04 to 20:09. Zadorov’s combination of performance and personality quickly made him a fan favourite, but it also raised his value as a pending UFA. Unable to reach a contract agreement with the Canucks, he signed a six-year, $30-million deal with the Boston Bruins that summer.

Jan. 31, 2024
To Vancouver: Elias Lindholm
To Calgary: Andrei Kuzmenko, Hunter Brzustewicz, Joni Jurmo, a 2024 first-round pick and a 2024 conditional fourth-round pick

Why it happened: The Canucks had climbed to first in their division and were tied with the Bruins for top spot in the league. Looking to bolster a roster that was now all but assured a playoff berth, Vancouver completed another trade with Calgary — this time acquiring forward Lindholm for a much larger package than the Zadorov trade, headlined by Kuzmenko, who had fallen out of favour with former head coach Rick Tocchet, and the 2024 first-round pick. At the time, Allvin described Lindholm as “a really solid 200-foot player, makes us harder to play against and gives our coaching staff options in the top six.” 

How it’s turned out: Lindholm began his tenure in Vancouver as a top-six winger but was eventually moved into a third-line centre role. He missed seven games due to injury, and overall his regular-season performance — just 12 points with a minus-six rating in 26 games — was underwhelming. In the playoffs, he redeemed himself, playing the hero at times and taking on a pivotal shutdown role in others, finishing with 10 points in 13 post-season games. His most valuable contribution was in the faceoff circle, posting a team-leading 58.7 per cent in the regular season and 51.2 per cent in the playoffs. Like Zadorov, Lindholm became a UFA on July 1 and did not re-sign with the Canucks, instead inking a seven-year, $54.25-million contract with the Bruins.

Jan 31, 2025
To NY Rangers: J.T. Miller, Erik Brannstrom and Jackson Dorrington
To Vancouver: Victor Mancini, Filip Chytil and a 2025 conditional first-round pick

Why it happened: Does this one really need an explanation? The Canucks’ 2024-25 season was a rough one, marked by a lot of drama that culminated in the club moving on from Miller amid off-ice issues and subpar on-ice production. It ended a months-long narrative about Miller and Elias Pettersson, in which there was a rumoured rift between the top two centremen that was impacting the team. Friedman reported at one point that all solutions were on the table — trading one, both, or neither — and Rutherford added fuel to the fire when he interviewed with The Globe and Mail, saying, “It certainly appears like there’s not a good solution that would keep this group together.” The solution they ultimately chose was to send Miller to the Rangers and keep Pettersson.

How it’s turned out: Though the trade put an end to the negative attention and drama surrounding the team, Vancouver — almost a full year later — has still not managed to find a reliable replacement down the middle, and the absence of a true second-line centre remains a noticeable weakness as the team struggles this season. As for the players acquired from New York, Mancini has split his time between the AHL and NHL. Chytil, who had a history of head injuries before arriving, has continued to deal with them in Vancouver as well, including what is presumed to be a concussion at present. Since January of last year, he has appeared in only 21 games for the Canucks because of injuries.

Jan 31, 2025
To Vancouver: Marcus Pettersson and Drew O’Connor
To Pittsburgh: Melvin Fernstrom, Vincent Desharnais, Danton Heinen and a 2025 conditional first-round pick

Why it happened: Just hours after trading Miller, the Canucks opted to use their newly acquired first-round pick as trade capital, immediately sending it to the Penguins, along with a trio of players, in exchange for defenceman Marcus Pettersson and forward Drew O’Connor. Pettersson’s name had been linked to Vancouver for some time leading up to the deal, and he fit the profile of the solid second-pairing blue-liner the Canucks had been seeking. Of Pettersson, Rutherford told The Athletic, “He’s just what we need, in my opinion… He’s just a very, very steady defensive defenceman. You need to have guys like that if you want to win in this league.” And with Heinen and Desharnais moving the other way, the Canucks were also able to part with two players who never quite found a fit within the organization.

How it’s turned out: Both Pettersson and O’Connor were pending UFAs when they arrived in Vancouver, and each was quickly re-signed — Pettersson to a six-year, $33-million contract and O’Connor to a two-year, $5-million deal — a sign of how strongly management felt about their fit moving forward. In 58 games between this season and last with the Canucks, Pettersson has recorded 16 points, is a plus-11 and averages over 20 minutes of ice time, and he’s become a regular on the penalty kill. O’Connor, meanwhile, has also appeared in 58 games, putting up 21 points, and this season he’s operating at a 21.9 shooting percentage and a 64.3 faceoff percentage while taking on PK duties of his own.



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Wednesday, 3 December 2025

Why now is the best time to bet on the Panthers to make playoffs



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Tuesday, 2 December 2025

Brock Boeser adjusting to Canucks’ centre woes: ‘It’s hard’

LOS ANGELES — Brock Boeser has seven primary assists this season, and the five centres he has played with on the Vancouver Canucks’ second line have none.

Without a National Hockey League playmaker down the middle, winger Conor Garland had been creating scoring chances for Boeser from the opposite side of the line, but now Garland is hurt, too.

“That’s the definition of this year,” Boeser lamented after Monday’s practice in El Segundo, Calif. “I mean, it’s hasn’t been the greatest of luck. And finally, when you start to get some confidence, something like this happens.”

After missing Saturday’s 2-1 overtime loss to the Los Angeles Kings with an undisclosed injury, Garland was scheduled to fly home to Vancouver Monday afternoon for further medical evaluation while the Canucks travelled to Denver to take on the force of nature that is the Colorado Avalanche.

At 10-13-3, the Canucks are not yet through the first third of their season, and Garland is already out of the lineup for the third time after missing only two games the last three years.

With Boeser now playing left wing for the first time in his career, Kiefer Sherwood is the new second-line right winger alongside centre David Kampf, who does not yet have a point in six games since joining the Canucks following his contract termination in Toronto.

An experienced, respected fourth-line NHL centre, Kampf has spent the last five games in the middle of the Canucks’ second line.

Filip Chytil started the season as the second-line centre and scored three goals before suffering another serious concussion in Game 6. Bottom-six centre Teddy Blueger was injured the same game. Neither has played since.

Between Chytil and Kampf, inexpensive pickup Lukas Reichel had 12 games at second-line centre before playing himself right out of coach Adam Foote’s lineup. There was also one game for Aatu Raty and two for Max Sasson, both recent graduates of the American Hockey League.

As CanucksArmy.com reported, in 26 games, the Canucks’ various second-line centres have contributed one secondary assist — a defensive-zone point for Reichel in a Nov. 8 win against the Columbus Blue Jackets.

Say what you want about Canucks president Jim Rutherford, but the Hall-of-Fame manager was excruciatingly accurate when he said after last season that Vancouver needed to add a top-six centre and that it would be expensive, “but it’ll also be very expensive not to get one.”

The team never acquired one, and here it is three points from the bottom of the NHL.

It’s hard for the Canucks to feel positive these days, although the energy and enthusiasm of Nils Hoglander in his first practice since pre-season ankle surgery helped the mood on Monday.

“It is hard,” Boeser said. “Like, it’s hard. But we’re coming to the rink. . . I think we’ve played some good games. Guys show up and work hard, and we’re following our structure, and then we’ll lose a tight game. I feel like that’s happened a lot. And after it happens to you a few times, it gets frustrating.

“When I was playing with a guy like Gar, you know, he’s really good at creating space for himself and for others. He’s such a good playmaker. That’s kind of where I think we’ve gotten a lot of those (scoring) chances, but obviously he’s hurt now.

“I do feel like I’ve been making a lot of plays — more so than in past years when I was playing with J.T. (Miller) all the time. That was a little different. I do feel like I’ve created a lot of stuff, but I don’t think I have a secondary assist yet. They’re all primary, which is crazy. But, I mean, it doesn’t really change anything. Like, I’ve got to shoot the puck. I know I need to score goals for our team. . . and it doesn’t matter who’s in the middle. I’ve got to show up and try to have a good game and try to produce and not get scored on.”

Considering who has been available as Boeser’s centre, the longest-tenured Canuck is actually having a decent season with nine goals and seven assists in the 24 games he has played.

But the Canucks have just two wins in their last 10 games (2-5-3), and in the last eight, Boeser has one goal. The 28-year-old, however, has had a pile of scoring chances among his 21 shots on target during this time.

He looked dangerous in all three games in California, where the Canucks went 1-1-1.

“I’ve been right there,” Boeser said. “When you’re getting chances, that means you’re close. When you’re not getting chances, that’s when I know I’ve got problems.”

Minus a major move by Allvin for centre, Boeser making a U-turn in the hour before free agency opened on July 1 and re-signing in Vancouver for seven years and $50.75 million was the biggest hockey news of the summer on the West Coast.

But things haven’t quite gone as Boeser and Canucks had hoped.

The critical mass of injuries, headlined by starting goalie Thatcher Demko and two of the team’s three NHL-proven centres, contributed to inconsistency in systems play. And since general manager Patrik Allvin informed other teams that the Canucks are willing to move their UFA-eligible players, trade conjecture is becoming deafening. Sherwood, the team’s leading goal-scorer with 12, has been at the epicentre of rumours whirlwind.

“To be honest, I haven’t really heard much because I’m not really on social media,” Boeser said. “I’ve overheard some of it. I know it can be tough. I’ve gone through (trade rumours) and I’ve had a lot of noise around me, and it can be hard. As much as you don’t want to think about it, it’s definitely in the back of your head and might affect you a little bit. But at the end of the day, it’s part of the business, and you’ve got to push forward and push through.”

Two months into his seven-year extension, is Boeser worried where the Canucks might be headed?

“If my brain tries to go there. . . I try not to go there just because we’ve been dealt with some tough luck,” he said. “You know, look at our centres. We’ve had Heats and Teddy out pretty much the entire year. That hurts. Those guys are important pieces to our team, and I thought we were playing some good hockey when we did have those guys in the lineup. You know, I think everyone’s trying hard. Even last game, I thought we worked hard and we were right there. We just ended up on the wrong side of it.”

• With minor-league callup Nikita Tolopilo summoned home for the birth of his child, the Canucks recalled goalie Jiri Patera to join them in Colorado and back up Kevin Lankinen.

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HOW THE CANUCKS PRACTISED

Forwards

Kane-Pettersson-Lekkerimaki
Boeser-Kampf-Sherwood
O’Connor-Sasson-DeBrusk
Bains-Raty-Karlsson

Defencemen

Hughes-Hronek
M. Pettersson-Myers
Pettersson Jr.-Willander

Goalie

Lankinen

Extras

Hoglander (non-contact)
Reichel
Joseph



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Raptors passing chemistry test on way to surprising early-season run

TORONTO — Does chemistry beget winning or does winning beget chemistry? 

It’s the chicken-or-egg argument of team sports. 

The Toronto Raptors have certainly enjoyed great chemistry through the quarter-point of their season — and great success, too. 

After 21 games, they are 14-7 and just 2.5 games out of first place in the Eastern Conference, in a virtual tie with the New York Knicks, who easily handled the Raptors — a fatigued and short-handed version — on Sunday night. Even the most optimistic prognosticators would not have anticipated the Raptors hitting those benchmarks at this stage, certainly not after they started the season 1-5. 

And while the additions of Brandon Ingram and Sandro Mamukelashvili, the availability of Immanuel Quickley after he played just 33 games last season and the internal improvement by the likes of Jamal Shead have given Toronto a significant boost of talent, the team seems to be over-indexing in the stuff that is harder to quantify but just as important over the course of a long NBA season. 

“Our team chemistry, I think that’s the most important part,” said Scottie Barnes the other day, when asked about what elements had contributed to the Raptors’ torrid November. “Our chemistry, no matter wins or losses, we’re all just super connected, laughing, smiling, just having fun. Our chemistry on this team is the best that I’ve been around in my five years in the league.

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“It keeps growing every single day. There’s a lot of laughing, a lot of great moments, making memories on and off the floor. We really enjoy each other’s presence. So, when we get on the floor, obviously, it’s gonna start clicking. We all trust each other. We’re all happy for each other when someone succeeds. That’s what it’s all about.”

Is that why the Raptors are fifth in the NBA in assist percentage, which is just one reason Toronto boasts the NBA’s sixth-best offensive rating, even after a four-game offensive mini-slump that coincides with RJ Barrett going down with a knee injury?

Is caring sharing?

Barnes was speaking on Friday, when the Raptors’ then nine-game winning streak and stretch of 13 wins in 14 games was still intact and before they blew a 12-point lead with just under six minutes to play against Charlotte on Saturday and ran out of gas against the Knicks the night after.

The test of any team bonds comes when the losses mount. And although it’s not like the Raptors are about to hit a wall by any stretch, the wins project to be a little more difficult to come by in the coming weeks.

Toronto returns home to host the Portland Trail Blazers on Tuesday night. Portland isn’t exactly a juggernaut (8-12) but is a big group that ranks No. 2 in offensive rebound rate, which has been a thread running through several of the Raptors’ losses this season. They lost the offensive rebound battle 25-14 against the Knicks, who rank sixth in offensive-rebound rate, and 17-12 against Charlotte, which is fifth. Five of the Raptors’ seven losses this season have come against teams in the top 12 in offensive-rebound rate. 

Next, Toronto hosts the surging Los Angeles Lakers (15-4), who now feature two players — Luka Doncic and LeBron James — the Raptors have never had an answer for, before matchups with Charlotte, Boston (11-9) and the Knicks (13-6) next Tuesday in an NBA Cup quarterfinal.

With the way the Raptors have performed this season, there is no reason not to expect them not to be able to rattle off three, four or five wins, especially since all five games are at home. But it presents a stiffer test than playing Brooklyn, Indiana, Charlotte and Washington (combined winning percentage of .194) seven times in a 10-game span.

However things turn out, the hope and expectation is the Raptors are built for it.

In the glow of the Raptors’ grinding win over Cleveland last week — their eighth straight at the time — I asked Shead how or why the Raptors were able to keep from getting carried away with their success, especially coming off a 30-win season in which the Raptors didn’t win their 14th game until the end of January.

“It’s the same way we didn’t get swept up in the losing last year,” the Raptors’ second-year guard said. “We stay one game at a time, stay positive with each other and keep the message the same: it’s about winning, it’s about playing hard, it’s about doing all the right things to put us in position to win.”

It hasn’t been accidental.

Raptors head coach Darko Rajakovic has been preaching a consistent, process-based approach since he arrived before the 2023-24 season. How effective it was or if it mattered was hard to measure when Toronto won just 55 games over two seasons.

But that didn’t prevent Rajakovic from emphasizing togetherness, accountability, incremental progress and sacrifice as themes. The message has been constant. It’s why he’s had the team gather for off-season mini-camps in Las Vegas, Spain and Miami the past two summers. Perhaps just as importantly, the Raptors have tried to identify players who are open to that kind of team experience and appreciate the approach.

“It’s not really (surprising), I feel like, just because of how much time we spent together over the summer,” said Quickley, who has been with the organization since being acquired from the Knicks in December 2023, when asked about the team’s family-like vibe. “We were together, probably, I’m sure, more than any other team, and I think that’s been big for us.”

And why have the Raptors been able to bring their team together during what is officially the off-season?

“A lot of our guys, they’re so young, they don’t know any better,” Quickley said. “Most of the teams, when they get older, like seven-to-10 years in the league, they’re like, ‘OK, I’m going to do my own thing,’ but our guys are still coming from college, so they believe everyone is supposed to be together all the time, but it’s pretty cool to have everyone together and everyone enjoys each other’s company, on and off the floor.”

But it’s not just a group dynamic. There aren’t many practices or shootarounds that go by where Rajakovic doesn’t seek out one or two of his players for some one-on-one conversations. He routinely goes over video with Ingram, and meets with Barnes and everyone else on his roster regularly. It means that when he’s challenging the group, everyone knows where he’s coming from.

“He brings the energy every single day,” said Ingram, who is enjoying peak production in his 10th NBA season after being acquired from New Orleans in February. “He’s the leader of our team. He makes sure we bring the energy to practice, games, shootarounds. He makes sure that we have it every single time we step on the basketball floor. For me, that’s the best part about being here.”

It’s level of buy-in that Rajakovic has worked hard to foster but won’t take credit for.

“You know, guys, their character is the baseline for everything, and our front office did really good job of identifying (the) right people,” Rajakovic said. “And now our job as leaders, as adults, is to put them in situations that they’re gonna thrive and learn each other, and then they can build that camaraderie, on the court and off the court. That’s a process, and that process never ends. It’s always evolving, it’s always changing, and it’s always, for all of us, learning.”

Coming off two losses in two games and a schedule that will only demand more of them as the season unfolds and expectations rise, the Raptors head into the next stage of the calendar with plenty of lessons learned but doubtless more to come.



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Oilers hope homestand sparks latest turnaround

“You can be the judge of whether you believe in us or not. I think we’ve proven it year over year.” — Zach Hyman on his Edmonton Oilers.

EDMONTON —  It was The Tragically Hip that warned us of the perils of ruminating on yesterday’s accomplishments.

You can’t be fond of living in the past,” advised the great Canadian poet Gord Downie. “’Cause if you are then there’s no way that you’re going to last.”

So how does that apply to an Oilers team that has stunk the joint out for three consecutive autumns, yet embarks on a five-game homestand Tuesday with full confidence that they are ready to pull the same rabbit out of that same old top hat from which the last two seasons were magically rescued?

“Our locker room has been through it before,” Zach Hyman said on Monday, the day before Edmonton was to play just their 10th home game in 27 starts. “We’ve been through adversity, through the outside noise, through all the chaos that comes with it…

“We’re used to it. We know we have to play better, and you can be the judge of whether you believe in us or not. I think we’ve proven it year over year.”

Right around this time two seasons ago, with Kris Knoblauch just a few weeks into his tenure behind the Oilers’ bench, Edmonton walked into Washington and won 5-0. They never looked back, going 44-15-5 from that game onwards.

“More Oiler-like,” Hyman assessed that evening in D.C. “Great special teams, great PK, great power play. Great saves that kept us in it early. Great even strength play…

“It’s the kind of game that you look up to and say ‘Yes. This is how we should play.’”

Roughly a year later, back in the glue again with a middling 10-9-2 record on Nov. 22, Mattias Ekholm was speaking to the concept of how a Stanley Cup finalist can make just a few changes, yet arrive to start the season like a bunch of total strangers.

“Ultimately, it’s about how you gel as a team,” said Ekholm. “Things can look great on paper, and you’re thinking, ‘Oh, they’re just going to take off where they left off, right?’ Well, it doesn’t work that way.

“It can change in a heartbeat. It could be one guy here or one guy there, and then all of a sudden, nothing works.”

Today, the Oilers find themselves somewhere in the same postal code of both 2023 and 2024, a couple of points removed from the Western Conference playoff picture on American Thanksgiving.

Edmonton is an 11-10-5 team, though it somehow resides just four points south of Pacific Division leading Anaheim. A two-time Stanley Cup finalist, the Oilers haven’t won three games in a row yet, have the worst team save percentage in the NHL (.877), and are ranked 30th in goals allowed per game at 3.58.

All of that can be assuaged, however, with a solid homestand against Minnesota, Seattle, Winnipeg, Buffalo and Detroit.

“When the world’s caving in, you take a look at things, and it’s still right there within our grasp,” said veteran centreman Adam Henrique. “I know you (media) guys love Thanksgiving and those sorts of things. But it’s there, and we know that.”

With the goaltending under intense scrutiny here, Stuart Skinner authored a shutout on the road in Seattle Saturday, the latest in a growing number of solid wins that were supposed to begin the turnaround, but never did.

The Edmonton power play went two-for-two in that game, the penalty killers a perfect six-for-six.

If ever there was a springboard game, this was that.

“We’ve had a few of those where we want to get going,” Henrique said. “It was a complete game. Now, being at home here for a little bit, we’ve got to step on the gas.”

“It’s a big, big stretch for us,” echoed Hyman, “to come home, establish our game at home. We’re usually very good at home. It’s a fun building to play in, and we’ve got the most amazing fans, so it makes it easy to come to the rink every day and play.

“It’s going to be a good stretch for us to get back on track.”

It always has been, around this time of year.

You wonder how long the Edmonton Oilers can keep living this way?



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How Celebrini, Bedard make life harder for Team Canada’s decision makers



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Monday, 1 December 2025

Why Eagles’ struggling offence needs to get ground game going



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Revisiting the Canucks’ early-season moves under Rutherford and Allvin

Ahead of the 2024-25 season, the consensus around the Vancouver Canucks was that there was positivity and potential — two things that weren...