SCORING
Saturday, February 28, 2026
Oilers vs Sharks
Thursday, February 26, 2026
Oilers vs Kings
SCORING
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
Oilers vs Ducks
Score 6-5 Ducks FINAL
GAME TIME
Goaltenders
SCORING
Ryan Nugent-Hopkins (14) EDM C. McDavid (63), M. Savoie (11)
Ian Moore (3) ANA J. Harkins (3), R. Johnston (11)
Got it — holding the thread exactly where you want it. Since you’re ready to pivot into a game summary, I’ll build it straight off the live NHL GameCenter data from your open tab nhl.com and keep it clean, disciplined, and narrative‑ready for your editorial workflow.
Edmonton at Anaheim — Game Summary (through 10:31 of 3rd)
Scoreline
Edmonton 5, Anaheim 5
Shots: ANA 25, EDM 21 nhl.com
How the game unfolded
- Oilers jump early: Roslovic scores 13 seconds in, Nugent‑Hopkins doubles it at 9:03. Edmonton controls pace, up 2–0.
- Ducks answer: Moore cuts it to 2–1, but Edmonton restores control late in the second with Hyman (tip) and Bouchard (wrist shot) for a 4–2 lead.
- Anaheim’s surge: Carlsson and Zellweger strike 85 seconds apart early in the third to tie it 4–4.
- Edmonton’s pushback: Savoie on the power play restores the lead at 5–4.
- Anaheim refuses to go away: Sennecke ties it 5–5 at 6:39.
nhl.com
What the numbers say
- Faceoffs: Edmonton 58.3% — a quiet but real territorial edge.
- Special teams: Both clubs 1-for on the PP; Edmonton’s goal came at a critical moment.
- Giveaways: Edmonton 19 to Anaheim’s 11 — the Ducks’ pressure is forcing mistakes.
- Hits: Anaheim 18–17 — physical but not chaotic.
nhl.com
Momentum profile
Anaheim owns the third period: three goals, heavier shot volume, and more clean exits. Edmonton’s top-end skill is still generating, but the Ducks’ young core — Carlsson, Zellweger, Sennecke — is dictating tempo.
Stakes for the final stretch
- Edmonton needs a stabilizing shift from the McDavid line or the Ekholm/Bouchard pair.
- Anaheim is playing freer, faster, and with nothing to lose — the next mistake decides it.
Sunday, February 22, 2026
United States for win in Men's Hockey Olympic gold!
The United States men’s hockey team ended a 46‑year wait in Milan, claiming Olympic gold with a 2–1 overtime victory over Canada that instantly entered the sport’s canon. It wasn’t just a win; it was a generational reset, the kind of moment that redraws a nation’s relationship with its own hockey mythology. Jack Hughes delivered the decisive strike, slipping the puck through Jordan Binnington’s pads just 1:41 into the 3‑on‑3 overtime frame, a goal already being spoken of in the same breath as the 1980 Miracle on Ice. [NHL](https://www.nhl.com/news/united-states-canada-2026-olympics-gold-medal-game-recap-february-22-2026)
A Businesslike Step Toward the Real Test
Canada enters the third game, this one against France, with one job: handle their business and move on. No drama, no surprises. On paper, this is the softest landing spot of the tournament—a roster stacked with NHL pedigree against a French side still building its international footprint. It’s the kind of matchup where the scoreline matters less than the habits.
Thursday, February 19, 2026
Coffey Arrives to Keep Oilers Blue-Line Mission Oriented
As NHL Olympic Break Is Winding Down
For most NHL teams, the Olympic break is a pause button. For the Edmonton Oilers, it became an opportunity to take quiet advantage by adding Paul Coffey to coach to the on-ice practice schedule.
Coffey’s return to the bench during a long schedule break before the runup to the 2026 Stanley Cup Finals is no surprise. He reshaped the Oilers’ defensive identity over two seasons, and his influence has been visible in the group’s cohesion this season.
As the season griud is re-launched in a clear-cut drive for playoff position, the Oilers don’t need their defense to be flashy—they need it to be reliable, confident, and capable of supporting the team’s high-octane identity.
Coffey can perfect their handle of the puck in the breakout, and strengthen the way they tighten the circle around netminders. It will improve the complex task of working with Jarry, Ingram, Pickard, with Coffey working hands‑on during the Olympic break. He adds another layer to the story.
He keeps the Edmonton home-fires burning. There’s a hockey sense that comes with Coffey’s presence in Edmonton. He’s not an abstract Hall of Famer wearing a parachute. His experience is visible in skating, teaching, and reinforcing Edmonton's winning hockey tradition in real time.
For a defense corps that has become one of the tightest units on the roster, consistency matters. It keeps the team connected to a cohesive identity. Players have been shown to respond to Coffey. It may be the way he interprets a defenseman's role in the game. He is the bomb in teaching defensemen to contribute offensively from the blueline.
February has been erased and replaced with a practice schedule, an artificially created Olympic lull. It's a chance to harmonize on moving up the ice, honing the trust in other players' puck-skills, and supporting the four offensive units working to take puck possession into the offensive zone.
Clarity has been a major part of the Oilers’ stabilized blue line, and why younger players in particular have taken visible steps forward. The roles are clear.
The long break could have been a momentum killer. Instead, Coffey’s renewed involvement turns it into a prestaging event. The practices have purpose, the room stays focused on the task, and the pace stays elevated. The group stays connected to coaching staff who help unlock their best potential in the most important stretch of hockey this season.
There’s no guarantee in the NHL, every team jockey's for position in February. But the Edmonton Oilers have something tangible: a defense corps that believes in what it’s doing, and a coaching staff whose credibility and calm have become part of the team’s bench strength. Coffey’s presence through the Olympic break isn’t a footnote. It’s a quiet advantage for a team anchored on winning tradition.
If the Oilers defense come out of the break playing as a cohesive unit, improved over the break, don’t be surprised.
Saturday, February 14, 2026
Thursday, February 5, 2026
NHL Penguins Newcomer Drops A Couple Surprises Today
What did I just see?
An NHL Shooting Star?
Every so often, this league coughs up a moment that feels like a flash, a streak, a brilliant interruption in the grind of an 82‑game season. The kind of thing you miss if you’re busy checking line combinations or wondering why the power play still can’t enter the zone.
Tonight, Avery Hayes was the NHL flash.
He didn’t glide in with the polished glow of a first‑rounder or the smug certainty of a blue‑chip prospect. No, Hayes arrived the way shooting stars do: suddenly, unexpectedly, and with enough brilliance to make you wonder if you really saw what you think you saw.
His first NHL shot found the back of the net, a clean, seamless strike from a kid who’s spent more nights in minor‑league rinks than anyone cares to count. Nine minutes later, he buried another, and for a brief stretch of NHL hockey, the whole focus seemed to turn toward him. Not because he was supposed to be the story, but because he refused to let the moment pass without leaving a mark.
That’s the thing about shooting stars. They don’t ask permission. They don’t wait for the right circumstances. They explode because they have to, because the window is small and the sky is crowded and the universe doesn’t hand out second chances to be seen.
Maybe Hayes sticks. Maybe he fades back into the dark corners of the depth chart. The league is a machine that works that way. But here’s the part the old sportswriters never admit out loud: every once in a while, a shooting star doesn’t disappear. Every once in a while, it circles back, brighter the second time, proving it wasn’t a fluke, just the first glimpse of something taking shape.
Should young Avery Hayes light up the Penguins’ scoreboard again, make sure we don’t act surprised.

