Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Maple Leafs vs Oilers

 5-2  Leafs FINAL in Edmonton





GAME TIME

Goaltenders

Stolarz , Leafs | Ingram, Oilers

Scoring

1st Period

2nd Period

Matias Maccelli (9) TOR J. McCabe (15)

Jake Walman (5) EDM J. Samanski (2), J. Roslovic (9)

Matthew Knies (14) TOR N. Roy (15)

3rd Period

Kasperi Kapanen (4) EDM  V. Podkolzin (12), T. Emberson (10)
 
John Tavares (20) PPG TOR  W. Nylander (34), M. Knies (32)
 
Matias Maccelli (10) PPG TOR  M. Domi (22), O. Ekman-Larsson (26)
 
Bobby McMann (19) EN TOR  A. Matthews (22)

5-2 Maple Leafs FINAL Edmonton 

Josh Samanski gets his second NHL assist in the second game in a row, also off the faceoff. He's the Oilers player on the left, and he backhands the puck to Walman who scores on a shot from the blueline. edmontonloilerscupchase.blogspot.com @followers
He's the Oilers player on the left, and he backhands the puck


Edmonton Oilers - Toronto Maple Leafs - Feb 3, 2026 | NHL.com

NHL.COM Recap Maple Leafs vs Oilers  Feb 3, 2026

Sunday, February 1, 2026

Oilers Finally Blink in Three‑Goalie Challenge

It Tells You Everything About The Oilers Cup Math


Edmonton Oilers putting Cal Pickard on waivers isn’t a “transaction.” It's more like a confession. A quiet, administrative way to stop pretending it's a three‑man job.

Pickard didn’t lose the net. It moved on without him. Once Tristan Jarry returned from injury and Connor Ingram started looking like a real NHL goaltender instead of a placeholder, the Oilers’ crease became a two‑chair table. Pickard was left standing, helmet in hand, waiting for a seat that wasn’t coming back.

His late stage numbers didn’t help. A .871 save percentage and a 3.68 GAA don’t survive a Cup chase unless you’re carrying a halo or a legacy ring. Pickard had neither. What he did have was last spring’s goodwill — the “steady veteran who didn’t flinch in the playoffs” aura — but goodwill doesn’t override roster math in February.

This move is the Oilers admission that everyone was waiting to hear: the three‑goalie experiment was a stall tactic, not a strategy. It bought them time, not clarity.

Suddenly  there is clarity of a sort 

Jarry is the starter. Ingram is insurance. 

Could someone claim Pickard on waivers? Most certainly. The whole NHL is seeing what an outstanding Penguin Skinner has made. Pickard was shoulder to shoulder with Skinner for two seasons, including two Stanley Cup Championship runs. 

A veteran with playoff reps and a cheap ticket always draws looks. But the Oilers are betting the league sees the world their way: a goalie who can help in a pinch, but not one you rearrange your season for.

The real story isn’t Pickard. It’s the Oilers choosing direction. Cup chases aren’t built around sentimentality, nor is any team in the NHL. They’re built on decision-making. Edmonton just made one.

Still, Pickard. Deserves all the credit in the world for his tenure as an Edmonton Oilers championship contender. He was key on a great team for two seasons, plus half of one.



Florida Freeze‑Out: Tampa Tops Boston 6–5

BRUINS VS LIGHTNING    6-5 Lightning SO

 NHL’s Wildest Outdoor Game Yet

Prologue


The NHL hasn’t solved the climate crisis. What they’ve solved is how to brute‑force winter into existence for three hours at a time, using industrial refrigeration, insulated decking, humidity control, and enough electrical draw to power a small neighbourhood. It’s spectacle, not sustainability — a technological party trick, not a planetary solution. But that’s the charm of it. The league can’t fix the planet, yet it can conjure a playable sheet of ice in the middle of Florida and dare physics to object.

At ice level, it feels like a prairie January. Twenty feet up, it’s Florida again. 


That contrast is the magic trick — the NHL manufacturing winter inside a Gulf Coast football stadium, turning Tampa Bay into a physics experiment with a scoreboard. It’s outdoor hockey in a place where the only ice most people see comes in a plastic cup, and somehow the league makes it work.

The NHL’s Stadium Series stop in Tampa Bay isn’t just a novelty; it’s a technological flex. Hockey outdoors in Florida sounds like a punchline, but the league has turned it into a proof‑of‑concept: if you can build a stable sheet of ice in a humid Gulf Coast stadium, you can build one almost anywhere on Earth.

The secret is the league’s traveling refrigeration armada — a convoy of chillers, glycol pumps, insulated decking, and humidity‑control rigs that together create a micro‑climate colder than the surrounding city. At ice level, it’s a manufactured winter. Twenty feet up, it’s still Florida. That engineered contrast is the entire show.

The rink sits on a layer of insulated flooring that blocks heat from the ground. Beneath the surface, miles of glycol‑filled piping circulate through a massive refrigeration plant parked outside the stadium. Air movers and dehumidifiers carve out a crisp, dry pocket around the playing surface so the ice doesn’t melt into slush. It’s not just cold — it’s precision‑built cold.

And that’s why everyone working near the rink is dressed like they’re in Winnipeg, while fans in the stands are in hoodies and ballcaps. The NHL didn’t just bring hockey to Tampa; it brought winter.

This is the league’s long game: hockey as spectacle, hockey as export, hockey as a traveling technological achievement. If they can do it here, they can do it anywhere. Florida today. Mexico City tomorrow. Outdoor hockey on the equator? At this point, you wouldn’t bet against them.

Kicker

Jake Guentzel sealed it in the shootout, a 6–5 Tampa Bay win on a night where physics, structure, and sanity all took the night off. Kucherov had four points and a breakaway with thirty seconds left in OT to end the NHL’s Florida winter experiment, but the puck wouldn’t cooperate. So the game drifted into the most artificial finish possible inside the most artificial winter the league has ever built — and Guentzel delivered the final word.

Saturday, January 31, 2026

Wild vs Oilers

Fail to Rewrite Season Series

7-3 Wild FINAL  in Edmonton







This was Edmonton’s last chance to take something from the season series — and more importantly, to prove they can impose their game on a team that has twice dictated terms. They don’t need perfection. They just need to finally beat Jesper Wallstedt.
NHL Stanley Cup Chase: Oilers vs Wild

GAME TIME

Goaltenders

Wallstedt, Wild | Jarry, Oilers / Ingram in 3rd Period

Scoring

1st Period

Leon Draisaitl (27) EDM Unassisted
 
Joel Eriksson Ek (14) PPG MIN Q. Hughes (47), J. Wallstedt (1)
 
Ryan Nugent-Hopkins (13) EDM C. McDavid (61), E. Bouchard (45)

Kirill Kaprizov (30) PPG MIN J. Eriksson Ek (24), M. Zuccarello (23)
 

2nd Period

Mats Zuccarello (9) MIN R. Hartman (11)

Quinn Hughes (5) MIN B. Faber (23)

Vladimir Tarasenko (14) MIN M. Foligno (5), D. Yurov (13)
 

3rd Period

Tyler Pitlick (2) MIN Y. Trenin (12), V. Hinostroza (7)
 
Jack Roslovic (15) EDM D. Nurse (11), J. Samanski (1)

Brock Faber (12) MIN M. Boldy (27), J. Middleton (11)

NHL.COM Condensed Game Wild vs Oilers  Jan  31, 2026

Friday, January 30, 2026

Jan 29 Comeback Alters Oilers Tempo of 2026

Statement Signaling Contender


Theme 1 is The Slow Burn. Rogers Place felt like 'the room' was holding its breath for 40 minutes. The Oilers trailed 3–0, not because Oilers lacked initiative, but because the game slipped into an early‑season fog, structure was missing, passes died in the neutral zone, shots wide, and the crowd waited for someone in the line-up to light a fuse. This was the first theme of the night: the slow burn, the coiling tension that makes an explosion more shocking.

Theme 2 was The Tilt. The 3rd period didn’t start with a miracle. It started with a tilt, and subtle shift in pace, including intention. Rule Number 1. The puck belonged to somebody in blue and orange. Oilers tightened the high-speed turns, shortened routes to the puck, and played physically intense, so much so it forced the Sharks back on their heels.

Every comeback comes with a moment when the ice stops being a shared experience, and suddenly becomes owned, and this moment happened when the puck dropped to start the 3rd period.

Theme 3 is the, "We Believe" Machine, the moment Ingram left the Oilers net for an extra attacker, which  happened twice, the building went into a state of suspended animation and nobody was sagging with resignation. Never seemed to occur to anybody since the Oilers didn't allow the Sharks one chance at the puck. And the tempo rose. Higher. The Oilers for all the volatility in their offense, is a belief engine unlike any other in the league.

McDavid circling high.  Draisaitl anchoring either flank.  Hyman carving space where nobody believes it exists.  Bouchard waiting for an exact heartbeat when the Sharks’ weak‑side is flattened, and there's a straight 100 mph to the twine.

Watching this wasn’t chaos since it took a full 20 minutes to transpire. This was high speed, fighter jet choreography. When they they buried the puck three times unanswered, 59 seconds left, the building detonated.

For Theme 4 it was the inevitable crushing defeat foisted on the Sharks, because yes some goals feel lucky.  Others feel earned. Then there's the feel of the unstoppable, the inevitable. The overtime winner belonged to the third category.  

By the time Hyman buried the OT winner, the Sharks ceased to defend. They were in the equivalent of triage. Oxygen had been sucked off their bench. The Oilers had taken the game’s narrative, and beat them to every punch in real time. This is the theme of inevitability you see in a contender. The Oilers revealed it tonight. There was the sense that once the Oilers start rolling downhill, gravity becomes a teammate. 

In  Theme 5, this game is reframed the Season. Nobody panicked about goaltending. Nobody panicked about defense. A comeback like this isn’t about the two points. It was a demonstration of hockey supremacy. It’s a reframing in the discussion of the betting stakes, the paddock, and belly at  the bar, $50 riding on the wave which is genuinely unstoppable. 

If you saw the game, you know the Oilers reached a pivot point in the architecture of their season. Nothing looks impossible on the scoreboard. Not the time, not the numbers, not the penalties. Who is gonna argue?

The Oilers searched for a signature moment for three years, something to prove they are coming for that Cup, and nobody is going to stop them This was that moment. Remember it. This win is remembered in April when the stakes sharpen. This is the theme that matters in making championship identity.  This moment was forging the contender. The resilient, relentless version that believes in winning and wills it into being.

There's the Closing Theme,  the sign of this season having a night of revelation. Nobody is drifting.  Everybody is rising.  And when they rise, they do it with majestic force. I think this team could do a record amount of damage to opposition on the run to the Stanley Cup. I am talking about sweeping their way to the end. Remember you heard it here first.

Monday, January 26, 2026

Ducks vs Oilers

 Score 7-4 Oilers FINAL Edmonton

Four Oilers defensemen not named Bouchard score in the second period -- NHL RECORD

Click to expand and watch the full 11 goal sequence

Prediction Number 1: Oilers make the most commanding run to the Stanley Cup in modern history. Clean sweep, every series all the way to the end. You heard it here first.

Saturday, January 24, 2026

Thursday, January 22, 2026

Penguins vs Oilers

6-2 Penguins FINAL

Three goals in 30 seconds in the first 3 minutes of the game for the Penguins, and they never looked back.

Game Summaries and Articles of 2025-26 NHL Season -- A Fan Perspective on Edmonton Oilers

Search Oilers Games Back to 2024-25

ARTICLES

2025 2025-26 2025-26 Season 2026 NHL Season Anaheim Ducks Battle of Alberta Blue Jackets Bobby Orr Boston Bruins Bouchard Buffalo Sabres Calgary Flames Calvin Pickard Canucks Carolina Hurricanes Chicago Blackhawks Christmas Colorado Avalanche Columbus Blue Jackets Connor McDavid ConnorMcDavid Daccord Dallas Stars Demko Detroit Red Wings Draisaitl Draisaitl records Edmonton Oilers Edmonton Oilers Blog Edmonton Oilers Calgary Flames EdmontonOilers Florida Florida Panthers Game Preview GameSummary goals Goaltender GOAT Golden Knights Grok Preview history Hockey Hockey Recap home game Joey Daccord JonathanLekkerimaki Josh Samanski Kraken Kraken Offense LA Kings Las Vegas Golden Knights Leon Draisaitl Long Island NY Matthew Schaefer Matty Beniers McDavid Minnesota Wild moneyline Montreal Canadiens Nashville Predators NHL NHL 2024-25 NHL 2025 NHL 2025-26 NHL Analysis NHL Game NHL Game Preview NHL Preseason NHL Prospects NHL trades NHL2025 NHLRosterCuts NJ Devils NY Islanders NY Rangers October 25 2025 October 26 2025 Oilers Oilers Comeback Oilers Depth Oilers goalie trade Ottawa Senators Outdoor Game Ovechkin Overtime Pacific Division panic Penguins Philadelphia Flyers Pittsburgh Penguins Power Play Pre-season raod game road game Rookie season Roster rroad game San Jose Sharks scored scoring highlight Seattle Seattle Kraken SJ Sharks Skinner St. Louis Blues Stanley Cup chase Stanley Cup Finals Stu Skinner Stuart Skinner Tampa Bay Lightning Toronto Maple Leafs Trent Frederic Tristan Jarry Utah Mammoth Vancouver Vancouver Canucks VancouverCanucks Waivers Washington Washington Capitals Winnipeg Jets Zac Hyman Zach Hyman