5-3 Oilers FINAL
GAME REVIEW
Edmonton punched through 5–3, a win that mattered as much for its spine as its scoreline. With Draisaitl officially shelved for the rest of the season, the Oilers had to manufacture offense by committee, and they did it with a kind of stubborn, blue‑collar urgency—waves of pressure, second efforts around the crease, and depth minutes that actually tilted the ice. McDavid drove pace, but it was the supporting cast that kept the game from sagging when San Jose pushed back. Edmonton’s transition game looked sharper than it has in weeks, and their special teams—while not flawless—won enough key moments to keep the Sharks chasing.
San Jose didn’t fold; they countered with the same opportunistic bite that split the first two meetings. They found pockets of space, forced turnovers, and twice dragged the game back within reach. But every time the Sharks threatened to turn it into a track meet, Edmonton answered with a heavier shift or a timely finish. The Oilers closed it out like a team trying to prove they can survive without one of their pillars—tightening the neutral zone, leaning on structure, and refusing to let the night slip into chaos. It wasn’t pretty, but it was the kind of win that tells you something about who they intend to be down the stretch.
Connor Ingram earned an honourable mention on a night that could’ve easily exposed the Oilers’ vulnerabilities. With Draisaitl out for the season and the team reshuffling its identity on the fly, Ingram gave them exactly what a rising No. 1 is supposed to give—calm edges, controlled rebounds, and the kind of late‑sequence poise that keeps a game from tilting the wrong way. San Jose found their looks, and a couple of them were high‑grade, but Ingram’s reads were sharp and his timing never wavered. It wasn’t a highlight‑reel performance; it was a professional one, the kind that quietly stabilizes a bench and lets the skaters lean into their structure.
Goaltenders
Pavol Regenda (9) M. Ferraro (13), A. Gaudette (8)
Zach Hyman (29) M. Savoie (17), M. Ekholm (31)