7-2 Stars FINAL
Dallas didn’t just set the tone—they detonated it. From the opening draw the Stars played like a team with a score to settle, stacking three goals in the first period and stretching it to five before Edmonton could catch a breath. Jason Robertson carved up the night with a four‑point performance, Jamie Benn threw his weight and his finish around like it was 2014 again, and Miro Heiskanen quietly conducted the whole thing with three primary assists. It was fast, mean, opportunistic hockey—Dallas winning races, winning battles, and winning every argument that mattered on the scoreboard.
Edmonton finally pushed back in the second, clawing two goals out of the chaos, but the game had already hardened into a Stars‑shaped mold. The third period devolved into the kind of chippy, post‑whistle trench work that happens when frustration meets a runaway scoreline. Dallas still added two more for emphasis, closing out a 7–2 win that felt even more lopsided in real time. For the Stars, it was a statement. For the Oilers, it was a night to burn the tape and move on,
Goaltenders