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Game Notes: Canucks @ Oilers G1

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Photo credit:Bob Frid-USA TODAY Sports
Jason Gregor
2 years ago
The Edmonton Oilers are a good team. How good remains to be seen, but after years, heck decades, of being a non-contender, the Oilers are once again a legitimate playoff contender.
After one year in the all-Canadian (North) division, Edmonton returns to the Pacific Division and with Vegas, Vancouver, Calgary, Los Angeles, San Jose, Anaheim and the newest NHL franchise, the Seattle Kraken.
Many feel the overall depth of the Pacific division isn’t as deep as the other divisions. Will that be accurate? We find out starting tonight.
— Edmonton has the 10th best points% in season openers going 22-15-4 for .585P%. Vancouver is 9th at .590 with a record of 27-18-3-2. Edmonton is 11th best on home ice at .661 (31-9-3), while Vancouver is 8th best all-time at .529 (9-8).
—This is the third consecutive season the Oilers begin the campaign with a home game against Vancouver. In 2019, Edmonton defeated Vancouver 3-2, while last season the Canucks won 5-3. Connor McDavid mentioned yesterday he didn’t like how they started last year. I sense they will be more focused and determined tonight. They seem like a team on a mission to prove they can play a more consistent game most nights.
— After three seasons with very little improvement in lowering their goals against at 5×5, Edmonton made some progress last season. They allowed 2.18 in 2018, 2.14 in 2019 and 2.16 in 2020. It dropped to 2.07 in 2021. Not a massive drop, but some progress. Between 2018-2020 they were 28th in GA at 5×5, and last year they finished 21st. To be middle of the pack, 16th, they likely need to be around 1.90-1.95 GA/game at 5×5. If they do that they will have a great chance to win the division, because their offence will be better.
— McDavid is looking to become only the 19th player in NHL history with five 100-point seasons. If he does he will join a select group.
5: Paul Coffey, Jaromir Jagr and Denis Savard.
6: Sidney Crosby, Phil Esposito, Dale Hawerchuk, Jari Kurri, Guy Lafleur, Mark Messier, Bobby Orr, Joe Sakic, Bryan Trottier and Steve Yzerman.
7: Mike Bossy and Peter Stastny
8: Marcel Dionne
10: Mario Lemieux
15: Wayne Gretzky
— McDavid sits 8th on the Oilers all-time scoring list with 574 points in 407 games. He should be 5th when the season ends. He will pass Doug Weight (577), Ryan Smyth (631) and Coffey (669).
— Leon Draisaitl is currently 9th with 506 points. He should pass Weight, and has an outside shot to pass Smyth if he scores 126 points.
— Darnell Nurse is 5th all-time in goals by an Oilers defenceman with 45. He will pass Steve Smith (46) this season and then will trail Kevin Lowe (74), Charlie Huddy (81) and Coffey (209). Nurse will likely finish 2nd all-time on this list. He is currently 10th all-time in points (157) and if he scores 32 points he will be 5th at season’s end.
— Odd stat that might only interest me: McDavid was only the 1st star of the week once last season, and that was the final week of the season. Somehow he was only first star of the week once, over the 17-week period, despite leading the NHL with 105 points in 56 games. He was the 2nd star four times. As I said, I know it might only interest me, but it seems odd. Like his ridiculous production became ho-hum. Or simply the NHL wanted to make sure others won.
— Edmonton needs more scoring at 5×5 from forwards other than McDavid and Draisaitl. The 3rd-12th forwards combined for 59 goals in 56 games last season. Here is a quick comparison to the other rest of the NHL:
WEST3-12FTOP 2FEAST3-12FTOP 2F
COL8131WSH8127
VGK7927TOR8045
WPG7429PITT7923
NSH7019NYI7329
CGY6826NYR7324
DAL6826NJD7021
LA6817PHI6927
MIN6833OTT6824
SJ6625FLO6728
ANA6224TB6625
STL6124BOS6430
VAN6023CAR6424
EDM5932MTL6330
ARI5822DET5817
CHI5727CBJ5723
SEANANABUFF5219
Edmonton was 26th in goals from forwards 3-12, while they were 3rd in goals from their top-two goal scoring forwards. It isn’t just the bottom six forwards who need to produce more. The Oilers need more goal scoring depth from the other four players in the top-six.
— Zach Hyman will add some scoring punch, so too with Warren Foegele and Derek Ryan on the third line. Jesse Puljujarvi seems poised to have a career year. Ryan Nugent-Hopkins and Kailer Yamamoto are the two top-six forwards who need to produce more at 5×5. Both are capable of better offensive production than they produced last year. The bottom six needs to chip in more as well, and on paper Edmonton has more offensive punch in their bottom six. We’ll see if they can produce as a group.
— Edmonton did have great 5×5 goal scoring production from their blueline last season.
WESTDMENEASTDMEN
VGK29PITT24
DAL24WSH23
EDM24FLO23
VAN20TB20
COL19NYR19
CGY18CAR17
ARI18CBJ17
STL17BUF16
CHI16PHI15
NSH15OTT13
MIN15BOS13
SJ14MTL13
ANA14DET12
LA10NYI11
WPG6NJD11
SEANATOR7
They were tied for 2nd overall with Pittsburgh and Dallas with 24 goals. Only Vegas had more with 29.
— Edmonton did finish 9th overall in goals for (115) at 5×5, but they were 21st in goals against with 116. I expect they will score more goals at 5×5 this season, and with more puck possession, in theory they should spend less time defending which should reduce their goals against. Will that happen?
— Edmonton currently has seven new players on the roster: Hyman, Foegele, Ryan, Brendan Perlini, Tyler Benson, Duncan Keith and Cody Ceci. When they announce the Colton Sceviour contract it will be eight. Those are the new faces while Dominik Kahun, Alex Chiasson, Jujhar Khaira, Gaetan Haas, Tyler Ennis, James Neal, Ethan Bear, Adam Larsson and Caleb Jones are out. Josh Archibald is on LTIR and his status for the season is undetermined at this time.
— Vancouver has 13 new faces currently on the roster. They brought in Chiasson, Jason Dickinson, Justin Dowling, Connor Garland, Juho Lammiko, Nik Petan, Vasily Podkolsin, Kyle Burroughs, Oliver Ekman-Larsson, Brad Hunt, Tucker Poolman, Luke Schenn and Jaroslav Halak.
They moved on from Jake Virtanen, Antoine Roussel, Zack MacEwan, Jayce Hawryluk, Jimmy Vesey, Travis Boyd, Tyler Graovac, Loui Eriksson, Nate Schmidt, Alex Edler, Travis Hamonic, Olli Joulevi and Braden Holtby. Brock Boeser is on IR to start the season and when activated I’d guess Burroughs will be reassigned. That is a significant change for the Canucks, and you wonder if it will take some time to find chemistry among the D pairings and forwards.

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