Edmonton Oilers send Kings to brink of elimination with dominating 3-1 win in Game Five: Cult of Hockey Player Grades
The Edmonton Oilers have erased a 0-2 start to take a 3-2 series lead on the L.A. Kings after a commanding performance in Los Angeles in Game Five.
The Oilers utterly dominated the Kings. The shots were 19-4 in the first goalless period of the series. It was 33-12 after two as Edmonton's hard press continued. And the shot clock ended 46-22, with the scoreboard 3-1. That, against the best home team in the NHL. The score flattered L.A., frankly. It should be stated that Darcy Kuemper was all that stood between that score and a beat-down. He was spectacular. At the other end, Calvin Pickard was more than good enough.
The Kings now teeter on the brink of elimination, as the Oilers come home to Rogers Place for a potential clinching Game Six.
CALVIN PICKARD. 7. Made his first save on the Power Play nine minutes in. Fought off a Doughty wrister through traffic in the opening frame. Two saves on Foegele to start the second, a toe stop and another up high. A high tip he had no chance on for the 1-0. Got just enough of a Kempe breakaway attempt to keep it 1-1. Looked very much like Byfield put his hand on the puck in the crease but there was no call. Nice glove grab on Kempe with 3:35 remaining. Another important save on Fiala late. Stopped twenty one of twenty-two. All he does is win!
CONNOR McDAVID. 7. Absorbed eight hits in the first frame. A slick cross-ice pass to Bouchard who was stoned by Kemper in the first. Hard wrist shot forced Kuemper to squeeze a puck hard, keeping it 1-1. Great chance on a wrapround but it bounced inches wide. Neat feed up to Nugent-Hopkins at the attacking blueline with the 3-1 empty net goal. Seventy percent CF V5v5.
RYAN NUGENT-HOPKINS. 7. A clear that killed off the Kings first period man advantage. Lost faceoff on the 1-0. Created a dangerous chance in front with a tidy backhand from below the goal line. Third period PK clear. Chip shot on net late in the third. Clutch blocked shot late then salted it away with the empty netter.
ZACH HYMAN. 7. Drew a penalty with a near knee-on-knee from Kuzmenko. Physical, four hits in the first period alone. Received an excellent Nuge pass right in front but could not drain it. Another four hirs in the second. Six shots. Ten hits to end the night.
JAKE WALMAN. 6. A great feed inside to Corey Perry who just missed the tap-in. 'Third assist' with a high clear of the zone which led to the Oilers break and the 2-1 at the other end. Jumped on a loose puck in his own end on the PK and cleared it safely away. Blocked shot same shift.
EVAN BOUCHARD. 6. Robbed by Kuemper's lightning glove off a fine pass through coverage from McDavid. Gained the zone on McDavid's terrific chance at 9:52 of the second. Excellent stick to clear a loose puck from the slot early in the third. High Dangers 8-4 on his watch. Led the D-corps at 22:14 TOI.
LEON DRAISAITL. 7. Fed Perry for a PP chance in the first. A splendid one-touch pass to spring Walman and Perry early in the second. Sprung Perry for a Grace 'A' in the second. Denied by Kuemper off a great backhand pass by Perry. A zone clear and then a pass out of the zone to earn the secondary assist on the 3-1. Great game. Seventy-four percent CF 5v5.
VIKTOR ARVIDSSON. 5. Shot from the doorstep nine minutes into the first, off a turnover. Terrific play along the wall to spring McDavid and Bouchard for a Grade 'A' chance. Hammed a shot on net, the rebound from which Janmark slammed home for the 2-1.
VASILY PODKOLZIN. 5. A hard play behind the net created a chance for Arvidsson in front. Nice pass to Arvidsson on Janmark's eventual 2-1 goal. Had six hits.
BRETT KULAK. 5. A point shot rattled dangerously around the crease late in the second. Solid defensive play on Byfield behind his own goal line. Excellent stick disrupted a Kempe sortie deep into the third. HDSC 3-5 5v5.
TY EMBERSON. 6. Heavy hit on Kopitar in the first. A couple clears on a first period PK. Two more clears on a third period kill. Seventy-seven percent on draws. Particularly good PK work on the night.
ADAM HENRIQUE. 6. A backhand and then forehand chance point-blank in the first. Fed a pass over to Frederic on a 2-on-1 but no dice.
EVANDER KANE. 7. Attempted bank shot his first shift. Another chance close in late in the opener. Ripped home a wrist shot which deflected high and in for the 1-1. Landed Kempe on his pants hallway through the second. Got a stick on a Hyman rebound and nearly snaked it home. Blocked shot late. Five shots, four hits.
CONNOR BROWN. 5. Clear on the first period PK. Shorthanded 2-on-1 but could not find the insurance marker.
DARNELL NURSE. 5. Took a second period trip on which the Kings scored the 1-0. Took a hooking minor in the third, too. HDSC's 7-5 5v5. Two shots, three blocks, four hits in 22:15.
JOHN KLINGBERG. 7. Two tremendous plays with the puck early in the second frame, the second of which set up Kane fore the 1-1. High skill play beating Doughty off the wall. Solid defender stop on Fiala late in the second. Beat by Kempe a shift later.
TRENR FREDERIC. 5. Early shot from the high slot which handcuffed Kuemper. Terrivic chance on a 2-on-1 late in the second but Kuemper got just enough of it to send the puck wide. Hard play on the wall in his own zone for a clear.
MATTIAS JANMARK. 6. Roughing call in the first but his mates killed it off. Harf to the net and rewarded with a rebound off Kemper's blocker for the 2-1. Turned out to be the game winner. His second of these playoffs after scoring but two all regular season long. Three shots, two hits.
COREY PERRY. 6. Chipped a pass from Draisaitl off the goalie's glove and wide on the PP in the first. Will see that gaping open net that he missed in the early second frame in his sleep tonight. Tooka nifty backhand move to the net halfway through the second. Terrific backhand pass to Leon for a chance.
The series is now 3-2 Oilers. Game Six is Wednesday.
Now on Bluesky @kurtleavins.bsky.social. Also, find me on Threads @kleavins, Twitter @KurtLeavins, Instagram at LeavinsOnHockey, and Mastodon at KurtLeavins@mstdn.social. This article is not AI generated.
STAPLES: Newcomer D-man bolsters Edmonton Oilers blueline
LEAVINS: Ultimate edge that should give the Oilers the edge
STAPLES: Miracle Oilers comeback evens LA series at two
In memory of Bruce McCurdy, 1955-2025.
Don't miss the news you need to know — add EdmontonJournal.com and EdmontonSun.com to your bookmarks and sign up for our newsletters here.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
NBA, NHL Ratings Swoon Can Only Be Fixed by Game 7
A question for all those casual hockey fans—an oxymoron, but we'll let it slide—who have yet to overcome their apathy for the Oilers-Panthers Stanley Cup Final rematch: What's it going to take to get you to tune in to this nerve-chewingly entertaining series? Four games in, and everything's all tied up at 2-2 after Thursday night's lunacy, which featured Edmonton rallying to undo a 3-0 first-period deficit and Florida's Sam Reinhart potting the tying goal with just 19.5 ticks left on the clock. This marked the third game of the series to require bonus cantos, two of which were triggered by a goal that knotted up the score within the final 20 seconds of regulation. Advertisement More from If tight, evenly matched games aren't your thing—but for the 6-1 blowout in Game 3, this Final has been riveting throughout—perhaps all the scoring might convince you to engage with the NHL title tilt. With 32 goals, the series now stands as the fourth-highest scoring Final through four games in the history of the league. TNT Sports thus far hasn't been able to capitalize on this bonkers matchup, and while the unspectacular TV ratings aren't terribly shocking, the deliveries are nowhere near commensurate with the quality of hockey on display. Through the first three telecasts, TNT/truTV's coverage is averaging 2.41 million viewers per night, down 28% compared to ABC's analogous stretch (3.34 million) one year ago and off 8% from the pace set when the Warner Bros. Discovery networks carried their first Final in 2023 (2.63 million). Little wonder. A rematch between a Sunbelt squad and a Canadian team with no stateside market representation was already going to be a drag on the ratings, but the absence of a big-reach broadcaster really seems to have put the squeeze on the NHL's numbers in the States. Cord-cutting is showing little sign of letting up, as the legacy pay-TV bundle lost another 12% of its subscriber base in the first quarter, bringing overall penetration down to just 36% of all U.S. TV households. Advertisement Since TNT Sports covered the five-game Golden Knights-Panthers series in 2023, some 13.1 million subscribers have ditched the bundle, an erasure that obviously isn't working in the rights-holder's favor. And while virtual MVPDs are doing their bit to offset at least some of those cable/satellite/telco-TV defections, the arrows are still pointing downward. (According to MoffettNathanson estimates, approximately 65.2 million consumers subscribe to some sort of video package; given a universe of 125.8 million U.S. TV homes, overall pay-TV penetration is now at 52%. When cable was at its peak in 2012, more than 90% of Americans bought the bundle.) If there's a silver lining to these cable-throttled Final deliveries, it's that the NHL is guaranteed at least a six-game set. (And given the dizzying back-and-forth nature of this year's series, a seventh game all but seems predestined.) Historically, the sixth frame is when even the lesser-watched series tend to see a significant uptick in deliveries, and a seventh telecast always draws a crowd. The deciding game in last year's Final scared up 7.66 million viewers on ABC, a stampede that boosted the overall series average by 16%. Meanwhile, the Oilers' quest to hoist Canada's first Cup since 1993 has kept fans to our north locked in, as Sportsnet/CBC are averaging 4.19 million viewers through Game 3. All told, the Final is averaging 6.6 million viewers across the NHL's home nations. As hockey awaits the boost that accompanies a long series, basketball faces a similar narrowing of interest. Through Wednesday night's broadcast of Game 3 of the NBA Finals, ABC is averaging 8.95 million viewers, down 23% versus the year-ago 11.6 million. Advertisement While a protracted series would go a long way toward beefing up the TV numbers, the turnout thus far has been blighted by a combination of small markets and relatively anonymous players. With a combined home-market reach of 1.99 million TV households, No. 25 Indianapolis and No. 47 Oklahoma City represent just 1.6% of all U.S. TV homes. (New York City alone boasts 7.49 million TV homes, or 6% of the national base.) In advance of Wednesday night's game in Indy, NBA commissioner Adam Silver dropped in on NBA Countdown, where he tried to find the upside to the ratings crunch. Silver noted that Games 1 and 2 were the 'highest-rated programs in May and June so far on television,' before going on to say that the hometown fans have been captivated by the Pacers-Thunder series. 'We have two markets … that are completely captured by the Finals,' Silver said. 'Every store you go to, there's signage. Everybody on the street is wearing team colors. I've been doing this for a long time; I don't remember being in two markets where it feels so dominant to have these games.' That's all very well and good, but 98.4% of Americans don't reside in either market. If the Finals are to get a ratings bump, the Basketball Gods will need to serve up a seventh game. And ABC wouldn't say no to a full slate, either; a half-dozen games should generate north of $250 million in ad revenue, while precedent suggests that a seven-night run will yield more than $300 million in marketing spend. Advertisement If the Finals grind on for the full seven games, the bonus deliveries will help pull ABC out of a deep ratings hole; through the first three broadcasts, the TV numbers are on pace to underperform every previous title series but for the 2020 bubble matchup. That said, Game 7s aren't easy to come by. In the last quarter-century, only four series have required a seventh frame, with the average audiences ranging from 19 million for the Spurs-Pistons clincher in 2005 to 31 million for the second Cavs-Warriors series nine years ago. As with the NHL, every day the 2024-25 season gets extended is a win for the NBA. That said, if Indiana wins Game 4, the Thunder may not be long for this world. Once heavily favored to win the title at -700, Oklahoma City now faces a 2-1 deficit and has seen its odds whittled down to -230. If nothing else, this suggests that bettors are expecting a protracted run, as OKC will need at least six if they're to get past a confounding Pacers squad. Game 4 tips off Friday night at 8:30 p.m. ET. Best of Sign up for Sportico's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Luis Robert Jr.'s RBI forceout
Three Former Blue Jackets Win The 2025 Stanley Cup The Florida Panthers won the Stanley Cup for the second straight year last night, beating the Edmonton Oilers also for the second straight year. 1:08 Now Playing Paused Ad Playing


New York Post
6 hours ago
- New York Post
NHL futures bettors can take advantage of postseason chalk
Gambling content 21+. The New York Post may receive an affiliate commission if you sign up through our links. Read our editorial standards for more information. The NHL prides — and markets — itself on parity. Hockey is a chaotic, unpredictable sport, and the perception is that anybody can win. On any given night, in any given season, we are to expect the unexpected in the National Hockey League. And while there are plenty of upsets and surprises in the regular season, the playoffs were incredibly chalky. Only one underdog (Dallas Stars over Colorado Avalanche) advanced in Round 1, and there were no more upsets until the Stanley Cup Final, when the Panthers lifted the trophy after starting their best-of-seven series with the Oilers as a slight +110 pooch Not exactly David vs. Goliath. Brad Marchand of the Florida Panthers kisses the Stanley Cup. Sam Navarro-Imagn Images In 2023-24, it wasn't all that different. All eight favorites advanced in Round 1 last spring, and just two teams (Rangers over Carolina Hurricanes in Round 2 and Oilers over Stars in Round 3) pulled an upset during the playoffs. This is not normal. In the previous playoffs, there was an average of six upsets, including a handful of real shockers. Going back to the 2013-14 season, when the NHL realigned and changed playoff formats, the average Opening Night price of the Stanley Cup winner is +1250, with just two teams cashing at anything above 15/1 odds. The 2023-24 Florida Panthers started the season as a 20/1 outsider, while the 2018-19 St. Louis Blues began that campaign at 30/1. The last time there was a true long-shot winner was back in 2005-06, the first season after a lockout wiped out the entire 2004-05 campaign, when the Carolina Hurricanes stunned everyone at 60/1 odds. It's also worth noting that the betting landscape (not just in hockey, but all sports) has changed significantly over that time, which has caused future odds to tighten. It was a rarity to see more than two or three teams start the NHL season with single-digit prices, even a couple of years ago, but now things are incredibly bunched up at the top of the board. There are five teams with Stanley Cup odds less than 10/1 odds at FanDuel Sportsbook for the 2025-26 campaign, and there are four more under 20/1. Your next Stanley Cup champion will likely come from that cohort. That sounds like an obvious thing to say, but it is worth bringing up because of the reputation that hockey has among sports fans and bettors. Betting on the NHL? The NBA playoffs are supposed to be chalky and predictable, while the NHL's postseason is assumed to be full of upsets and Cinderellas. That just isn't the case anymore. The NBA postseason have had five upsets (and potentially a sixth if the Pacers win Sunday) this season, and there were 11 more in the previous two tournaments. Vladimir Tarasenko and the St. Louis Blues won the Stanley Cup as a 30/1 outsider. AP The last six teams to make it to the NBA Finals have had average odds of 22/1, and that includes last year's Boston Celtics, who were +400 on Opening Night, and the current favorite Oklahoma City Thunder, who owned +500 odds to start this season. The last six teams to make it to the Stanley Cup Final have had average odds of 16/1, and no teams that entered the season at 20/1 or longer have made it to the championship series since the Montreal Canadiens did so in the shortened 2020-21 campaign. Maybe the pendulum will swing back the other way and we'll see some chaos in 2025-26, but as it stands right now, the NHL's reputation for being unpredictable is fake news. Why Trust New York Post Betting Michael Leboff is a long-suffering Islanders fan, but a long-profiting sports bettor with 10 years of experience in the gambling industry. He loves using game theory to help punters win bracket pools, find long shots, and learn how to beat the market in mainstream and niche sports.