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Oilers GM Bowman willing to work on McDavid's timeline for extension
Oilers GM Bowman willing to work on McDavid's timeline for extension

Winnipeg Free Press

time21 hours ago

  • Sport
  • Winnipeg Free Press

Oilers GM Bowman willing to work on McDavid's timeline for extension

EDMONTON – Edmonton Oilers general manager Stan Bowman is ready to work on Connor McDavid's timeline for a contract extension. 'Connor is the most important player in the league,' Bowman said Friday. 'He's our captain, he's our leader. He's certainly our top priority and he's earned the right for us to be respectful of his timing. 'He's driving that process.' McDavid is heading into the final year of his contract and becomes eligible to sign an extension on July 1. The Oilers captain, however, said Thursday after the Oilers' exit meetings that he's in no rush to make a decision about his future. McDavid also explained that winning is his top priority, which doesn't surprise Bowman. 'He wants to win,' Bowman said. 'He just wants to win the cup, that's all he cares about. He's not driven by statistics or points or records or money.' Bowman and head coach Kris Knoblauch met reporters for an end-of-season news conference three days after Edmonton's loss to the Florida Panthers in the Stanley Cup final. The GM said the Oilers will look to make changes during the off-season, particularly on offence and in goal. 'We're not going to bring the same guys back,' he said. 'The area with the least amount of change is going to be our defence. Up front, we need some different players. I wouldn't expect wholesale changes; we're not going to have nine or 10 new players. 'Forwards and the goalies are the ones we're going to evaluate the most deeply.' Beyond McDavid, the Oilers' most pressing matter is signing star defenceman Evan Bouchard, who's set to become a restricted free agent July 1. Bouchard said Thursday he wants to stay in Edmonton. So did forwards Corey Perry and Trent Frederic. The Oilers, according to multiple reports, have a deal in place for Frederic. Bowman wouldn't confirm the contract, but he called Frederic 'a pretty unique player in the league.' 'There's not a lot of guys that have that combination of his age, his experience, his competitiveness, size, physicality,' Bowman said of the player he acquired from the Boston Bruins before the NHL trade deadline. 'And I think when you add it all up, he could bring a lot to the team.' The 27-year-old Frederic had one goal and three assists during the playoffs, albeit with 85 hits. Frederic produced 40 points during the 2023-24 season with the Bruins. Bowman previously said he feels Frederic could be a top-six winger or a third-line centre. 'Incredibly competitive, great teammate, great guy,' said Bowman. 'He brings an element that I think you need, which is very competitive, fearless. Nobody's going to push us around. 'He's really impressive to have someone with his skill set that can play three different positions. When we talked to him yesterday, he said he likes to play centre.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 20, 2025.

NHL trade rumor: Edmonton Oilers eye bold eight-year deal in less than 24 hours after Stanley Cup loss
NHL trade rumor: Edmonton Oilers eye bold eight-year deal in less than 24 hours after Stanley Cup loss

Time of India

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • Time of India

NHL trade rumor: Edmonton Oilers eye bold eight-year deal in less than 24 hours after Stanley Cup loss

Edmonton Oilers during Game Five of the 2025 NHL Stanley Cup Final (Credit: Getty Images) The Edmonton Oilers were eliminated from the Stanley Cup Final barely a day ago, but they are already shifting focus to offseason business. According to reports from Andy Strickland of FanDuel Sports Network and Jim Matheson of the Edmonton Journal, the Oilers are in advanced talks to sign forward Trent Frederic to an eight-year contract extension. The deal is expected to carry an average annual value around $4 million. It's a bold move, considering Frederic's limited impact during the postseason and the fact that the Oilers have major cap decisions looming. Frederic played in 22 playoff games but produced just one goal and four points. Salary cap implications of Frederic deal raise eyebrows Edmonton currently holds just under $12 million in cap space, with 19 players signed for next season. With restricted free agent Evan Bouchard likely to command a sizeable raise and captain Connor McDavid eligible for an extension soon, dedicating a large portion of cap room to a bottom-six forward like Frederic has sparked debate. Frederic is coming off a two-year, $4.6 million deal with a $2.3 million cap hit. If the rumored extension at $4 million AAV materializes, it would represent a significant raise for a player projected to fill a third-line role. His best season came with Boston in 2023-24, where he notched 18 goals and 40 points. Stan Bowman wastes no time reshaping Oilers roster This deal could be the first domino in what promises to be a pivotal offseason for the Oilers. The decision to jump on a max-term agreement with Frederic so soon after the Stanley Cup loss signals urgency from management to define the team's direction before free agency opens on July 1. Read more: NHL trade rumor: Mika Zibanejad's New York Rangers future sparks chatter after Irma Zibanejad calls out false reports As the Oilers regroup from their Cup Final disappointment, all eyes will be on whether Bowman's gamble on Frederic is a savvy long-term investment or a premature commitment that limits future flexibility. Game On Season 1 kicks off with Sakshi Malik's inspiring story. Watch Episode 1 here

NHL trade news: Edmonton Oilers offer max-term deal to Trent Frederic just hours after Stanley Cup loss
NHL trade news: Edmonton Oilers offer max-term deal to Trent Frederic just hours after Stanley Cup loss

Time of India

time2 days ago

  • Sport
  • Time of India

NHL trade news: Edmonton Oilers offer max-term deal to Trent Frederic just hours after Stanley Cup loss

Edmonton Oilers center Trent Frederic (21) (Credit: Getty Images) After losing Game 7 of the Stanley Cup Final, most teams would take a breath before launching into contract talks. But Edmonton Oilers general manager Stan Bowman appears to be wasting no time. Reports now confirm that the team is working on a max-term eight-year deal with forward Trent Frederic, a move that's catching many off guard. Frederic, who was acquired mid-season from the Boston Bruins, played a minor role in the Oilers' postseason, notching only four points. He appeared in just one regular-season game after arriving in Edmonton. Despite his limited involvement, Bowman is clearly banking on Frederic's upside and long-term value. Trent Frederic's past stats show potential but raise questions In 2023–24 with the Boston Bruins, Trent Frederic had a breakout campaign, scoring 18 goals and tallying 40 points across 79 games. Before his injury this season, he managed eight goals and 15 points in 57 games. Those numbers aren't elite, but they are steady for a middle-six forward. Edmonton likely sees Frederic as a valuable depth piece, someone who can be a physical presence and offer secondary scoring. However, critics argue the contract term is a risky gamble, especially since Frederic hasn't had the opportunity to showcase himself in a playoff setting consistently. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Indian Truck Driver Now Earns ₹2.9 Crore Monthly (See how) prestigetrophy Learn More Undo Connor McDavid and Evan Bouchard remain top priority While the Trent Frederic deal is making headlines, it's not the main storyline fans were expecting to hear after the Stanley Cup Final. The real spotlight is on superstars Connor McDavid and Evan Bouchard, both of whom become eligible for contract extensions when NHL free agency begins on July 1. McDavid, widely considered the best player in the world, has two years remaining on his deal, but locking him in long-term will be Edmonton's biggest challenge. Bouchard, meanwhile, emerged as a defensive powerhouse this postseason and is due for a significant raise as well. Read more: NHL trade rumor: Don Cherry fuels spicy Brad Marchand conspiracy with wild Bruins return claim after Panthers Cup win The NHL offseason is officially underway, and Edmonton is wasting no time making headlines. Game On Season 1 kicks off with Sakshi Malik's inspiring story. Watch Episode 1 here

Stanley Cup Final live updates: Florida Panthers vs Edmonton Oilers, Game 3
Stanley Cup Final live updates: Florida Panthers vs Edmonton Oilers, Game 3

Yahoo

time10-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Stanley Cup Final live updates: Florida Panthers vs Edmonton Oilers, Game 3

Florida Panthers fans react during a watch party after their team scored against the Edmonton Oilers in Game 1 of the NHL Stanley Cup Final at the Amerant Bank Arena on Wednesday, June 4, 2025, in Sunrise, Fla. The best-of-7 Stanley Cup Final is now essentially a best-of-5 set. After splitting the opening games in Edmonton, the Florida Panthers and Edmonton Oilers now play the next two games in Sunrise, with the Panthers looking to take advantage of home ice in their quest to repeat as champions. Advertisement Game 3 on Monday is set for an 8 p.m. puck drop, with the game televised on TNT and truTV and available on streaming via Max. Follow along throughout the game for live updates, news, analysis and commentary. Panthers win Game 3, Edmonton loses its cool In a game with 17 power plays, many of them after the Panthers took a three-goal lead and Edmonton began venting, the Panthers won 6-1 to take a 2-1 lead in the Stanley Cup Final. Rodrigues. Panthers 6, Edmonton 1 On a two-man advantage in an increasingly nasty last 10 minutes filled with misconducts as officials just tried to push this game to a finish, Evan Rodrigues scored from the left circle at 16:10 of the third period. Advertisement Panthers 6, The Oil 1. Competitive phase done, down go the gloves Down 5-1, Edmonton right wing Trent Frederic started crosschecking Sam Bennett in the neutral zone. Dissatisfied with Bennett's response (ignoring it with a chuckle), Frederic stepped up the crosschecks and punches. Jonah Gadjovich flew in to give Frederic more response and satisfaction. A.J. Greer went after Oilers defenseman Mattias Ekholm with a furious assault. Eventually, Gadjovich and Edmonton's Darnell Nurse dropped the gloves in one of the best and longest fights you'll see in a Stanley Cup Final. Frederic got crosschecking and roughing minors. Nurse got a roughing minor and fighting major. Greer and Bennett got roughing minors. Gadjovich got a fighting major. All of them and Ekholm got misconducts. Ekblad scores, chases Skinner. Panthers 5, Edmonton 1 Redemption Monday for Panthers defenseman Aaron Ekblad. Advertisement Ekblad, minus two and minus one in the first two games, was a plus one after two periodsin Monday's Game 3, had a game-high five hits and fired home a power play goal off a saucy behind-the-back turn from Evan Rodrigues that put goalie Stuart Skinner out of position. The Panthers' second power play goal of the night expanded the lead to 5-1 3:27 into the third period. That was all for Skinner, who put the Panthers on that power play by flipping a hard around attempt into the stands. Skinner gave up five goals on 23 shots End of second: Panthers 4, Edmonton 1 With 44.7 seconds left in the second period, Edmonton defenseman Darnell Nurse looked at the back of Panthers center Anton Lundell in a board scrum, lightly crosschecked Lundell, lightly crosschecked Lundell, then crosschecked Lundell like Lundell said a 'Yo, mama' snap. Advertisement The dumb penalty indicated the frustration the Panthers once again forced upon Edmonton in one of the second periods of this series. The Panthers have a 5-2 scoring advantage in the three second periods while establishing a physical dominance, no more so than Monday. See below for the Sam Bennett hits that preceded his goal. After dough-popping Connor McDavid midway through the period, Panthers' defenseman Aaron Ekblad smashed Corey Perry into being one with the boards. Perry rose as if feeling all of his 40 years plus someone else's 40 years. Ekblad had a game-high five hits after two periods. Ekblad vs. McDavid went better for the Cats this time Edmonton center Connor McDavid's usual sizzling slashes through the neutral zone got interrupted Panthers defenseman Aaron Ekblad, who McDavid made look like a manatee trying to swim on ice on a dazzling Game 2 assist, blasted McDavid with a check a that sent McDavid to the bench and briefly to the locker room. Advertisement McDavid was back for his next shift. Two Sams call and raise. Panthers up, 4-1 Just 1:20 after Perry's goal, the Panthers began pounding out the kinds of goals that have allowed them to own the second periods in this series. Sam Reinhart matched Perry's goal to restore the Panthers' two-goal lead and Sam Bennett expanded it to 4-1. First, center Aleksander Barkov hounded Oilers defenseman John Klingberg around the Edmonton net and right into referee Francis Charron along the deep left boards. Klingberg lost his feet and the puck. Carter Verhaeghe fed Reinhart in the left circle and Reinhart struck for a 3-1 lead. Advertisement Four minutes later, Bennett obliterated Vasily Podkolzin at the Panthers line, smashed Klingberg against the boards, then, when Eetu Luostarinen stripped a still dazed Podkolzin at the blue line, accelerated into space. Luostarinen gave the breakaway to Bennett instead of taking it himself, and Bennett proved the worth of his teammate's generosity by beating Skinner. About that Panthers penalty gets one back Just 20 seconds from another successful penalty kill, Edmonton worked the puck around high in the zone while rotating until Panthers defenseman Seth Jones left the Corey Perry alone in front of the net. Not a good idea, even if Perry's almost as old as the last Super Bowl tickets bought by Dolphins fans. Advertisement Oilers defenseman Evan Bouchard spotted Perry, fed him on the doorstep and the Panthers lead was down to 2-1 at 1:40 of the second. End of first period, Panthers lead special teams duel, 2-0 Somebody had to score on the power play as the Panthers and Oilers refused to allow referees Wes McCauley and Francis Charron to swallow their whistles, putting each other on the power play seven times in the first period. Only 8:45 of the first period was spent five-on-five, only 10:01 spent at even strength. The Panthers maintained good offensive zone time on their power play and actually created one or two chances on each power play. Finally, their rotten (at home) power play bore fruit when Carter Verhaeghe walked into the left circle and beat Edmonton goalie Stuart Skinner over the right shoulder with a snipe. Advertisement That put the Panthers up 2-0 at 17:45 of the first period, made the Panthers two for 32 at home in the playoffs on the power play and gave defenseman Nate Schmidt another assist, his ninth of the playoffs. Meanwhile, the Panthers snuffed all three Edmonton power plays, preventing the circle-to-circle passes through the penalty killing box from Connor McDavid while also respecting his shot. Also, the Panthers kept goalie Sergei Bobrovsky's sight lines clear and efficiently cleared rebounds. Appropriately, the period ended with Panthers center Anton Lundell going to the box for roughing. Really, Lundell was sent off for sparking a post-horn mini-rumble with an extra poke at Skinner as time expired in the period. That brought the predictable pushing-and-face washing response from the Oilers, which brought the predictable defense of Lundell from the Panthers. Marchand, who ended Game 2, gets the Game 3 party started On the game's second shift, off a face-off in the right circle of the Edmonton zone, Panthers center Anton Lundell circled the net right to left and tried to pass back to Eetu Luostarinen at the right post. When Luostarinen couldn't handle the pass, Lundell circled the net, came out from behind the left post and tapped the puck to Brad Marchand. Advertisement The 37-year-old Game 2 double overtime scorer fired home his eighth goal of these playoffs 56 seconds into the game. Panthers 1, Edmonton 0. Marchand has the Panthers last three goals in the series. He's the oldest player to score in each of the first three games of a Stanley Cup Final, replacing Frank Mahavolich, who was 35 when he did it in the 1973 Stanley Cup Final for Montreal against the Rangers. RNH is in; starting lineups Ryan Nugent-Hopkins is in. Full starting lineups: Panthers: Verhaeghe-Barkov-Reinhart/Forsling-Ekblad Oilers: RNH-McDavid-Perry/Ekholm-Bouchard Bobrovsky vs Skinner in net. A look at the lineups With A.J. Greer drawing into the lineup for the Panthers, the only change from Game 2 is on Florida's fourth line. They'll start out as follows... Advertisement Forward lines Carter Verhaeghe-Aleksander Barkov-Sam Reinhart Evan Rodrigues-Sam Bennett-Matthew Tkachuk Eetu Luostarinen-Anton Lundell-Brad Marchand A.J. Greer-Tomas Nosek-Jonah Gadjovich Defense pairs Gustav Forsling-Aaron Ekblad Niko Mikkola-Seth Jones Nate Schmidt-Dmitry Kulikov Goaltenders Sergei Bobrovsky Vitek Vanecek Edmonton, meanwhile, has swapped around its defense pairs and still has to formally say whether Ryan Nugent-Hopkins is playing. He was listed as a game-time decision but went through warmups and took line rushes. Here's how the Oilers should look if he is indeed in... Forward lines Ryan Nugent-Hopkins-Connor McDavid-Corey Perry Advertisement Evander Kane-Leon Draisaitl-Kasperi Kapanen Trent Frederic-Adam Henrique-Connor Brown Vasily Podkolzin-Mattias Janmark-Viktor Arvidsson Defense pairs Mattias Ekholm-Evan Bouchard Darnell Nurse-John Klingberg Brett Kulak-Jake Walman Goaltenders Stuart Skinner Calvin Pickard Series schedule ▪ Game 1 — Oilers 4, Panthers 3 (overtime): The Panthers had a two-goal lead early in the second period but couldn't hold on as Edmonton tied the game early in the third and won it on a Leon Draisaitl power-play goal with 31 seconds left in overtime. ▪ Game 2 — Panthers 5, Oilers 4 (double overtime): The Oilers tied the game with 17.8 seconds left in regulation to force overtime for a second consecutive game. Brad Marchand scored the game-winner 8:05 into the second OT period to secure the Florida win and even the series 1-1. Advertisement ▪ Game 3: Tonight ▪ Game 4: Thursday, June 12, 8 p.m., TNT, truTV, Max, Sunrise's Amerant Bank Arena ▪ Game 5: Saturday, June 14, 8 p.m., TNT, truTV, Max, Edmonton's Rogers Place ▪ Game 6 (if necessary): Tuesday, June 17, 8 p.m., TNT, truTV, Max, Sunrise's Amerant Bank Arena ▪ Game 7 (if necessary): Friday, June 20, 8 p.m., TNT, truTV, Max, Edmonton's Rogers Place Pregame reading Need to catch up ahead of Game 3? Here are the highlights of the Miami Herald's coverage over the past few days. ▪ 'He just finds a way': Panthers' Brad Marchand, at 37, has another big playoff moment ▪ After excelling on road all playoffs, it's time for Panthers to produce at home in Cup Final Advertisement ▪ Panthers vs. Oilers Stanley Cup Final changes rinks. And, probably, little else ▪ Panthers know Bobrovsky's importance in Cup Final. 'We're not taking him for granted' ▪ Panthers' top line hasn't scored yet in Stanley Cup Final. Is it a cause for concern? ▪ Legendary lineages: Have the Panthers joined South Florida's sports dynasties from the past?

Trent Frederic could be the missing piece to the New York Rangers' Stanley Cup Run
Trent Frederic could be the missing piece to the New York Rangers' Stanley Cup Run

Time of India

time06-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Time of India

Trent Frederic could be the missing piece to the New York Rangers' Stanley Cup Run

Photo by Andy Devlin/NHLI via Getty Images There's always that one move that doesn't make headlines but ends up being the one everyone talks about in April and May. For the New York Rangers, that move could be signing Trent Frederic. Not a superstar. Not a scorer who'll put up 90 points. But a guy who plays with bite. A guy who shows up when the games get ugly. And after last season's early exit, the Rangers should know by now—they need more of that. Trent Frederic has the grit, goals, and playoff bite the New York Rangers were missing The Rangers had the talent. Artemi Panarin had a career year. Mika Zibanejad did his thing. Adam Fox and Igor Shesterkin were as steady as ever. But when the postseason came, they got pushed around. The games slowed down, the hits got heavier, and they didn't have enough guys willing—or able—to fight through that. Trent Frederic lives for that kind of hockey. He's not a guy you bring in to score on the power play. He's the one who wins a puck battle in the corner, wears down a defense over 60 minutes, and stands tall when the other team tries to take liberties. He hits with purpose, plays smart in his own zone, and chips in enough offense—15, maybe 20 goals a season—to keep defenders honest. Look at what he did with the Oilers during their Cup run. That Game 6 goal to eliminate the Kings wasn't pretty, but it was pure Frederic—relentless forecheck, pressure at the net, and just enough finish. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Milana, 38, Shows Her Huge Size In New Photos. Paperela Undo That's what wins playoff games. At 6-foot-3 and 220 pounds, he brings a level of physicality the Rangers don't have much of right now. Think of him as a younger, slightly more skilled version of Barclay Goodrow. He can slide into the bottom six, play center or wing, and give Mike Sullivan a trusted option when things get tight. And at a projected $2.5 to $3.25 million per year, he won't mess with the cap. He fits Chris Drury's "win now and later" mindset perfectly. At 27, Frederic still has runway. He's not a stopgap—he's a playoff piece. The Rangers don't need more flash. They need fire. Frederic gives them that—without breaking the bank or the structure. He's not the kind of signing that makes waves on July 1, but come spring? He's the kind of guy who makes all the difference. Also Read: Vegas Golden Knights announce 2025 road trip with free Hockey clinics for kids

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