Sports
Is this the last stand for Connor McDavid, Leon Draisaitl and the Oilers?
EDMONTON — Leon Draisaitl tugged at his full playoff beard as he waited for the first question.
Wearing a team-issued hoodie, the Edmonton Oilers superstar stood in front of a video board at the base of the dressing room moments after yet another elimination loss, this time to the eventual champion Vegas Golden Knights. This one felt different than the previous knockout blows.
Over the next two minutes and 40 seconds, Draisaitl tried to make sense of what had just happened all while holding back tears.
“It hurts,” he said. “It’s tough to find the words right now.”
It wasn’t just that the Oilers lost. It was how they lost.
The series was tied and the Oilers were up by a goal past the midway point of the second period of Game 5 in Las Vegas. The Golden Knights got a two-man advantage thanks to a careless high-sticking penalty and scored a pair of power-play goals. They quickly added another one — scoring three times in a 1:29 span.
Game 6, the elimination game, was eerily similar. In fact, the Oilers had a lead in every game of the series, yet won just twice. They didn’t feel like they were beaten by a superior opponent. They felt like they beat themselves.
That’s why Draisaitl said it felt like a “failure or a wasted season almost.”
“I don’t think anyone in here wants to feel like that again,” he said.
His running mate for nine years, captain Connor McDavid, also chimed in, saying you sometimes “have to go through some of this to win.”
And then he added: “Let’s hope it’s the last time.”
Edmonton, after rebounding from a horrific start to this season, is again poised to be one of the favorites in the Western Conference to advance to the Stanley Cup Final. That’s ideal considering its two superstar players had previously called it a “Cup or bust” season.
The “bust” part of that is what has Oilers fans on edge.
Draisaitl, winner of the Hart and Art Ross trophies and the Ted Lindsay Award in 2020 and one of the greatest goal scorers of this era, will be entering the final year of his contract. He’s eligible for an extension on July 1, but, if those talks falter, in the NHL that tends to mean a trade for something now rather than risk losing a player for nothing. Such a trade would break up one of the best one-two punches in NHL history and would significantly alter the Oilers’ roster.
The second part of that grand proclamation is McDavid, the best player of his generation and already a lock to be an inner-circle Hockey Hall of Famer. He has two years left on his contract. If Draisaitl were to leave, would McDavid be far behind?
That is why this year’s playoff appearance is seen as massive for one of the league’s most storied franchises, but a franchise that hasn’t sipped from the exalted Cup since 1990.
“We’re right in the window,” says winger Zach Hyman, “so we have to take advantage.”
Earlier in the season, that window appeared to be closing. The Oilers had lost to the lowly San Jose Sharks in early November, dropping their record to 2-9-1, tied with the Sharks for last place in the NHL. With the players reeling, that result was the tipping point for a coaching change. A victory over the Kraken two nights later was immaterial.
While GM Ken Holland was with the team in Seattle, hockey operations CEO Jeff Jackson was working the phones from Toronto. Just three months into his job after serving as McDavid’s agent, Jackson was spearheading a dramatic move. He sought and received permission from the New York Rangers to hire their American Hockey League coach Kris Knoblauch. Jackson had a long-standing relationship with Knoblauch dating back to the Erie of the Ontario Hockey League. That’s where Knoblauch coached several of his clients — namely McDavid and Connor Brown.
Jay Woodcroft was fired despite accumulating a .643 points percentage, the best of any bench boss in franchise history — albeit over just 133 games. His right-hand man, assistant coach Dave Manson, was also out.
And from the news conference in Edmonton introducing Knoblauch through to the next morning’s player media availabilities, there were more eyebrow-raising moments.
Jackson pressed Oilers legend Paul Coffey — the person who recommended Jackson be hired in the first place — to take on Manson’s duties running the defense. Though Coffey had never coached in the pros, he had relationships with some blueliners from his past role in player development — in particular, Darnell Nurse and Evan Bouchard — and was routinely around the team as an adviser to owner Daryl Katz. However, Jackson really had to convince Coffey, who stressed that being an assistant coach wasn’t his preference.
The next day, before a home game against the New York Islanders, the players had their turn to speak. McDavid tried to debunk narratives that he was the one calling the shots. He called Woodcroft a top-five coach after the first round of the playoffs just months earlier.
“It’s someone we all thought highly of,” McDavid says now.
Draisaitl, with a hoodie pulled over his head, sounded annoyed by what had transpired and gave a full-throated endorsement of Woodcroft.
Looking back on those days, Draisaitl talked about the bad vibes. “There’s a lot of negative talk and negativity in general,” he says. “It was maybe a little blown out of proportion, but obviously not a good start by any means.”
His teammate, blueliner Mattias Ekholm, says the decision to change coaches was a bit of a surprise. “We did so well the year before,” he says. “It was pretty quick, and they were out. But this is a business of winning. When you don’t do that, the consequences are going to follow.”
The Oilers’ start was shocking not only because they entered the season as perhaps the Stanley Cup favorites. It was also because McDavid and Draisaitl raised the bar all summer.
It started with McDavid addressing the team in a closed-door meeting after the playoff loss to Vegas. This is our window to win. We have a great team. We’ve got to take hold of it.
Draisaitl got a house near McDavid’s offseason home in Aurora, Ont. That allowed him to train alongside McDavid and the Oilers’ large southern Ontario crew, which includes Hyman, Nurse and Bouchard.
Even fun times had a spirit of competition. McDavid invited his teammates to his cottage for a weekend and, as they looked out at an island over the lake, the debate picked up. The question: How long would it take to swim there?
“We had a bet that it would probably take 30 minutes to do it,” winger Warren Foegele says. “Two weeks later, we get a video and it’s Connor swimming to the island. He does it in like 10 minutes.
“Just seeing that work ethic and that drive, if he’s doing that, there’s no reason why we can’t work hard in the offseason.”
McDavid called everyone back to Edmonton more than a week earlier than usual for pre-training camp captain’s skates so the Oilers could get a head-start on the season.
But Ekholm, arguably their top defenseman, and Ryan McLeod, their third-line center, sustained injuries in those informal practices and missed all the exhibition games. Ekholm sat out the season opener, too, an 8-1 drubbing in Vancouver. Both players took a while to get up to speed.
McDavid missed two games early, and he and Draisaitl got off to slow starts offensively.
As the team struggled, Woodcroft was in the early stages of implementing more of a zone defense to mimic the reigning Presidents’ Trophy-winning Boston Bruins, who allowed the fewest goals in the league. There were plenty of kinks in their end, and the Oilers also were miserable at defending off the rush.
They couldn’t score; they had the second-worst shooting percentage at five-on-five. They didn’t get enough stops; they had the worst save percentage — which led to high-priced goalie Jack Campbell being waived and demoted.
The first day at the rink for Calvin Pickard, Campbell’s stand-in, was the morning skate of that San Jose loss.
“It sounds weird, but I think it was a good thing we lost that game,” Ekholm says. “Sometimes you need to hit rock bottom before you can get back up.”
And while there were plenty of tangible reasons for the slow start, there might have been a lingering mental hurdle to clear, too.
“From the start of the year, you’re thinking about that loss from the playoffs again,” says Hyman, who signed with the Oilers in 2021 in large part to play with McDavid and Draisaitl. “You’re thinking that you’re already going to be there. In reality, it’s a new season and you’ve got to flush the past.”
“It was looking pretty bleak,” McDavid says. “But this group was resilient. We stick together. I’m not going to say it was never in doubt, but we knew that we have the group to do it and that belief was there.”
Oddly enough, one video clip at the end of another lopsided loss might define the Oilers’ turnaround.
They were down 5-1 with just over five minutes to play in the second period of a loss, their third in a row, to the Hurricanes in Raleigh, N.C. McDavid and Draisaitl sat next to each other on the Oilers bench, both looking miserable. McDavid shook his head in frustration. That’s when Draisaitl gave him a supportive tap on the arm and McDavid returned the gesture.
From the moment of those subtle motions, the Oilers have been a different team.
They scored the next two goals to make a game of it before losing 6-3. From there, though, the talk in the room turned.
“It took us time to say, ‘Hey, we better grab this — this is a new year — and we need to start playing the way we need to play,’” Hyman says.
The day after American Thanksgiving, the Oilers had a game in Washington. Knoblauch, an analytically minded coach, wanted to provide a different perspective. He broke down the remainder of the season into eight-game blocks and, upon crunching the numbers, felt the Oilers would need to win five out of every eight games to make the playoffs.
“That benefitted us a lot,” says Foegele, who also played for Knoblauch in OHL Erie. “When you break it down into a small picture the way Knobber did there with small segments, it gave this group belief. We just went on a roll.”
The Oilers destroyed the Capitals 5-0 in what was easily their best performance to that point. “There was a sense in the room that things were going to be OK,” McDavid says.
It was the first of eight straight wins. After another three-game losing streak, the Oilers won their final two contests before the Christmas break and then kept that going by upping their victory streak to 16 — one shy of an NHL record — heading into the All-Star break.
That 24-3 stretch saved their season.
“Pucks were going in. We were getting saves. We were collectively playing better as a group,” Foegele says.
Knoblauch put a greater emphasis on rush defending after he came aboard. He also tweaked the penalty kill, giving the responsibility to Mark Stuart — a former NHL blueliner and a holdover from Woodcroft’s staff. The Oilers began limiting the number of forwards that got short-handed time and put them in regular pairings. Coffey encouraged the defensemen to work on their breakout passes.
“When you get a new coach — I’ve had a few now — you go back to your roots and your details,” Ekholm says.
It’s impossible to know if the Oilers would be where they are today, just coming up short of their first division title since 1987, with Woodcroft and Manson still behind the bench. They have by far the best points percentage in the NHL since American Thanksgiving.
“Knobber’s come in and just been a calming presence,” McDavid says. “He settled the waters. He’s calm behind the bench. He’s brought that sense of confidence.”
It didn’t hurt that McDavid and Draisaitl got back on track. An incredible scoring run after the coaching change got McDavid back in the conversation for a fourth straight scoring title and sixth of his career before a late minor injury prevented that from happening. He became the fourth player in NHL history to record 100 assists in a season. Draisaitl surpassed the 40-goal, 100-point thresholds yet again.
“It was a hard move at the time,” says Hyman, who surpassed the 50-goal mark for the first time. “But, in hindsight, the way the season has gone with Kris’ success, it was the right move.”
With all his teammates gone after a late-season practice, Foegele sits in his stall in the vacant Oilers dressing room. He glances at all the nameplates of the star offensive players and smiles.
“I feel this is the best team I’ve been on,” he says, scanning the room. “There’s a lot of leadership, a lot of games played.”
Then Foegele’s eyes fixate on Draisaitl’s stall.
Foegele had the best offensive output of his career, hitting the 20-goal mark in a contract year, while playing nearly 40 percent of his five-on-five minutes next to Draisaitl. He credits Draisaitl for teaching him how to be more patient and look for the optimal play in the offensive zone. But he knows Draisaitl’s contractual status is the elephant in the room.
“You’d be silly not to be aware of that. He’s a big piece of this team,” Foegele says. “He’s a three-time 50-goal scorer, a five-time 100-point getter. Everyone talks about Connor and then you talk about (Auston) Matthews. But probably Leon’s name should be up there a lot.
“He wants to win. He cares. I don’t think you’d be able to find anyone like him. You want to win with one of the best players in the league.”
Holland, the GM, is in the final year of his contract — something Jackson wouldn’t address for this story. Holland would say only that he, Jackson and Katz will sit down to discuss his status after the season. But with due respect to the Hall of Fame manager, Draisaitl’s future is the most pressing issue facing the franchise.
Jackson told The Athletic in January the Oilers plan on offering Draisaitl a contract extension in July, the earliest time that can happen.
How will the playoffs impact Draisaitl’s decision to sign?
“It doesn’t really,” he says. “I’m not in a mindset right now where I think about those things.”
Until he puts pen to paper, this version of the Oilers as we know it — the one with Draisaitl and McDavid leading the way — is in limbo.
“They’re one of the best one-two punches the NHL has ever seen,” Jackson says. “I can see them wanting to continue that goal of trying to win Cups together. I’m not up at night worrying about it. We’ll deal with it when we have to deal with it.”
Over 28 playoff games in 2022 and 2023, McDavid and Draisaitl have posted 53 and 50 points, respectively. But they don’t have a championship, or even a Stanley Cup Final appearance to show for it.
Of course, those in the Oilers’ room feel a heightened sense of urgency.
“We like our group. There’s no doubt about it,” McDavid says. “That’s all there is really to say.”
Aside from Bouchard and goalie Stuart Skinner, McDavid is the youngest part of the core. He’s 27. Draisaitl is 28. Nurse is 29. Hyman and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins are 31. Evander Kane is 32. Ekholm is 33.
No wonder McDavid and Draisaitl went with “Cup or bust” right after the Vegas loss.
“It is the time (to win). I don’t know if I’m sticking with that slogan,” Draisaitl says. “There’s 15 other teams that are going to make our life hell — and we’re going to try to do the same thing. It’s a little easier said than done.
“But it’s definitely our window. We’re also aware of how much work it’s going to take.”
All that means is the Oilers can’t afford to let opportunities slip away.
“Everybody’s in their prime or, if not, really close to it,” Ekholm says. “We know the situation we’re in. We know what kind of personnel we have in here. Everybody’s been around. We’re not waiting for anything.”
(Illustration: Eamonn Dalton / The Athletic. Photos: Bill Wippert / NHLI via Getty; Steph Chambers / Getty)
Sports
SMU’s CFP nightmare: Interceptions, diverted billionaires and a ‘shell-shocked’ Cinderella
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — Billions of dollars can buy a lot of things. It can help revive a football program and get your alma mater into a bigger conference. It can buy a private jet. But it can’t clear more space at a tiny regional airport.
SMU donor Bill Armstrong’s last name is on the team’s indoor practice facility. His plane, which included two-time U.S. Open champion golfer Bryson DeChambeau and former Mustangs star running back Craig James, left Dallas around 6:30 a.m. CT for State College, Pa. But upon arrival, it was diverted to Williamsport, as were some other SMU private planes. The airport was full.
If you believe in harbingers, this was an ominous one, the limits of SMU’s money on display. From a party bus on the drive to the stadium, several SMU donors and former players watched on their phones as quarterback Kevin Jennings threw two pick sixes. By the time they arrived at Beaver Stadium, the score was 21-0, the game all but over.
“Still a great season,” Armstrong said after the game, pulling gloves out of his pocket and refusing to get too down. To him, there was no doubt that the 11-win Mustangs belonged here.
The final score was 38-10. As the last at-large team in the field, the discourse over College Football Playoff blowouts and selection committee decisions turned to SMU, one day after Indiana was manhandled by Notre Dame.
On display at Penn State was the difference between being a CFP darling, a fun story, and a CFP contender. It’s a gap so often exposed at this stage of the season.
“We didn’t play well enough to say anything that isn’t going to be written,” head coach Rhett Lashlee said. “It’ll be written, should we be in or did we belong? That’s fine. You’re welcome to write it. We didn’t play good today. But this is a quality team. We had a good team. We deserve to be here. We earned the right to be here. I’m disappointed we didn’t play to the level that validates that.”
What’s too bad is SMU didn’t even give itself a chance. Before kickoff, Lashlee told the broadcast his team had to avoid a bad start like it’d had in the ACC Championship Game against Clemson, when Jennings had two bad turnovers.
What happened this time? First, Jennings missed a wide-open Matthew Hibner in the end zone on what should’ve been a fourth-down touchdown to cap SMU’s opening drive. On the second drive, Jennings threw a pick six, missing a short throw out of the backfield. On the fourth drive, Jennings threw another pick six, a desperate attempt to make a play on third down instead of throwing the ball away.
SMU was down 14-0 despite playing pretty well otherwise and holding up in the trenches. The defense to that point had been stout.
“That kind of shell-shocked us a little bit,” Lashlee said of the turnover scores.
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Jennings has been turnover-prone. He had five against Duke, but the Mustangs rallied to win that one. SMU also rallied from his two turnovers against Clemson to tie things up late. But Penn State is another level up in competition.
“We don’t have an Abdul Carter,” Lashlee said, referring to Penn State’s All-America edge rusher who was in the backfield constantly and did more than his two tackles for loss indicate, constantly sending Jennings out of the pocket. Penn State’s defense finished with 11 tackles for loss.
For his part, Jennings said his early miss in the end zone didn’t linger in his head and lead to the interceptions. Lashlee blamed the second quarter tipped red zone interception on himself, saying he should’ve just called a running play. Jennings blamed himself.
“I made mistakes three times and gave them the ball with careless mistakes,” the typically quiet Jennings said. “I didn’t take care of the ball.”
Asked if he considered replacing Jennings with backup Preston Stone, Lashlee didn’t indicate it ever came up until the fourth quarter. Stone, who was the Mustangs’ starting quarterback last year and at the beginning of this year, entered the transfer portal earlier this month but had stayed with the SMU team. When Lashlee pulled Jennings late, everyone decided they didn’t want Stone to get hurt on his way out at that point in the game, the coach said. After the final horn sounded, multiple reports emerged that Stone was heading to Northwestern.
A 38-10 game is not close, nor is it competitive. Penn State was clearly the better team, one that will be favored to win the Fiesta Bowl against No. 3 seed Boise State. But SMU finished with more first downs and held PSU to 5.0 yards per play, though the amount of garbage time certainly factored into those respectable stats.
SMU scored just three points on four red zone trips and gave away 14 points on the interception return touchdowns. It’s why Lashlee was so frustrated. He knows how it looks. He can’t argue otherwise.
“People are going to see 38-10 or (28-0 at) halftime and say they don’t belong, but the two pick sixes and we had our opportunities,” he said. “We don’t have anybody to blame but ourselves. It should’ve been a good defensive struggle in the 20s. We didn’t do that.”
SMU long felt that if it just got a power conference invitation, it would show it belonged. The Mustangs showed they belonged in the ACC, going 8-0 in conference play. But they didn’t show they’re ready for this stage yet. Nittany Lions coach James Franklin takes a lot of heat from fans and detractors for not winning the big games, but he almost always wins the games in which Penn State has more talent.
Underdog stories typically end with a thud in the CFP, and SMU and Indiana join a list that includes Cincinnati, TCU and others. Top-level talent wins in the end, and SMU doesn’t have that yet.
Lashlee and SMU will spend the ensuing months hearing those that say SMU shouldn’t have been in the CFP, that Alabama deserved the spot (even though Crimson Tide quarterback Jalen Milroe’s three-interception performance in a 21-point loss to 6-6 Oklahoma in mid-November was nearly exactly the same as Jennings’ at Penn State). That’s what comes with this stage.
SMU found itself here for the first time and didn’t deliver. As the party bus headed back to Williamsport and the private planes flew back to Dallas, SMU’s coaches, players and billionaires left with a clear vision of just how far they still have to go.
(Photo: Mitchell Leff / Getty Images)
Sports
Ravens take down Steelers to keep AFC North race open
The Baltimore Ravens punched their ticket to the postseason and kept their hopes for a division title alive Saturday.
With a 34-17 win over the division rival Pittsburgh Steelers, Baltimore could reclaim first place in the final two weeks.
Pittsburgh (10-5) would have clinched the division with a victory, but now the teams are deadlocked after the Ravens (10-5) won for just the second time in the last 10 games of the series. Baltimore clinched a playoff berth with the win.
The Steelers had already clinched a playoff spot.
Russell Wilson threw two touchdown passes, the second of which tied the game at 17 with 5:14 left in the third quarter. Jackson answered with a 7-yard scoring strike to Mark Andrews.
After Pittsburgh turned the ball over on downs, a 44-yard run by Derrick Henry put the Ravens in the red zone.
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That drive ended when Jackson was intercepted for just the fourth time this season, but Marlon Humphrey picked off Wilson and ran 37 yards to the end zone to give Baltimore a cushion in a series that’s been tight of late. The previous nine games between the Steelers and Ravens were decided by seven points or fewer.
Jackson improved to 2-4 against Pittsburgh as a starter. Saturday’s game marked his first time facing the Steelers at home since 2020.
Henry rushed for 162 yards.
Pittsburgh entered the game with a plus-18 turnover margin, but the Ravens had the edge in that department Saturday. Baltimore recovered three of its own fumbles and had two big takeaways.
Now the Steelers will have to deal with Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs on Christmas Day before finishing the season at home against the Cincinnati Bengals. The Ravens will travel to Houston to play the Texans on Christmas Day before finishing the season at home against the Cleveland Browns.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Sports
JuJu Watkins and No. 7 USC hold off No. 4 Connecticut to win in a thriller
HARTFORD, Conn. — In a marquee matchup Saturday night, No. 7 USC defeated perennial powerhouse No. 4 Connecticut 72-70, avenging its Elite Eight loss to the Huskies in April and strengthening its status as one of the nation’s elite teams.
“This is a really significant win, and it’s a significant win because of the stature of the UConn program and what [Connecticut coach] Geno Auriemma has done for our sport,” USC coach Lindsay Gottlieb said. “I told [the team] in [the locker room] — for me, for my entire high school and on, this is what basketball excellence was, this is what we saw. And it’s challenged all of us to want to be better, to find players who want to be better and be that elite.”
Undeterred playing in front of a sold-out crowd on the road, USC opened the game with a 9-0 run, capitalizing on cold shooting and defensive lapses from the Huskies. Buoyed by 15 points from JuJu Watkins, the Trojans shot 48.6% from the floor in the first half, including seven for 11 from three-point range, to take a 42-29 lead at halftime.
“A lot of the things [JuJu] does [are] super hard, but she makes it look so easy,” USC forward Kiki Iriafen said. “So I think she really got us going on the offensive end … we all know she’s a superstar, so playing with her definitely relieved the pressure on everybody else.”
Connecticut came out of the locker room with increased intensity, forcing seven Trojan turnovers and limiting Watkins to four points in the third quarter. Propelled by nine points from guard Paige Bueckers, the Huskies outscored USC (11-1) 20-13 in the third quarter, cutting their deficit to six points entering the fourth.
Connecticut (10-2) continued to chip away and took its first and only lead when freshman Sarah Strong scored on a layup with 4:34 left. USC regained the lead moments later on a Watkins jumper, but the Huskies wouldn’t let the Trojans pull away.
“I don’t think we were ever really rattled,” Watkins said. “We knew what [Connecticut] is capable of, they were going to go on runs, so it was just a matter of handling that and coming down on top.”
With USC leading by three with five seconds left, Strong drew a foul off Watkins while attempting a three-point shot. Strong made her first free throw, but missed her second attempt. After Strong missed her final attempt, Bueckers grabbed the rebound and fed the ball back to Strong, who missed a logo three at the buzzer.
Watkins finished with 25 points, six rebounds, five assists and three blocks. Iriafen had 16 points, 11 rebounds and six assists.
Bueckers and Strong each had 22 points.
Auriemma praised Watkins’ exceptional talent.
“Every scouting report that you put together, or every film that you watch, it’s very evident that one player can’t guard her,” Auriemma said. “You have to hope she helps, you have to hope she misses. And when she gets a little bit of a rhythm like she got in that first half, it’s really, really difficult … there’s qualities that she has that are just unique.”
Watkins showed why she’s one of the nation’s brightest stars, helping the Trojans earn a signature win. The victory was a showcase of the elite talent that has accelerated women’s college basketball’s growth in popularity.
“It’s just a testament to when you give women a platform, we’re going to perform,” Watkins said. “And I think that tonight was an excellent game. … It was just beautiful to be a part of. And I couldn’t imagine watching it — so, super exciting. And I think, as we continue to get games like this, we’ll always show up.”
The Trojans next play No. 20 Michigan at Galen Center on Dec. 29.
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