Oilers defeat Canucks 3-2 to end nail-biting playoff series
Canucks score twice in final period but Oilers advance to Western Conference final
The Edmonton Oilers survived a late comeback attempt from the Vancouver Canucks to win 3-2 in Game 7 of their second-round playoff series on Monday.
The Oilers will advance to face the Dallas Stars in the Western Conference final after defeating the Canucks at Vancouver's Rogers Arena.
Edmonton will continue their quest to bring the Stanley Cup home to Canada for the first time since 1993, 370 days since Leon Draisaitl declared the 2023-24 season to be 'Cup or Bust' for the team.
Cody Ceci, Zach Hyman and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins scored for the Oilers, while Stuart Skinner made 15 saves.
Conor Garland and Filip Hronek replied for Vancouver. Playing his 10th playoff game, rookie goalie Arturs Silovs made 26 saves for Vancouver.
Vancouver was 0-for-3 on the power play, while Edmonton was 1-for-2.
With the win, Edmonton advances to the Western Conference final for the first time since 2022. Facing the conference champion Stars, the best-of-seven series will open at American Airlines Center in Dallas on Thursday.
After learning that their leading goal-scorer, Brock Boeser, was sidelined due to a reported blood-clotting issue, the Canucks were forced to juggle their forward lines on Monday.
Sam Lafferty and Ilya Mikheyev played in Game 7 after a two-game absence, while Vasily Podkolzin was left out of the team entirely.
Silovs was the story of the first period, stopping all 13 shots he faced. Though the Canucks were awarded the first power play of the game late in the opening frame, Skinner needed to make just two saves in the period.
While the Canucks end the season with a heartbreaking loss, Vancouver finished top of the Pacific Division in the regular season, and it was the first time the team hosted playoff games since 2015.
In January, team president Jim Rutherford said the team needed "major surgery" to start winning again after a disappointing few seasons. But analysts and fans credited coach Rick Tocchet this year for instilling a new culture that saw the team one win away from the Western Conference finals.
Comeback attempt comes up short
Ceci opened the scoring on his team's first shot of the second period, with a slap shot from the right point that beat Silovs high to the glove side at 1:16.
The Oilers then went on their first power play, and Hyman scored his playoff-leading 11th goal by tipping an Evan Bouchard point shot to Silovs' stick side at 5:20.
Nugent-Hopkins extended the lead to 3-0 with a sharp-angle shot at 15:22. It was Edmonton's first power-play goal in three games.
Garland ignited the crowd at 8:33 of the third period, breaking Skinner's shutout bid with an unassisted shot from the slot.
The Canucks amped up the pressure, and Hronek got the home side within one with his first goal of the playoffs, with 4:36 left in the third. But the comeback bid ultimately fell short.
Despite losing Vezina Trophy nominee Thatcher Demko to injury after the first game of Round 1, the Canucks advanced past the first round for the first time since the 2020 playoff bubble.
With the win, the Oilers move to 8-4 all time in Game 7 appearances, while the Canucks fall to 6-7. The Oilers are the first road team to win a Game 7 in the 2024 Stanley Cup playoffs.
The Oilers hold down the top three spots in the playoff scoring race through two rounds. Leon Draisaitl leads the way with 24 points in 12 games, Connor McDavid has 21 and Evan Bouchard leads all defencemen with 20 points.
The long series between the Canucks and Oilers prompted an outpouring of support from each team's fan base, with B.C. fans using creative displays to cheer on their NHL team.
A fan in Clearwater, B.C. made an orca mosaic using granite, shale and black lava. Another fan in Kelowna B.C. constructed a 4.6-metre sculpture of Demko made entirely of Pepsi boxes.
Public viewing parties were packed throughout the Metro Vancouver region throughout the playoff run and Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim said it was a great season even before the playoff journey began.
The mayors of Edmonton and Vancouver agreed to fly the rival team's flag at their city hall if their home team fails to win the series. And the losing mayor must wear the winning team's jersey.
Meanwhile, the premiers of B.C. and Alberta agreed that the premier of the province that loses must deliver a statement in the provincial legislature, written by the winner, while wearing the winning team's jersey.
With files from the CBC's Courtney Dickson and Akshay Kulkarni