Oilers fans flock to downtown Edmonton for Game 4 of Stanley Cup final
Oilers are now down 3-1 in the best-of-7 series
The Edmonton Oilers survived a do-or-die home ice game on Saturday to stay in the chase for the Stanley Cup, and fans that flocked downtown to watch it were fired up.
There was also a lot of buzz about the Oilers 50/50 raffle, which eclipsed the previous record total of $14.2 million to reach $16,125,710. One lucky winner will take home half the pot, with the rest of the money going to charities and non-profit groups in the Edmonton community.
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Hours before Game 4 puck-drop against the Florida Panthers, nine-year-old Edmontonian Brett Hayes, sporting a No. 97 Connor McDavid jersey, had four simple words for the Oilers' captain.
"Be the greatest player."
The Oilers, down 3-1 in the best-of-seven series, will now head back to Florida. A Game 4 win fended off the Panthers from attaining their first ever Stanley Cup for at least one more game.
It would also be the first step toward achieving something only the 1942 Toronto Maple Leafs have accomplished: hoisting Lord Stanley's mug after losing the first three games of the final.
Three generations of the Gautreau family travelled overnight to Edmonton from Shediac, a coastal town in southeastern New Brunswick, to root for the Oilers in Game 4.
Daniel Gautreau, a lifelong Montreal Canadiens fan, has put his allegiance aside so his seven-year-old grandson Max, an Oilers fan, can watch his favourite team.
"I feel so blessed being able to come here with you guys," Gautreau said. His son Remi — Max's father — is with them too.
"It's a dream come true. So, go Oilers! Go!"
The family, as well as their friend Donny Brau, an Oilers fan who tagged along with them to Edmonton, have already booked their tickets to Fort Lauderdale, Fla., in hopes there is a Game 5.
Kevin Genge's daughter flew in from New York to watch the game with him tonight. Genge has been a fan since the very beginning. For him, tonight was a chance to see another Oilers victory.
"This is it. This is the excitement I was wanting. I was here when they won their first cup. I was here in '88 … and I think I deserve to see another great ending. So that's a win tonight. That's a Father's Day win."
Panthers fans Chris and Shawn O'Connor said travelling from Florida to Edmonton felt like a journey to the moon with all the rain in Florida. One train and two airplane rides later, they made it to Game 3 with an hour to spare.
Ahead of tonight's game, they were hoping to see their team lift the cup.
"They're putting in the effort," Chris said. "They've worn teams down in the first three rounds and they don't change. They play the same game no matter what you throw at them. They play their game — which I think is a big thing."
"Not to be greedy. But you know, it would be great to see the cup on the ice tonight."
Despite the odds being against the Oilers, the team has not given up hope.
"Two of the three games probably could have went either way," said Leon Draisaitl, after Thursday's loss. "We could be up 2-1 right now, but that's not the case. It's not how this league or how this sport works, unfortunately.
"We've just got to find a way to dig ourselves out."
On Saturday, veteran Corey Perry reiterated that the team can't look beyond what's in front of them.
"If you start looking too far ahead, it's a daunting task," said Perry, one of only five Oilers players with previous Stanley Cup final experience. He won the trophy in 2007 with the Anaheim Ducks and has since appeared in multiple finals.
"[Florida is] a great team. We know that. But you start with one period, one game — and you work your way from one."
Oilers head coach Kris Knoblauch is confident with his boys, describing them as resilient, persevering and focused.
"It's going to be a challenge. But if there's a team that can do it — if there's a group of men that I want to do this with — it's the guys in that room," Knoblauch told reporters Saturday.
"I'm really excited for the next 10 days."
Music superstar Shania Twain fired up the crowd outside Rogers Place prior to Game 4 on Saturday night and started a "We want the Cup!" chant among Oilers fans.
It would take the team pulling off a comeback not made in the final since 1942 — the only time in NHL history it has happened at this stage and on only four previous occasions any time in the playoffs.
"How you guys feeling Edmonton?" Twain said between songs. "We are in the spirit of the Stanley Cup right here in Edmonton!"
Kailan Tremoyne arrived at 7:45 a.m. to score the first spot in line.
"I wanted to be the first here," he said, adding it's his second time ever attending a concert.
"I think Shania is going to bring the crowd together for the Oilers."
With files from Sam Samson, Charles Delisle, The Canadian Press, The Associated Press