Hockey·Recap

Oilers beat Flames but lose McDavid to injury in season finale

Connor McDavid left Edmonton's season finale with what appeared to be a serious left leg injury as the Oilers beat the Calgary Flames 3-1 on Saturday.

Edmonton star crashed into net, had to be helped off ice

Edmonton Oilers' Connor McDavid, left, has his knee tended too after crashing into Calgary Flames goalie Mike Smith during the second period on Saturday. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press)

The Edmonton Oilers believe they received relatively good news after Connor McDavid left Saturday's season finale with a leg injury.

After a 3-1 win over the Calgary Flames, the Oilers said X-rays on McDavid's left leg came back negative. He was scheduled to return to Edmonton on Saturday before having an MRI.

"He had a lot of people looking at him and so far, so good ... [The] MRI tells you everything," Oilers coach Ken Hitchcock said.

HIP CHECK | McDavid's injury adds insult to Oilers' season:

Hip Check: McDavid’s injury adds insult to Oilers’ season

6 years ago
Duration 3:24
Connor McDavid flew into the post at high speed, slamming his leg and requiring the trainer’s assistance to get off the ice as the Oilers played their final game of the season.

The Oilers star was hurt early in the second period. Darting down the wing, McDavid had his feet knocked out from under him as he tried to cut hard around defenceman Mark Giordano. The Oilers captain slid hard into the goal post, his left leg taking the full brunt of the impact.

He remained down for a few minutes before being helped off the ice by teammate Zack Kassian and a trainer, while putting no weight on his left leg.

Giordano was penalized for tripping on the play.

"That's the best player in the game. I hope he's OK," said Giordano, the Flames' captain. "I'll reach out to him and hopefully get an answer, but it's a 1-on-1. I'm trying to dive to chip the puck off his stick. It happened so quick."

In hindsight, Giordano thought maybe he'd consider making a different play if he had the chance.

"Obviously, with the result being what it is, if I had to do it all over again, you'd almost want to see myself let him go and not injure him," he said. "But that's easy to say, after the fact."

Leon Draisaitl, with his 50th goal, Alex Chiasson and Darnell Nurse scored for the Oilers (35-38-9), who were eliminated from playoff contention for the 12th time in 13 years earlier this week.

WATCH | Oilers' Leon Draisaitl nets 50th goal in win:

Draisaitl scores 50th goal in Oilers victory over Flames

6 years ago
Duration 0:29
Leon Draisaitl became the Oilers first 50-goal scorer since Jari Kurri and Wayne Gretzky in 1987-88 as the Oilers beat the Flames 3-1 in their season finale.

Mark Jankowski scored for the Flames (50-25-7), who enter the playoffs as the top seed in the Western Conference.

Calgary will face the Colorado Avalanche in the first round. The Flames will have home-ice advantage for the first time since 2006.

McDavid finished second in NHL scoring, 12 points back of Tampa Bay's Nikita Kucherov. McDavid's 41 goals equalled his career-best and his 116 points is a career high.

Edmonton took a 2-1 lead on the power play after McDavid's injury when Chiasson poked a loose puck past Mike Smith after he had stopped Oscar Klefbom's point shot.

Oilers goalie Mikko Koskinen made 30 stops.

Smith made 22 saves.

Edmonton opened the scoring at 10:55 of the first period when Andrej Sekera pinched down the sideboards and got the puck to Draisaitl near the faceoff dot. He wristed a shot past Smith for his 50th.

Draisaitl is the first Oiler to reach 50 goals since Wayne Gretzky and Jari Kurri each did it in 1986-87.

Calgary drew even five minutes later when Jankowski deflected Travis Hamonic's shot past Koskinen. Johnny Gaudreau had the second assist to get him to 99 points.

Gaudreau would fall one point shy of becoming the first Flame since Theoren Fleury in 1992-93 to record 100 points in a season.

Nurse gave the Oilers some breathing room 5:21 into the third, holding the puck patiently on a two-on-one before firing a shot past Smith high on the glove side.