McDavid, Oilers itching to erase past playoff failures by getting past Chicago
Edmonton face bottom-seeded team Saturday in NHL's restart
Edmonton Oilers forward Connor McDavid may be the best hockey player in the world, but his body language these days resembles a guy with a big chip on his shoulder and something to prove.
McDavid and teammate Leon Draisaitl were one-two in league scoring during the regular season, with Draisaitl racking up 43 goals and 110 points to win the Art Ross trophy. McDavid was second with 34 goals and 97 points.
The duo formed the nucleus of the league's deadliest power play, scoring at almost 30 per cent, a rate not seen since the high-flying Montreal Canadien dynasty days of the late 1970s.
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Everything is looking good for the Oilers: four months off gave a breather to Draisaitl (he had been logging heavy minutes) and playing the games in an isolation bubble in Edmonton, which, while far from ideal for so many reasons, levels the playing field between east and west teams on travel.
McDavid worked hard during the hiatus, and teammates say he has somehow found a next gear for his world-class speed. He scored two goals against Calgary in Tuesday's exhibition game. The second saw him rocket down the right side, pull up as if to pass, then whip a no-look shot between the pads of David Rittich.
Flat out filthy.
Chicago, meanwhile, appears ripe for the picking. Chicago were spiralling out of the playoff picture when they given a Lazarusian reprieve by becoming one of the 24 eligible for return to play. Heck, they were even sellers at the trade deadline.
Their best hope, veteran goalie Corey Crawford, needs to steal a couple of games, but he didn't even resume skating until a week ago as he recovered from COVID-19.
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Only 11 of the 35 players starting Chicago's return to play camp had playoff experience, but those who do — including Patrick Kane, Jonathan Toews and Duncan Keith —are Stanley Cup winners and won't be feeling any jitters.
The Chicago kids will have to step up, particularly Calder candidate winger Dominik Kubalik. He continued his torrid pre-hiatus scoring pace by potting two goals and an assist versus St. Louis in exhibition play this week.
McDavid also doesn't have to do it alone.
His supporting cast is stronger. Ryan Nugent-Hopkins has continued his top-level play. Kailer Yamamoto has been scoring at a point a game pace since getting called up in late December. And mutton-chopped Zack Kassian has come into his own as a power forward, reminding everyone if he has the choice between scoring or running over somebody and then scoring, he'll pick the latter every time.
The Oilers have made the playoffs only once in McDavid's time and the bottom line is the clock is ticking if McDavid, 23, and Draisaitl 24, want to fulfil the promise of being one of the storied NHL duo success stories a la Gretzky-Messier and Crosby-Malkin.
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Also, lose to Chicago and the crocodile-tear-stained schadenfreudists will no doubt resurface, again urging McDavid be granted an exit visa out of hockey's northern gulag, which has seen one playoff run in 13 years and where the most treasured recent collective hockey memory, seriously, is deputy commissioner Bill Daly turning over the gold card in 2015 to give Edmonton the right to draft McDavid.
Answering questions over Zoom after Tuesday's Calgary game, McDavid fidgeted in his chair, eyes frequently darting off camera, his game analysis kept to a tight Dick and Jane reading level ("Liked our first period, didn't like our second, and I thought we responded well in the third.")
His demeanour, however, was clear.
Enough yappity-yap.
Let's drop the puck.
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