Edmonton Oilers: 2014-15 NHL season preview

Young, talented roster strives for 2-way game

Image | hall-taylor-620

Caption: Former first-overall pick Taylor Hall notched a career-high 80 points last season for Edmonton while staying relatively healthy for the second year in a row. (Abelimages/Getty Images)

This is part of our series of quick season previews for the seven Canadian-based NHL teams. We've also covered the Vancouver Canucks, Calgary Flames, Winnipeg Jets and Toronto Maple Leafs.

Edmonton Oilers(external link)

Last season's record: 29-44-9 (67 points), 7th out of 7 in Pacific Division, missed playoffs.
Last season's story: New coach Dallas Eakins got the same old results from this tantalizing-but-frustrating young roster as the Oilers missed the playoffs for the eighth season in a row. Edmonton put itself behind the eight-ball with a horrid 4-15-2 start en route to surrendering the most goals in the league. Despite a career-best 80-point year by former first-overall pick Taylor Hall(external link), the offence wasn't much better, finishing 25th in goals as the Oilers struggled with puck possession. They also seemed adrift at times, as Eakins clashed with Hall (the water-bottle incident(external link)) and the maddening Nail Yakupov(external link). Franchise icon Ryan Smyth(external link) retired after the season.
Key off-season additions: F Benoit Pouliot(external link), F Teddy Purcell(external link), D Nikita Nikitin(external link), D Mark Fayne(external link), D Keith Aulie(external link).
Key off-season subtractions: F Ryan Smyth(external link), F Sam Gagner(external link), F Ryan Jones(external link), D Anton Belov(external link), D Mark Fraser(external link).
Best-case scenario: Ben Scrivens(external link) and Viktor Fasth(external link) form an effective goalie tandem in their first full season together; GM Craig MacTavish's changes to the defence help while young Justin Schultz shows he can anchor a blue-line; and the Oilers' goal prevention improves from porous to passable. Meanwhile, fifth-year forward Hall puts up even bigger numbers and proves his early-career injury issues are behind him; Ryan Nugent-Hopkins(external link) and Jordan Eberle(external link) blossom into stars; Yakupov buys into a two-way game; and the Oilers make the playoffs for the first time since their run to the Cup final in 2006.
Worst-case scenario: The advice of new analytics hire Tyler Dellow is ignored by the old-school MacTavish as the Oilers' possession struggles continue and a weak defence makes life miserable for Scrivens and Fasth. Hall is unable to stay on the ice; Yakupov is traded for peanuts after another clash with the coaching staff; Edmonton misses the playoffs again and provincial rival Calgary lands phenom Connor McDavid in the draft lottery.