Oilers Still Believe After Mistakes Put Them in 3-0 Cup Hole
EDMONTON, Alberta — Stuart Skinner hasn’t given up on the Oilers’ Stanley Cup dream.
“It is disappointing being down 3-0. We’ve got to let that reality sink in,” the goaltender said after the Florida Panthers’ 4-3 win in Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Final on Thursday night. “I’m not too sure what the stats are on coming back in it, but if anyone can do it, it’s the Oil.”
Here are the stats: Teams that go up 3-0 in a best-of-seven Stanley Cup Final have won 27 of 28 series. The only exception was in 1942, when the Toronto Maple Leafs rallied to defeat the Detroit Red Wings.
Of those 28 series, 20 ended in sweeps. The Panthers are trying to get the broom out in the Stanley Cup Final for the first time since the Red Wings eliminated the Washington Capitals in four games in 1998.
Even if the Oilers manage to send the series back to South Florida with a Game 4 win, 25 of those 28 series have ended in no more than five games.
Belief Amidst Adversity
But the Oilers still believe.
“I think we’ve showed that we can beat this team,” said coach Kris Knoblauch, whose Oilers are now 0-5-0 against the Panthers this season. “I think there’s a lot of belief in that. It’s not like we’re getting outplayed and we’re just [saying], ‘That team’s better than us.’ We can string together a lot of wins. We’ve shown it. I don’t think there’s any doubt in our room.”
Knoblauch pointed to two eight-game winning streaks in the regular season and a 16-game winning streak from the end of December into January.
“There’s frustration that we’re down, but there’s a difference between frustration and quitting,” he said. “There’s absolutely no quit. There’s a belief that we can do this, so we just need to keep pushing.”
Edmonton did push in the third period Thursday, getting greasy goals from Philip Broberg and Ryan McLeod to cut the Panthers’ lead to 4-3. But the critical takeaway from Game 3 was that the Oilers were down 4-1 entering the third period — on home ice, in a must-win game, against a team with a plus-15 goal differential in the final frame during the postseason.
Second Period Collapse
Their undoing came in an embarrassing 6:19 stretch in the second period when Florida scored three goals. The Oilers had just tied the game at 1-all on a Warren Foegele breakaway goal. But a turnover by Skinner allowed forward Eetu Luostarinen to find Vladimir Tarasenko to make it 2-1, deflating the crowd at 9:12.
It was 3-1 at 13:57, as solid forechecking by Matthew Tkachuk helped force a Darnell Nurse turnover that Sam Bennett snapped into the net for his seventh of the playoffs.
Aleksander Barkov capped the scoring for Florida at 15:31, converting a 2-on-1 chance that the Oilers allowed to start from deep inside their attacking zone.
“After they got that second one, they just kind of got on a roll. We let them take that momentum and stride with it,” Skinner said. “They got two more quick ones. Just kind of silly mistakes that don’t need to happen.”
Star Players Struggling
The mistakes piled up for Edmonton. The goals for their star players have not. Foegele, Broberg, McLeod and Mattias Ekholm have goals. The five leading scorers in the playoffs — forwards Connor McDavid, Leon Draisaitl, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, Zach Hyman and defenseman Evan Bouchard — do not.
Those five players also run the Oilers’ power play, which has been powerless this series as the Florida penalty kill has gone 10-for-10. Edmonton’s power play entered the series clicking at over 37%, best in the postseason.
McDavid has hit the score sheet, with assists on three of the four Oilers goals in the series. The Oilers star is on pace to become just the second player since 1967-68 to have a point on at least half of his team’s goals in the postseason. The only other player to do that was Wayne Gretzky for the Oilers in 1988.
Draisaitl took responsibility for his surprising lack of production.
“It’s very frustrating, of course,” said Draisaitl, who entered the Final with 28 points in 18 games. “I pride myself on being good in the playoffs and playing well and just can’t seem to get anything going. So yeah, I obviously have to look in the mirror and try to be better.”
He said the Oilers made it too easy for the Panthers in Game 3.
“We shot ourselves in the foot a little bit today,” he said. “Made some individual and collective mistakes that they immediately took advantage of.”
But like the rest of his team, he still believes they can rally, against all odds.
“We’re a good offensive team,” Draisaitl said. “They’re doing a good job, but we’re still getting our looks. It’s just when you’re chasing the game for a big chunk of the night, it’s hard to come back. It’s a steep hill right now, obviously. No choice but to take it one game at a time. Try and get one win in Game 4 and go from there.”