Oilers May Lose A Playoff Spark Because Of Another Cap Squeeze

Will the Edmonton Oilers risk losing playoff hero Kasperi Kapanen to salary cap constraints and contract disagreements?

The Edmonton Oilers may be staring at a tricky call with Kasperi Kapanen, the winger who led the team in playoff goals and now sits in unrestricted free agency.

Bob Stauffer of Oilers Now said there is still “an appetite potentially for (bringing back) Kapanen… Claimed off waivers at a million bucks (Kapanen’s 2024-25 cap hit). Oilers re-signed him at $1.3 (million) this past season.

Unfortunately, battled injury. Had a pretty good playoff.

Is that a double-your-salary guy in your opinion. Because it isn’t for me.”

That’s the financial squeeze in a nutshell. Stauffer also said Darnell Nurse might be back with the Oilers, and if that happens, the cap picture gets even tighter.

Edmonton’s free agent priorities were Connor Murphy and Jason Dickinson, and both of those deals are already done. As Stauffer put it, “In Kapanen’s case of the three guys you mention (Kapanen, Jack Roslovic and Adam Henrique), he’s the most likely ti be potentially retained but not at $2.5 or $3 million .

That’s simply not going to work for Edmonton.”

Kapanen’s playoff run certainly changed the conversation. He scored four goals in six games against the Anaheim Ducks, making him the Oilers’ top playoff goal scorer in 2026.

That was a sharp turn from last year, when he was viewed as a mediocre, mistake-prone player. In the playoffs, though, he turned into a finisher on Leon Draisaitl’s wing, getting to the slot and hammering home chances.

His regular-season work with Draisaitl and Vasily Podkolzin was also a big part of Edmonton’s attack. That trio became the Oilers’ best line, a big, fast, hard-checking group that could cycle the puck better than any other Edmonton unit. They logged 141 even strength minutes together and outscored opponents 12-3.

Still, the contract question hangs over everything. On Tuesday, Kapanen’s wife posted “Last Days in Canada,” which drew plenty of attention online.

There is some risk in bringing him back. Kapanen has had an up-and-down career, and he was banged up enough last season to miss games several times. He also wasn’t a dominant two-way force at even strength, just an average one with the Oilers.

But there’s a simple case for him too: average NHL players matter, especially when they’re not taking up above-market money. The average salary in the NHL this year will be around $4.5 million per player, and Kapanen looks like the kind of player who could land a two-year deal worth $2.5 million to $3 million somewhere else if Edmonton can’t make the numbers work.

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