Oilers Face A Familiar Matt Savoie Decision They Can't Afford To Miss

With escalating contract standards and his rising performance, locking in Matt Savoie sooner rather than later could save the Oilers millions.

The Edmonton Oilers have a chance to get ahead of the market with Matt Savoie, and the timing matters.

After the Philadelphia Flyers changed the conversation around second contracts by signing Anaheim Ducks centre Leo Carlsson to a record-breaking offer sheet, the ripple effects are already being felt across the NHL. Edmonton won’t be dealing with anything nearly that dramatic for Savoie, but the lesson is clear: if a young player pops, the price climbs fast. That gives Oilers general manager Stan Bowman a window to act now, before the 2026-27 season, and lock in some cost certainty.

Savoie is one year away from needing a new deal. If his next season goes the way Edmonton hopes, that number could get uncomfortable in a hurry. The smart play is to sign him early.

His offensive growth last season showed why.

The Oilers handled Savoie cautiously through the first three months of the 2025-26 season. In October, he logged 133 minutes at five-on-five and didn’t record a point.

Through that opening stretch, he piled up 480 five-on-five minutes mostly on depth lines and produced just 0.75 points per game. Kris Knoblauch kept him largely on the fourth line and used him heavily on the penalty kill.

Then the season turned.

After Jan. 1, Savoie climbed the lineup and eventually found himself on Connor McDavid’s top line.

Over 511 minutes after the new year, he posted 2.23 points per 60 for Edmonton. His full-season totals look ordinary at first glance, but that first half came with the kind of slow-play treatment the Oilers have used on young forwards for years.

That approach has not always worked out well. Edmonton has already paid for it with Philip Broberg and Dylan Holloway, both of whom were lost to offer sheets.

Savoie’s second-half production is the more useful guide here. In the final 41 games of the regular season, he put up 6-13-19 at five-on-five.

Even with only about one minute per game on the power play in the back half, he added three goals and a short-handed goal. His second-half boxcars finished at 10-13-23.

If he turns that kind of stretch into a 20-goal, 50-point season next year, his camp will have a strong case for a major raise.

Edmonton has lived through the danger of overpaying wingers for McDavid’s line, too. For years, the organization kept cycling through middle-six players who got premium minutes and premium money.

Milan Lucic, Zack Kassian, Evander Kane and others all filled that role at different points. Patrick Maroon was the best value of the bunch, and he did it on a $2 million AAV deal signed when he was still a depth player for the Anaheim Ducks.

That pattern shifted once Zach Hyman arrived in 2021 on what became the Oilers’ best free-agent deal. From there, the club stopped handing out expensive contracts to placeholder wingers and settled into a better structure with Ryan Nugent-Hopkins or Leon Draisaitl on one side and Hyman on the other.

Savoie may be the next player in line to benefit from that kind of clarity - and the next player whose price rises quickly if Edmonton waits.

His defensive work gives the Oilers even more reason to take him seriously. Savoie logged 64 minutes on the penalty kill last season, the highest total for an Oilers rookie winger since Iiro Pakarinen in 2015-16.

Pakarinen was 24 and already had several pro seasons in Finland behind him. For Knoblauch to trust Savoie that early says plenty.

His expected GA-60 of 8.48 ranked third among regular Oilers penalty-killing forwards.

The McDavid-Savoie pairing also held up against top competition. According to Puck IQ, the two skated 105 minutes together at five-on-five, and their Dangerous Fenwick was 57 percent with a 64 percent goal share while facing elite competition.

Those numbers were stronger than McDavid’s results away from Savoie against elite opponents, and better than Nugent-Hopkins in that role as well. It’s a small sample, but it’s enough to show Savoie handled the assignment.

The market for his next contract is still taking shape. The Flyers’ Carlsson offer sheet has changed the way teams will think about players coming out of entry-level deals, and older players may end up with less of the cap pie.

Before that move, some online projections had Savoie around $4 million times four seasons. Since then, Mavrik Bourque’s $5.5 million times six years, via PuckPedia, has become a popular comparison, while Logan Stankoven’s $6 million times eight years is another possible benchmark.

Whatever the final number looks like, one thing is obvious: a long-term deal is cheaper now than it will be later. If Savoie follows his second-half trajectory and puts together a strong two-way season in 2026-27, the bill goes up.

Bowman has time, but not much. Best to get it done before September.

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