The Edmonton Oilers could spend their remaining cap space on another forward, and two familiar names are still sitting there in Patrik Laine and Vladimir Tarasenko. On paper, both make sense. In practice, Edmonton may be better off doing nothing right now.
That’s the tricky part of free agency this late in the game: the temptation is real, but so is the value of patience. The Oilers need room to maneuver, and keeping that flexibility could matter more than adding a name today.
Laine is the flashier swing. The selling point is obvious - he still has an elite shot and, when he’s healthy, can score at a first-line pace.
At 28, and with injury concerns hanging over him, he could come at a bargain if a team is willing to structure the deal around incentives. For a club looking for a pure finisher, the appeal is easy to see.
But the downside is just as clear. Laine doesn’t bring much beyond the goals, and his availability has been a major issue. Over the last five seasons, he’s appeared in just 186 of 410 games, including only five last year.
Tarasenko offers a different kind of case. He’s still a useful scoring winger, and his 23-goal, 47-point season with Minnesota shows he can help a lineup. He won’t be the engine of an offense, but he can add dependable secondary scoring and slide in as a complementary piece for a contender.
Even so, there are reasons to hesitate. He’s now on his sixth team in four years, and that raises obvious questions about long-term value.
At 34, he’s too young for a bonus-structured contract. But, at 34, he's not young.
He's also a largely one-dimensional scorer at this stage.
The smarter play may be to hold the line and wait for the season to create better opportunities. The Oilers have seen this before, with players arriving late in the year. Last season, they brought in Jack Roslovic on opening day of the regular season for a fraction of what he might have cost earlier.
If the market stays quiet, there’s no reason to force it. Edmonton can look to Ike Howard for a bigger role, then revisit trades and depth additions once new options emerge. Meanwhile, the team can keep building cap space for the trade deadline.
If Laine or Tarasenko comes with an offer too good to ignore, Stan Bowman should absolutely listen. But this doesn’t feel like the moment to chase either one.
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For Edmonton, the intrigue is easy to understand because the Oilers have been linked to the same sort of low-cost, low-commitment path that could make sense for a player like Kane. A professional tryout would let everyone take a longer look before anything more permanent, and a one-year deal would keep the risk manageable if the fit is there, especially with the club still sorting through its forward depth and the uncertainty around some of its other options. [Read more 🡒]
