Oilers Face One July 1 Dilemma That Could Define Bowman's Summer

Deck: Entering a tricky free agency period, the Edmonton Oilers' management must tread carefully to avoid past missteps and make strategic moves for future success.

Stan Bowman doesn’t need another July 1 mistake on his ledger.

That’s the warning hanging over the Edmonton Oilers as free agency approaches, and it’s a loud one. In two summers on the job, Bowman has already seen how thin the margin is when the market opens and teams start throwing money around.

His first full offseason included the trade for prospect winger Ike Howard and the free-agent additions of Andrew Mangiapane and Jack Roslovic. One of those bets fit the old Edmonton pattern too neatly.

The other was the kind of move that actually makes sense.

Roslovic, signed on the opening night of the 2025-26 season, ended up being the better investment. Mangiapane, meanwhile, fit a trend the organization has been chasing since Milan Lucic in 2016: a Day 1 free-agent splash that doesn’t age well.

The message from the past is pretty clear. Bowman should be patient and let the market come to him.

That advice matters even more this summer, because July 1 looks like a trap. The cap is climbing fast, but the free-agent pool is weak.

That combination can push teams into overspending for players who are more expensive than they are impactful. Edmonton has lived through this before, most infamously in 2016 when Peter Chiarelli signed Lucic and then shipped out Taylor Hall in a stunning talent bleed that fans still remember.

The Oilers’ roster situation could make the temptation even stronger. If Darnell Nurse is moved, Edmonton could be sitting on more than $15 million to work with.

Even then, the depth chart would still need work: one goaltender, two defencemen and three forwards would have to be added. There isn’t much help coming from Bakersfield, either, with Damien Carfagna the lone strong candidate and Quinn Hutson and Connor Clattenburg in the mix for opening-night roles.

That’s why the smarter play may be the least flashy one.

A short, cautious free-agent list makes a lot more sense than a big swing. Ryan Shea fits that mold as a possible Nurse replacement or a third-pair option if Jake Walman slides into the second pair with Connor Murphy. He’s not the youngest name in the world, but he has been getting better every year and looks like the kind of defenceman who could age well.

Up front, Mavrik Bourque stands out as a possible offer-sheet target and a fit with Bowman’s effort to add youth. Edmonton already has Vasily Podkzolin and Matt Savoie in that lane, with Howard set for full-time duty this fall. Bourque, a smaller skill winger, could also open up trade possibilities involving Savoie or Howard.

Then there’s Pavol Regenda, the kind of low-profile bet that can make sense for a team hunting value. He scored nine goals in 28 games with the San Jose Sharks this season, and at 6-foot-4 and 212 pounds, he brings size along with some offensive touch. Vincent Desharnais is another option, offering reach, penalty-killing ability and a mean streak that could help in more than one area.

But the real lesson for Edmonton comes from Roslovic.

When the Oilers signed him on Oct. 8, he had already been sitting in free agency for months. That kind of patience can pay off, and it did here - Roslovic scored 21 goals for Edmonton.

The lesson is obvious: don’t be the team that pays the first price on July 1. Let somebody else overcommit.

Then shop once the market cools.

That approach matters most in goal. Free-agent goaltenders are everywhere this summer, and several teams have three quality waiver-eligible goalies they may be willing to move.

Bowman should resist the urge to hand out a long, expensive contract at the position. The spread between the best and worst outcomes is too wide, and predicting who is about to pop has proven impossible.

If Edmonton waits until July 10 and signs Connor Ingram, he could end up being the best-performing goalie the team lands in free agency this summer. Bowman could pair that with a trade for a cheaper option, like Michael DiPietro of the Boston Bruins, then bring Ingram, DiPietro and Tristan Jarry to camp and sort it out from there. The Oilers could even lean on the waiver wire the way the Stanley Cup champion Carolina Hurricanes have done, using the season to audition goalies before settling on the right tandem.

What they cannot do is hand a goalie a long-term deal with big money attached. The Jack Campbell signing in 2022 is the cautionary tale sitting right there in Edmonton’s own history.

For now, the best thing Bowman can do is exactly what he appears to be doing: wait. Wait on Nurse.

Wait on the market. Wait for the overreactions to start elsewhere.

If the Nurse deal lands with the Bruins for DiPietro and a small retention, that opens the door for more flexibility in both free agency and trade talks. A summer that includes Shea, Regenda and Desharnais could still leave room to add two forwards through trades. That would be a cleaner way to reshape the roster than racing to spend on July 1.

The Oilers don’t need another aging free agent on a deal they’ll regret later. They need discipline, and Bowman has a chance to give them exactly that.

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For Edmonton, the appeal is obvious: Levi is now lined up with Tristan Jarry as part of the clubs goaltending tandem for the 2026-27 season, giving the organization a new look in net and a possible answer down the road. Levis move out of Buffalo closes a chapter that never fully settled into a full-time starter role, and the next one in Edmonton comes with pressure, opportunity and plenty of eyes on how quickly he can turn promise into reliability. [Read more 🡒]

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The appeal is easy to see, but so is the risk. All three are on the older side for free-agent bets, which is exactly why these kinds of discussions can feel like a gamble even when the fit makes sense on paper. Edmonton has not made any official move, and for now the idea remains just that, a possibility the Oilers may decide is worth revisiting if they want another layer of scoring support around their core. [Read more 🡒]

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Tralmaks comes off a productive season with Grand Rapids, where he put up 26 goals and 42 points in 64 AHL games. For Edmonton, the appeal is obvious: a player who can score at the minor-league level, comes cheaply at $850,000, and gives the organization another name to track as camp approaches, even if the path to meaningful NHL minutes still has to be earned. [Read more 🡒]