Oilers Just Made A Dach Bet That Could Quiet Doubters

Can Colton Dach's talent and potential transformation offer the Edmonton Oilers the competitive edge needed for a Stanley Cup victory?

The Oilers have found a relatively cheap way to keep a hometown player in the fold, and Colton Dach’s new deal gives Edmonton another piece to work with after the Darnell Nurse trade opened up extra salary cap room.

Dach signed a two-year extension worth an average annual value of $1.2 million, and the contract keeps him with the Oilers through the end of the 2027-28 season. Edmonton announced the move on July 12, 2026.

Dacher 👊

The #Oilers have signed forward Colton Dach to a two-year contract extension with an AAV of $1.2 million. pic.twitter.com/29pjRSs3eo

  • Edmonton Oilers (@EdmontonOilers) July 12, 2026

Dach arrived from the Chicago Blackhawks in the trade that sent Andrew Mangiapane and a 1st round pick the other way. Jason Dickinson was the main piece for Edmonton in that deal, but if Dach develops into a middle six forward at the NHL level, the trade starts to tilt further in the Oilers’ direction.

There’s still work to do in Dach’s game. The 6'4" forward brings size and above NHL average skating speed, but his production hasn’t yet outweighed the defensive holes. He finished last season at -15, the same plus/minus he posted the year before, and his advanced numbers also leaned negative.

Still, the picture changes a bit when you look at what happened after he got to Edmonton. In eight games as an Oiler, Dach looked noticeably better.

He posted a neutral plus-minus and saw his Corsi and Fenwick numbers rise sharply. The sample is tiny, so it’s easy to overread it, but a bad team can hide what an individual player is actually capable of.

He also held his own in the postseason. Averaging 8 minutes of ice time, Dach finished -1 only once and picked up an assist in Game 1. In a series where several teammates fell short, he at least came out even.

Health remains part of the conversation. Dach has dealt with injury issues, including a 12-game absence after joining the Oilers and another stretch of double-digit missed games the season before. Even so, he’s still young enough that it’s too early to stamp him with the “injury prone” label.

Bowman has made a sensible wager on a player with some real upside. Now the next step belongs to Dach.

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