Oilers May Be Flirting With Another Costly Goalie Gamble

With Sergei Bobrovsky's free agency looming, the Edmonton Oilers are faced with the risky decision of investing in a once-dominant goalie whose recent performance raises red flags.

The Edmonton Oilers may be staring down a free-agent decision that comes with a huge price tag and plenty of risk. With Sergei Bobrovsky set to hit the market on Wednesday, Edmonton has been mentioned as a possible suitor, and the idea of a major offer is starting to take shape even without any confirmation that GM Stan Bowman plans to go that route.

Bobrovsky’s situation has changed quickly. The Florida Panthers are completing a trade for Jacob Markstrom from the New Jersey Devils, which appears to shut the door on Bobrovsky in Florida. That leaves him available at a time when several teams are said to be interested, including the Los Angeles Kings and Toronto Maple Leafs.

The problem for any team chasing him is the price and the direction of his game. Bobrovsky is reportedly looking for one more homerun contract, and that could push a bidder into paying far more than his recent performance suggests he should command.

Last season was a rough one by his standards. Bobrovsky finished 27-23-1 with a 3.07 GAA and an .877 save percentage in 52 games, a steep fall from the level he showed during his best stretch with Florida. Just two seasons ago, he posted a 2.37 GAA and .915 save percentage, earned a Vezina nomination, and helped lead the Panthers to the Stanley Cup.

Age only adds to the concern. Bobrovsky is 37 now, and any long-term commitment would be a bet that he can still deliver two or three useful seasons. A one-year deal would carry far less danger, but even then the upside is limited.

His role also told a story late in the season. Daniil Tarasov took over most of the playing time as Florida shut things down, a clear sign that the Panthers were ready to move in a different direction. Florida is paying full price with no salary retained in the Markstrom deal, which underscores how little interest there was in keeping Bobrovsky at his current cost.

Even if he can still win 25-30 games, the return may not justify a top-dollar contract. The Oilers would be paying premium money for a goalie who likely won’t carry the net for more than half the season.

And that is the danger of free agency: the wrong team can convince itself that a big name is the answer. If Bobrovsky reaches the market as expected, Edmonton could be in position to make exactly that kind of mistake.

In Other News...

Sabres Just Made A Goalie Decision Fans Will Debate For Years

The Oilers quietly took a swing at one of their biggest organizational needs by landing Devon Levi, a young goaltender with real long-term upside, in a trade with Buffalo. Edmonton also picked up a seventh-rounder in 2028, while sending the Sabres a 2028 third-round choice, a price that signals the team sees Levi as more than a depth addition.

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 🡒]

Oilers May Be Eyeing A Familiar Free Agency Gamble Again

The offseason chatter around Edmonton has turned toward a familiar type of add, the veteran power forward who can give the lineup a little more finishing touch without needing top-line minutes. Anders Lee, Jamie Benn and James Van Riemsdyk are all being floated as possible fits, and each brings a different mix of pedigree, size and recent scoring history that could appeal to a team looking to deepen its offense without making a splashy long-term commitment.

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 🡒]

Oilers Make Another Quiet Forward Move That Could Matter

The Oilers have added another depth forward to the mix, signing Eduards Tralmaks to a one-year deal as they continue to round out the roster with low-cost bets that could pay off later. It fits the pattern of a team that has already been busy this offseason, following the trade of Darnell Nurse and the signing of Ryan Shea while trying to keep the forward group stocked with options.

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 🡒]