The Edmonton Oilers have one major contract battle staring them down next summer, but Matt Savoie could turn into another problem if the team waits too long.
Connor McDavid will be the headliner when extension talks come around, yet Savoie is the name lurking just underneath that spotlight. The 22-year-old is set to become a restricted free agent next summer, and that opens the door to something Edmonton knows all too well: an offer sheet.
Savoie isn’t the biggest piece on the roster, but he made a strong impression in his first full NHL season. If he takes another jump this year, he could become a key part of Edmonton’s future. That kind of growth would also drive up his price and make him a more tempting target for a rival club.
The Oilers have already lived through the damage offer sheets can do. They lost Dylan Holloway and Philip Broberg a few summers ago, and last year there was reportedly another threat hanging over Evan Bouchard from the Carolina Hurricanes.
That’s why the timing matters. The longer Edmonton waits, the more expensive Savoie can become.
The Anaheim Ducks’ handling of the Leo Carlsson situation is a warning sign, and Oilers GM Stan Bowman should be paying attention. Savoie is unlikely to land the kind of monster deal that would force a team to blink, but if he puts up something like a 30-goal, 60-point season, a $9- or $10-million offer sheet really wouldn’t be out of the question.
Young goal scorers are getting paid in today’s NHL, and Savoie has the kind of upside that can push him into that territory if he finds chemistry with either McDavid or Leon Draisaitl this season.
There’s risk in locking him in early, of course. But this isn’t some fringe case.
Savoie was a ninth-overall pick, and his rookie season ended with the sense that he’d found his footing late in the year. Players with that kind of profile usually end up on long-term deals anyway.
Logan Stankoven offers a useful comparison. In the summer of 2025, he signed an eight-year contract carrying a $6-million cap hit after a 14-goal, 38-point season split between the Hurricanes and Dallas Stars. That sort of number would make sense for both sides right now.
For an Oilers team built around an aging core, getting Savoie signed long-term would be a smart way to help keep the window open.
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