The Edmonton Oilers may be done with the draft and free agency, but the roster still comes with a few obvious questions.
On Sportsnet 590 The FAN, Jason Gregor pointed to the biggest shift first: Edmonton finally has cap space to work with. He said the Oilers have about $7.5 million available and, for the first time in a while, their core is already signed.
That flexibility matters because Gregor believes Edmonton is set to open the season carrying three goalies: Freddie Anderson, Tristan Jarry and Devon Levi. In his view, that setup reflects both the uncertainty and the plan in net.
“Like, actually, they’re going to carry three goalies, that’s my understanding. Anderson, (Tristan) Jarry, and Devon Levi.
And I think it’s fair to say, guys, that there’s, there’s some question marks here. Because you know, Freddie Anderson, he’s not a 55-game starter anymore, right?
You look, it was what he’s like, last year, he started 35, 22, 19, 33 I think his last four years. So he has a history of injuries, no one can debate that.
So Tristan Jarry didn’t have that history, but the last two years he has, so can between the two of them, can they, can they play enough games, and then maybe Devon Levi is your third stringer, who plays 20. I think that’s their strategy.
They don’t have a lot of money tied up in their goaltending now. Freddie Anderson when healthy, I don’t think anybody debates he’s a good goalie.
But the, when healthy is a fact that you can’t overlook.”
Gregor also sees a blue line that looks different, but not necessarily tougher. He noted that Darnell Nurse’s durability was never really the issue, saying Nurse has missed only 18 games in the last nine years. But he also suggested the Oilers may have traded away some physicality and size.
He pointed to Ryan Shea as a useful addition after a strong year in Pittsburgh, and said Edmonton’s right side now runs through Evan Bouchard and Connor Murphy, with Jake Walman, Mattias Ekholm and Shea on the left. Even so, he said the defense is not especially imposing.
“My concern is the Oilers don’t have an overly physical blue line right now. Not overly big, but you know, Ryan Shea, is he competitive enough? Yes, I think he, he, he will make less of the big errors that Nurse would make every now and then.”
For Gregor, though, the bigger story is what Edmonton can do next. With cap room in hand, he thinks the Oilers are positioned to act later if the roster needs more help.
“But more importantly, I think it just gives them flexibility that now they can go to the trade deadline, and if they’re missing pieces, they don’t have to just, you know, try to scrimp and scratch and claw. They’ll have significant amount of cap space to actually add some players.”
He also said the offseason trade market may not be finished yet, even after a flurry of activity around Calgary and Minnesota.
“And I wouldn’t be surprised, guys, if, like, we already had a trade at Calgary, Minnesota. I don’t think the summer of trades in the NHL are done just because free agencies passed. I think there’s a lot of teams that are still going to be looking to make some moves.”
In Other News...
Oilers Face A Costly Top Six Decision They Can't Delay
The Oilers are sitting on close to $6 million in cap space, which is enough to keep the conversation going but not enough to make the need disappear. A top-six winger remains the obvious target, and the list of realistic options is not exactly overflowing, which is why the front office has to weigh whether a move can be made now rather than letting the market tighten even further.
The names that keep surfacing point to the same kind of player Edmonton is after: a winger who can score and fit into a contenders top six without disrupting the rest of the lineup. With the free-agent path looking thin, the real question is whether the Oilers want to wait for the trade deadline dance or get aggressive before the asking price and the competition both climb. [Read more 🡒]
Oilers Blue Line Squeeze Could Force A Move Fans Saw Coming
The Oilers have spent the summer building depth on the blue line, but the math is starting to get awkward. After a run of trades and signings, Edmonton now has eight defensemen making $1.3 million or more, and it is hard to imagine the club carrying all of them when the season opens. For a team that has spent years trying to stabilize its back end, this is the kind of surplus that can look like a luxury right up until it turns into a roster decision.
What makes the situation interesting is that the likely move does not appear to involve one of the more established names. Edmontons choice seems to be narrowing around a pair of younger defensemen, with handedness and recent usage both part of the equation. One option has the cleaner fit on paper, while the other spent more time on the outside looking in, and the Oilers now have to decide whether they want to keep the extra insurance or turn that depth into something else before camp sorts it out for them. [Read more 🡒]
