This Connor McDavid Rumor Will Make Oilers Fans Uncomfortable

Speculation swirls around Connor McDavid's future, but is a move to the Flyers a realistic scenario or just another rumor?

A stray rumor can travel fast when Connor McDavid is the name attached to it, and that’s exactly what happened here. Former Flyers forward Todd Fedoruk suggested Philadelphia could be a destination McDavid wants, and even floated the idea that the Oilers captain could soon be reaching out to gauge interest.

Fedoruk put it this way:

“He is going to be a player who will be calling teams. His agent is going to be looking for him to go places. There are rumors that Philadelphia is a place that Connor McDavid wants to go,”

That’s a bold claim, but the trail behind it is thin. McDavid just helped steer Edmonton toward hiring Mike Babcock, and the source material says he’s invested in making a run with the Oilers for two more seasons. Maybe that plan doesn’t end with a parade, but for now, he’s all in.

The other issue is obvious: if McDavid or his agent were actually calling around, that would cross into tampering. Still, the rumor seems to rest on the same old logic that follows McDavid everywhere - if he’s not winning enough in Edmonton, he must be looking for a way out.

That’s what makes the Flyers angle so strange. Why Philadelphia?

The connection is flimsy at best. McDavid’s only obvious tie is that he played CHL hockey in Erie, in northwestern Pennsylvania, about 430 miles northwest of Philadelphia.

Beyond that, there are no family ties mentioned, no old teammates in orange and black, and no coach link to lean on. The Flyers have shown they’re willing to swing big, including the Leo Carlsson offer sheet, but they’re not presented here as a Stanley Cup contender.

If winning is the priority, Philadelphia would look like a step backward.

And yet the Flyers have still managed to make noise. Their recent moves sent a clear message that they’re open for business and willing to spend. That kind of signal can make almost any superstar rumor sound a little more believable, even when the facts behind it are basically nonexistent.

Money is the part that gives the story some surface-level appeal. Players have more control over their next move than ever, and long-term loyalty isn’t the force it used to be at McDavid’s level. Carlsson signed that Flyers offer sheet because the money was too good to ignore, and he later said he was glad the Anaheim Ducks matched and that he never wanted to leave.

If the Flyers were to chase McDavid, the assumption would be that they’d offer the maximum on a new deal. With the cap projected to reach $123 million in 2028-29, that would put McDavid at $24.6 million per season, nearly twice what he’s making now. That kind of number is hard to dismiss.

But the bigger point is that McDavid’s history points in a different direction. The source material makes clear that he has already shown what matters most to him: winning.

He’ll choose the place where he thinks he can do that before he lets money drive the decision. He’s going to get paid well wherever he lands; the real question is whether he’d ever see Philadelphia as the better path.

Based on what’s here, that would make far more sense for Carolina or Colorado than for the Flyers.

For now, though, there’s no evidence McDavid is trying to get out of Edmonton, and nothing here ties him specifically to Philadelphia or any other team. The rumor is catching on for the simplest reason of all: it’s Connor McDavid, and any speculation about him instantly becomes a conversation.

In the end, the Flyers aren’t really the story. McDavid is. Every rumor like this is less about a destination and more about the pressure on his current team - whether Edmonton is closing the gap or running out of time.

In Other News...

Former Oilers Prospect Just Surfaced In Stunning Star Trade Chatter

A former Oilers prospect has suddenly been pulled into a much bigger conversation, with Sam OReillys name surfacing in reported trade talks between the Tampa Bay Lightning and Columbus Blue Jackets involving defenseman Zach Werenski. OReilly, who was dealt from Edmonton to Tampa Bay last August, has been viewed as a promising young piece after a strong junior run, and he is expected to begin his professional career with the Syracuse Crunch next season.

For Edmonton fans, it is another reminder of how quickly a prospect can go from future hope to a possible chip in a major NHL deal. The chatter around Werenski did not last long, though, as both Columbus and the defenseman later issued statements reaffirming their commitment to each other, leaving OReilly still on Tampa Bays side of the ledger and his next step unchanged for now. [Read more 🡒]

One Oilers Camp Longshot Could Suddenly Matter More Than Fans Realize

With training camp approaching and roster decisions looming for both Edmonton and Bakersfield under new coach Mike Babcock, the Oilers are again sorting through the kind of depth questions that can shape a season in subtle ways. Jordan Oesterles recent retirement is part of that broader picture, but the more intriguing angle is the search for a player who can make noise in camp and give the organization a little more flexibility if the lineup gets tested.

One name worth watching is Eduards Tralmaks, whose AHL production and profile make him more than just another longshot invite. He is not expected to see much NHL ice, and even a brief run at the top level would be a surprise, but his ability to stand out in camp could put him on the radar if injuries create an opening later on. For a team trying to keep its options open, that kind of impression can matter more than it first appears. [Read more 🡒]