The Boston Bruins and Edmonton Oilers may need more depth to achieve their goals, and there's talent to try to acquire.
Not even close. Any concerns that a cross-continental flight from Seattle to Boston might have softened up the Edmonton Oilers were put to rest Tuesday, along with the humbled Bruins, in a lopsided show of force at TD Garden.
Third Period_4, Edmonton, Arvidsson 5 (Kulak), 16:25 (en). Shots on Goal_Edmonton 14-15-10_39. Boston 4-8-14_26. Power-play opportunities_Edmonton 1 of 3; Boston 0 of 2. Goalies_Edmonton ...
The biggest possible signing among Oilers prospects is Russian power winger Maxim Berezkin. I ranked him No. 3 on the winter edition of Edmonton’s top-20 prospect list based on size, skill and performance. He has scored 11-21-32 in 46 KHL games this season, and his free-agent window opens this spring.
First Period_1, Edmonton, Henrique 4 (Kulak, Perry), 6:33. Penalties_Zadorov, BOS (Interference), 14:35. Second Period_2, Edmonton, McDavid 16 (Nugent-Hopkins), 11:11 ...
Third Period_4, Edmonton, Arvidsson 5 (Kulak), 16:25 (en). Shots on Goal_Edmonton 14-15-10_39. Boston 4-8-14_26. Power-play opportunities_Edmonton 1 of 3; Boston 0 of 2. Goalies_Edmonton, Skinner 16-8-3 (26 shots-26 saves), Edmonton, Pickard 9-4-0 (0-0). Boston, Swayman 13-14-3 (38-35).
Advertisement Article continues below this ad Shots on Goal_Edmonton 14-15-10_39. Boston 4-8-14_26. Power-play opportunities_Edmonton 1 of 3; Boston 0 of 2. Goalies_Edmonton, Skinner 16-8-3 (26 ...
Adam Henrique scored two goals and Connor McDavid scored on a power play midway through the second period as the Edmonton Oilers won their fourth straight game, 4-0 over the Boston Bruins.
Make no mistake, what transpired at the end of Saturday night’s game was ugly. Cross-checks to the head and neck, no matter the reason for it, are more than deserving of supplemental discipline.
Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me. It’s hard to know exactly where to stand with the Vancouver Canucks, who very clearly deserve full marks for the way they performed in Saturday’s 3-2 win over the Edmonton Oilers.
Born in Montreal on Sept. 12, 1931, four days after what’s usually reported because of an error on his baptismal certificate, the 5-foot-10, 170-pound forward won the Stanley Cup with the Detroit Red Wings in 1955, then with the Canadiens in 1958, 1959 and 1960.
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