Home Ice Hockey (NHL)3 Takeaways From Oilers’ 3-0 Victory Over Kraken – The Hockey Writers –

3 Takeaways From Oilers’ 3-0 Victory Over Kraken – The Hockey Writers –

by Syndicated News

The Edmonton Oilers won for the fourth consecutive game, beating the visiting Seattle Kraken by a score of 3-0 at Rogers Place on Tuesday (March 31).

Max Jones, Kasperi Kapanen and Connor McDavid each scored a goal for Edmonton. Oilers netminder Connor Ingram made 27 saves to earn a shutout, while Seattle goalie Philipp Grubauer stopped 23 of the 25 shots he faced.

With the victory, Edmonton improves its record to 38-28-9. The Oilers have seven games remaining on their 2025-26 regular season schedule.

Another Complete Effort from Oilers

It took five and a half months, but the Oilers finally have a winning streak of at least four games this season. Before Tuesday, Edmonton and the Philadelphia Flyers were the only two teams in the NHL to have not won four games in a row since the season began in October.

Not coincidentally, the win streak has come at a time that Edmonton is playing its most fundamentally sound and defensively responsible hockey of 2025-26, with the entire lineup locked in from the opening faceoff to the final horn.

Max Jones, Edmonton Oilers (Jess Starr/The Hockey Writers)

Tuesday’s victory might be the best example yet of why Edmonton is suddenly succeeding. Jones scored just 5:28 into the game, and from that point on, the home team was in command. The Oilers were all over Seattle, staying on top of the opposing players and giving them little room to breathe. Seattle finished the game with just three high-danger scoring chances, compared to 11 for the Oilers.

Ingram Continues to Shine

On the rare occasion that Seattle did get an opportunity to score, Ingram was there to shut the door. During a humorous interview on Sportsnet after the game, the good-natured goaltender gave all the credit to Edmonton’s defensive play.

“Did I really do anything?” Ingram said in response to a question about his role in preserving the lead and ensuring Seattle didn’t score. When it was then pointed out that Ingram had stopped Seattle’s shots, the goalie just smiled and shrugged: “I don’t know, I saw ‘em. I mean, they (Edmonton’s defence) made my job pretty easy tonight, so I’ll take it.”

While he might not say it, Ingram has been as responsible for Edmonton’s improved play as any Oilers player. For the month of March, he went 7-2-1 with a 2.60 goals-against average and a .902 save percentage.

Ingram also just happened to turn 29 Tuesday. He became the first Oilers netminder to post a shutout on his birthday, a feat that had only happened 16 other times, by 15 different goalies, in NHL history.

No Draisaitl, No Problem

The most fascinating aspect of the recent turnaround in Edmonton is that the Oilers have done it without the services of superstar centre Leon Draisaitl, who is expected to be sidelined for the rest of the regular season while recovering from a lower-body injury.

Tuesday was the seventh game that Draisaitl has missed since being injured against the Nashville Predators on March 15, and the Oilers have a record of 5-2-0 in those contests.

Even more incredibly, Edmonton is now 7-3-0 without Draisaitl in 2025-26, and 11-4-0 in the last 15 games he hasn’t played, dating back to April 2025.

While the Oilers have managed to produce offensively at the same rate (3.50 goals per game without Draisaitl compared to 3.48 goals per game with him this season), they’re allowing much fewer goals (3.54 when Draisaitl plays compared to 2.10 when he isn’t in the lineup this season).

No one in their right mind would suggest that the Oilers are a better team without one of the greatest offensive players of his generation. But the numbers might suggest that Draisaitl’s absence forces his teammates to shore up their play, which is exactly what they’ve done these last handful of games.

Oilers Gain Ground on Ducks

With their victory against Seattle, the Oilers now have 85 points, just two less than the Pacific Division-leading Anaheim Ducks. Anaheim still has eight games – one more than Edmonton – left to play, but the Oilers currently hold the tiebreaker over the Ducks.

Related: Breaking Down How the Oilers Can Overtake the Ducks for First in the Pacific

Suddenly, it’s not so far-fetched that Edmonton could finish atop its division standings for the first time in nearly four decades. The race continues over the next couple nights, with Anaheim visiting the San Jose Sharks on Wednesday (April 1) and Edmonton hosting the Chicago Blackhawks on Thursday (April 2).

SUBSCRIBE FOR FREE TO OUR EDMONTON OILERS SUBSTACK NEWSLETTER

Source link

Related Posts

Leave a Comment