
Eight weeks, four rounds, and two dozen games after the 2024 Stanley Cup Playoffs began, the Edmonton Oilers are now just one win away from the franchise’s sixth championship.
Edmonton takes on the host Florida Panthers at Amerant Bank Arena in Sunrise on Monday in Game 7 of the 2024 Stanley Cup Final. The Oilers can become the first team since the Toronto Maple Leafs in 1942 to hoist the NHL’s championship trophy after trailing 3-0 in the best-of-seven series.
The Oilers have captivated their city, if not all of Canada and the entire hockey world, by taking fans on a thrill ride. Edmonton beat the Los Angeles Kings 4-1 in the first round, defeated the Vancouver Canucks in seven games in Round 2, and then captured its first conference championship in 18 years with a 4-2 victory over the Dallas Stars.
Now, the Oilers have rallied with three straight victories against Florida, outscoring the Panthers 18-5 over that span, to force a winner-take-all game that will end with one team in ecstasy and the other in agony.
Many superlative adjectives have been used to describe the Oilers’ journey: remarkable, incredible, amazing, unparalleled, etc. None of these are inaccurate. There’s no such thing as hyperbole when talking about something so rare as a 3-0 comeback.
However, the essence of Edmonton’s Stanley Cup run can best be captured in three phrases that have become very popular in Oil Country.
Stuart Skinner is an Edmontonian because the Oilers netminder refers to the team as “The Oil,” a term mostly exclusive to local fans.
Born and raised in the city where he now plays, Skinner first used the term as he spoke to reporters following Game 3 on June 13. Edmonton had just lost 4-3 to Florida and now trailed in the series 3-0: “I’m not too sure what the stats are coming back (from being down 3-0), but if anyone can do it, it’s the Oil,” Skinner said.
"If anyone can do it it's the Oil."
— Sportsnet (@Sportsnet) June 14, 2024
Stuart Skinner on making a comeback in the #StanleyCup Final. pic.twitter.com/gRxYtReyWQ
Following his brilliant 29-save effort in Edmonton’s Game 5 triumph on June 18, during which he made a couple of massive saves late in the third period with the Oilers clinging to a one-goal lead, Skinner was asked what the last two games had shown about his squad. “You can never count the Oil out,” the 25-year-old netminder responded, using the Edmonton vernacular again.
Then, after the Oilers won Game 6, Skinner doubled (or is that quadrupled?) down on his original statement: “There’s just a really strong feeling of belief with this whole group, and we’ve had it for a long time now, and no matter what situation we put ourselves in, we always do have that belief, so me saying that felt normal.’
“I really do believe in this group, and I’m sticking to those words: ‘If anyone can do it, it’s the Oil.’ We’ve got a lot more work to do here, though,” said Skinner, who stopped 20 of 21 shots in Edmonton’s 5-1 win on Friday (June 21).
The Oilers battled back from trailing 1-0, 2-1, and 3-2 in their second-round series against Vancouver. They were down 2-1 to Dallas in the Western Conference Final before winning three straight games. Now, after winning these three last contests against the Panthers, Edmonton is 5-0 when facing elimination in the 2024 playoffs.
As for those stats that Skinner wasn’t too sure about? Only nine times in Stanley Cup Playoff history had a team forced Game 7 after falling behind 3-0 in a best-of-seven series. Now it’s 10.
After dropping the first three games of the Stanley Cup Final, Edmonton blasted the Panthers 8-1 at Rogers Place on June 15, thus cutting Florida’s series lead to 3-1 and forcing a Game 5 in Sunrise.
Edmonton led 2-0 before the game was eight minutes old, went ahead 6-1 in the second period, and by the time the third period rolled around, Rogers Place was in party mode.
Connor McDavid had a big night in Game 4, with a goal and three assists to lead his team to victory. But the Oilers captain had no mind for celebrating. At the post-game press conference, he was asked whether erupting for eight goals had changed how the Oilers felt about the series.
“We got to go to Florida and do a job and drag them back to Alberta.”
— Sportsnet (@Sportsnet) June 16, 2024
Connor McDavid on the job that lies ahead for the Oilers. pic.twitter.com/LY0ERYdVmz
“No, I don’t think so,” McDavid responded. “It’s just one win, that’s all it is. It doesn’t matter if you score eight or you score one. It’s just one win, and we got to go to Florida and do a job and drag them back to Alberta.”
Those last five words were clipped and replayed across media endlessly over the next couple of days leading up to Game 5. They became the rallying cry for Oilers fans, and even McDavid’s teammates picked up on it, with Oilers forward Connor Brown telling reporters, “We’re gonna try to drag ‘em back to Alberta” during pre-game media availability.
Brown gave the Oilers an early lead in Game 5, scoring short-handed just 5:30 into the first period, and McDavid brought them home, scoring into an empty net with 19 seconds remaining to seal a 5-3 win.
McDavid finished the night with two goals and two assists, becoming the first player in Stanley Cup Final history with consecutive four-point games, as he completed his task to drag the Panthers back to Edmonton for Game 6.
They’ve been saying it for Edmonton for years, but “Play La Bamba, Baby” has only become well known across the NHL during the 2024 Stanley Cup Playoffs.
The Oilers started playing “La Bamba” by Ritchie Valens to celebrate each home victory, as a tribute to Joey Moss, after their longtime locker room attendant passed away in 2020.
“La Bamba” was a favourite song of the widely beloved Moss, who was around the Oilers for the better part of four decades. Born with Down Syndrome, Moss served as an inspiration, and his zest for life was infectious.
Later, a video of five-year-old Oilers fan Ben Stelter saying, “Play La Bamba, baby,” went viral. Stelter had been diagnosed with glioblastoma, a form of brain cancer, two months before his fifth birthday.
Edmonton’s players befriended Stelter, who spent time around the team. Just like Moss, the courageous youngster was a tremendously inspiring person with an infectious spirit. Stelter passed away at age six in 2022, having profoundly impacted Oil Country.
After Dallas beat Edmonton in Game 2 of the Western Conference Final on May 25, Stars DJ Jonathon Shipman trolled the Oilers by playing “La Bamba” at American Airlines Center. The DJ was unaware of the significance of the song and, after learning of it, issued a heartfelt apology. In a gesture of goodwill, Shipman donated to the Ben Stelter Foundation, as did many generous Stars fans.
The Oilers have played “La Bamba” 15 times so far this postseason. Can they cue it up one more time in South Florida on Monday night?
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Over the past few months, Jordan Kyrou’s name has been circulating in transaction rumours. Of course, as you know, he has also been linked to the Canadiens. In June, around the time of the draft, the forward’s name refused to die in town. But in the end, he’s still in St. Louis. Could things change? Who knows. The player’s poor start to the season and the fact that he’s been passed over by the Blues recently could push a file forward… But we do know that since July 1, the main interested party has had a no-trade clause. According to what David Pagnotta reported this morning on TSN 690’s Campbell VS Gallo, the Canadiens were indeed considering Kyrou in June… But his no-trade clause changed everything. According to Pagnotta, this means that Kyrou wouldn’t want to play in Montreal OR wouldn’t want to leave the St. Louis Blues. One or the other. Could what was true (according to Pagnotta) in July be different in November? Yes, theoretically. That said, the way the Canadiens have been playing for a while now, it’s not clear that Kyrou, signed for over $8 million a year until 2031, would want to embark on a Montreal adventure right away. And there’s no guarantee that the Canadiens would be happy with the price they’d have to pay to get him, should he become available. overtime – Really? – Marie-Philip Poulin gives her sweat to science. [JdeM] – Well. – Ouin…
With Aaron Rodgers dealing with a left wrist injury, the Pittsburgh Steelers worked out veteran quarterbacks Jason Bean and Tanner Mordecai on Tuesday, per Pro Football Talk’s Mike Florio. The Steelers currently have three quarterbacks on their 53-man roster and zero on their practice squad. Backup Mason Rudolph, and third-stringer Will Howard will both move up a spot on the depth chart for at least a week, leaving the Steelers without a third option should either of them get injured. Bean, 26, signed with the Colts as an undrafted free agent out of the University of Kansas in 2024. He did not make the 53-man roster, but stuck around on the practice squad for the entire season. He was waived during final roster cuts this year and did not draw practice squad interest from the Colts or any other team. Mordecai is also a 26-year-old who entered the NFL as an undrafted rookie in 2024. Mordecai finished his college career at Wisconsin and signed with the 49ers last spring. He spent the season on San Francisco’s practice squad and was repeatedly cut and re-signed during training camp as the team balanced their other roster needs. He was waived due to injury a final time during roster cuts. The Steelers did not sign Bean or Mordecai, though that could be coming in the next few days as they continue to assess Rodgers’ wrist. They could also work out other available quarterbacks later this week.
According to Michael Signora, the NFL has upheld Bengals WR Ja’Marr Chase‘s one-game suspension for spitting on Steelers DB Jalen Ramsey in Week 11. The incident sparked a commotion in Sunday’s game, where Ramsey threw a punch that got him ejected. Ramsey later said Chase spat on him, which provoked him. Chase denied it, but video from the game showed he was lying. The NFL has put an extra emphasis on sportsmanship this year, ejecting Eagles DT Jalen Carter for spitting in Week 1 and treating that as a de facto suspension by fining him a game check as well. He will now miss Cincinnati’s game against the Patriots in Week 12. A suspension costs Chase a game check worth $448,333 and a $58,824 active roster bonus. Chase, 25, was a two-year starter at LSU and a unanimous All-American during his sophomore season. He opted out of the 2020 college football season due to the pandemic. The Bengals took Chase with the No. 5 overall pick in the 2021 NFL Draft. He was in the fourth year of a four-year, $30,819,642 contract with the Bengals that included a $19,774,285 signing bonus when the Bengals picked up a fifth-year option worth $21.816 million fully guaranteed for the 2025 season. The Bengals and Chase then agreed to a massive, four-year, $160 million contract extension. In 2025, Chase has appeared in 10 games for the Bengals and caught 79 passes on 117 targets for 861 yards and five touchdowns.
The NFL has heard the arguments from Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver Ja'Marr Chase regarding his spitting incident against the Pittsburgh Steelers. It did not buy what he was trying to sell. Nor should it have. NFL upholds one-game suspension for Ja'Marr Chase Chase immediately appealed the one-game suspension the NFL handed down for spitting on Steelers safety Jalen Ramsey during Sunday's game, but on Tuesday night hearing officer Jordy Nelson upheld the league's initial decision. That means Chase, the Bengals' best wide receiver and one of their best players overall, will miss Sunday's game against the New England Patriots. It was the only decision that made sense. Especially given the precedent they set early this season involving Philadelphia Eagles defensive tackle Jalen Carter. Prior to this season the NFL did not treat spitting incidents as a suspension-worthy offense, only issuing fines for them. But the league is attempting to crack down on unsportsmanlike conduct incidents, and spitting is pretty clearly high on the list. The season began with Carter being ejected from their season opener following a spitting incident involving Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott. Even though the NFL did not suspend Carter beyond that, it viewed his ejection as serving as a one-game suspension because he never actually played a snap in the game. Chase's incident happened late in the fourth quarter after he had played nearly a full game, and also received no penalty or ejection for it. Ramsey was ejected from the game for punching Chase in response. It is the type of thing the NFL — and all sports leagues — should have zero tolerance for and punish harshly. It goes beyond the game and has nothing to do with the physical nature of the game. It's not a heat of the moment punch. Or a borderline play that produces a dirty or illegal hit because of the speed of the game. It is a blatant act of disrespect that takes thought and effort to do. The fact Chase denied doing it, took no accountability for it and had a lame excuse for doing it despite clear video evidence showing that he did it, only adds to the issue for him. He deserves to sit a game for it. Now he will.



