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Jeff Skinner gets the short end of the stick: 2024-25 Edmonton Oilers player review
Edmonton Oilers Jeff Skinner Calvin Pickard Jim Rassol-Imagn Images

Welcome to my annual player review series, where I dive into the Edmonton Oilers season player-by-player. We’ll look back at the season that was, what kind of impact each player had, and what we could see from them next season. You can read about the analytics behind my analysis here.


Via The Nation Network

In terms of players getting the short end of the stick, there may be fewer players with shorter sticks from this past season than Jeff Skinner.

He arrived last summer in free agency and was almost automatically pencilled into the Oilers’ top-six. After all, it made sense. Despite getting bought out by the Buffalo Sabres, Skinner had still been a solid offensive contributor for the team, but the buyout was more because of his salary, than anything else.

The only problem was that he didn’t quite fit there. A 200-foot game — something the team knew before signing him to his one-year, $3-million deal — wasn’t a strong suit throughout his prior 14 years in the league. So when he got demoted in the lineup and bumped out of it at times, he took it as a sign to improve his game.

He did so noticeably, but it still wasn’t enough. But it didn’t stop him from being a solid contributor for the team, with his five-on-five goals per hour rate and points per hour ranking third on the team being Leon Draisaitl and Zach Hyman, and third behind Drasiaitl and Connor McDavid, respectively.

His individual impacts defensively weren’t strong, at a 13 percent rate below league average, according to Hockey Viz, but he drove offence at a 10 percent rate above league average and his overall impacts — thanks to that offence and his ability to draw penalties — still had his overall contributions at that of a second-line winger. That’s what the Oilers had been hoping for when he signed, and while he didn’t play much in the playoffs, appearing in five games, he chipped in some offence and generated a strong amount of scoring chances and individual expected goals.

Evolving Hockey projected him to sign a three-year deal carrying a $4.7-million cap hit, while AFP Analytics projected a one-year, $2.6-million cap hit deal. Now 11 days into free agency and still unsigned — for some reason — Skinner will likely have to take a deal cheaper than projected.

JEFF SKINNER’S CAREER SO FAR

Season

Team

GP

G

A

P

+/-

PIM

PPG

PPP

SHG

SHP

TOI/G

GWG

OTG

S

S%

FO%

2024-25 Edmonton Oilers 72 16 13 29 +1 26 0 2 0 0 13:00 1 0 144 11.1 51.2
2023-24 Buffalo Sabres 74 24 22 46 -2 34 8 12 0 0 16:00 3 1 211 11.4 41.9
2022-23 Buffalo Sabres 79 35 47 82 +15 39 8 21 0 0 17:24 3 1 242 14.5 47.3
2021-22 Buffalo Sabres 80 33 30 63 -14 42 5 11 0 0 17:06 4 0 262 12.6 40.6
2020-21 Buffalo Sabres 53 7 7 14 -11 14 1 1 0 0 14:31 0 0 111 6.3 46.7
2019-20 Buffalo Sabres 59 14 9 23 -22 18 0 3 0 0 16:29 1 0 183 7.7 37.2
2018-19 Buffalo Sabres 82 40 23 63 0 36 8 16 0 0 18:31 7 3 268 14.9 52.2
2017-18 Carolina Hurricanes 82 24 25 49 -27 34 4 9 0 0 16:42 2 0 277 8.7 43.3
2016-17 Carolina Hurricanes 79 37 26 63 -3 28 7 15 0 0 17:44 4 0 281 13.2 37.0
2015-16 Carolina Hurricanes 82 28 23 51 -2 38 4 7 0 0 16:17 7 1 258 10.9 42.6
2014-15 Carolina Hurricanes 77 18 13 31 -24 18 4 7 0 0 16:03 2 0 235 7.7 45.7
2013-14 Carolina Hurricanes 71 33 21 54 -14 22 11 20 0 0 17:12 6 1 274 12.0 45.1
2012-13 Carolina Hurricanes 42 13 11 24 -21 26 5 9 0 0 18:28 0 0 159 8.2 47.7
2011-12 Carolina Hurricanes 64 20 24 44 -8 56 4 13 0 0 18:37 5 0 210 9.5 42.1
2010-11 Carolina Hurricanes 82 31 32 63 +3 46 6 18 0 0 16:44 2 0 215 14.4 36.9
Career 1078 373 326 699 -129 477 75 164 0 0 16:43 47 7 3330 11.2 44.5

OTHER PLAYER REVIEWS

This article first appeared on Oilersnation and was syndicated with permission.

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