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Oilers' Kris Knoblauch Thinks Deadline Additions Have Transformed Defense
Jan 8, 2026; Winnipeg, Manitoba, CAN; Edmonton Oilers head coach Kris Knoblauch looks on during a game against the Winnipeg Jets in the third period at Canada Life Centre. Mandatory Credit: James Carey Lauder-Imagn Images James Carey Lauder-Imagn Images

Kris Knoblauch addressed the media ahead of tonight's game against the Blackhawks, and his message was clear. The Edmonton Oilers did not chase offensive help at the trade deadline, and the head coach has no regrets about that decision. The results, he argued, have spoken for themselves.

The Oilers acquired defenseman Connor Murphy and forward Jason Dickinson from the Chicago Blackhawks in back-to-back deals at the March deadline. Neither move generated much excitement at the time, but both players have since logged heavy minutes in critical situations and delivered exactly what Edmonton needed.

Edmonton enters the game on a four-game winning streak, sitting second in the Pacific Division with 85 points. Knoblauch connected the team's defensive improvement directly to his two deadline additions and the emphasis on detail and systems work that followed their arrival.

Offense Was Never the Concern

Knoblauch was direct when asked why the Oilers passed on scoring help at the deadline. With Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl driving the attack, he felt that side of the puck was never the issue heading into March. "We felt going into the deadline we had enough offense," the coach said.

He continued, "Offense generation wasn't an issue for us, whether it was creating chances or scoring goals." With Evan Bouchard (86) and Leon Draisaitl (97) both supporting McDavid on offense this season despite Draisaitl's injuries, it was clear that the Oilers don't lack in points production.

What Edmonton lacked was defensive structure and personnel capable of handling tough matchups without overloading their stars. Dickinson and Murphy were brought in specifically to address that gap, and Knoblauch believes both have done exactly that.

Dickinson and Murphy Solidify Oilers Identity

Knoblauch was specific about what both players have contributed since joining the team. Murphy has brought size and reliability to the back end, while Dickinson has taken on the toughest center matchups nightly, giving Edmonton a credible shutdown option they previously lacked.

"Those two have really solidified our identity of how we want to play," Knoblauch said of his two deadline additions. The Oilers had allowed four or more goals in nine of their final eleven games before the deadline. That number has improved by miles since Dickinson and Murphy arrived in Edmonton.

Bedard Presents the Biggest Threat

With tonight's game against Chicago approaching, Knoblauch addressed the challenge Connor Bedard presents. He called the Blackhawks center their most dangerous player while acknowledging that the team has scoring depth throughout its forward group.

"He's definitely their most dangerous player," the coach said of Bedard, adding that Edmonton's approach will need to account for shutting down one of Chicago's lines regardless of the matchup decision. The Oilers have won eleven of their last twelve meetings against the Blackhawks, and today they hope to win one more.

This article first appeared on Breakaway on SI and was syndicated with permission.

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