The Edmonton Oilers are on the ropes, and their quest to return to a third consecutive Stanley Cup Final has run into trouble in Anaheim.
It's been an exciting first round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs, and most of the series are proceeding as expected. The Colorado Avalanche and Carolina Hurricanes — arguably the two best teams entering the fray — made quick work of their first-round foes.
Unexpected Upset in Anaheim
The one result that has undoubtedly caught me off guard? It's been this plucky Anaheim Ducks team giving a veteran-led Edmonton Oilers club all they can handle.
After Sunday's overtime thriller, the Ducks — who had not reached the playoffs in eight prior seasons — are one win shy of advancing to the second round. And this would be a meaningful upset.
Edmonton was priced at 69% implied probability of winning this series before it started; now, they are down to just 21%.
Goaltending Concerns Validated
What’s shocking is how this is playing out. We had serious reservations about Edmonton's goaltending, and those reservations have been validated once more.
The combination of Connor Ingram and Tristan Jarry has been dreadful, with the duo stopping just 85% of shots faced in the series.
Even Strength Struggles
But bad goaltending isn't the only issue. Getting outplayed by this Anaheim Ducks team at even strength is surprising, given the talent in the Oilers lineup.
Anaheim is outscoring Edmonton and is getting 55% of the shot share in the process.
Top Line Getting Outplayed
In playoff matchups, head-to-head performance can be illuminating as to where the performance gaps exist. What stands out immediately?
Edmonton's top line is getting outplayed by Anaheim's top line. In the Connor McDavid era, you can count the amount of times his line has been outplayed on one hand, but the young guns in Anaheim are giving this group fits.
Spending so much time defending the run of play is death by a thousand paper cuts for the Oilers' big guns. They're not a great defensive group to begin with, and now are spending inordinate amounts of time in the defensive third trying to protect an already besieged goaltending group.
Not only is that risky business, it means you aren't spending much of any time in the attacking third.
These big negative differentials have proved meaningful: the McDavid line is getting outscored 6-to-2 (-4), as is their top pairing of Evan Bouchard and Mattias Ekholm.
Power Play Underperforming
The exclamation point on all this? Edmonton's supernova power play has been anything but.
We have seen struggling Oilers teams many times over saved by a man advantage that looks unstoppable. Right now, the Ducks' power play is +6 in the series, while the Oilers' power play is just +2.
Bad goaltending, shoddy even-strength play, and a special teams disadvantage? This is how you can lose a series in five games.
Stars Must Step Up
Make no mistake, the Oilers are in real trouble here. And if there's ever been a time for the likes of McDavid and Leon Draisaitl to put the team on their backs, this is it.
Anaheim has shown up impressively and, frankly, looks the better team in every respect.
Either the Oilers run the table here, or we are headed for a long, painful offseason in Alberta.