
College football takeaways: What’s next for Ohio State? Who could land final CFP spot?
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6 months agoon
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adminRivalry week brought us many entertaining moments as brawls broke out, flags were planted and teams were eliminated from title races.
No. 2 Ohio State lost to Michigan for the fourth consecutive time. As Ohio State was favored by three touchdowns going into the matchup against the unranked Wolverines, where do the Buckeyes go from here?
With the final College Football Playoff rankings less than a week away, we know the top four seeds will be from among the highest-ranked Power 4 conference title winners and the winner of UNLV–Boise State. With some debate on who could land the final CFP spot, could it be Ole Miss? South Carolina?
Our college football experts break down key storylines and takeaways from Week 14.
The 12-team College Football Playoff is already making a case for further expansion
Someone is always going to be left out, but when the final bracket is revealed on Selection Day, odds are there will be one or two three-loss SEC teams (maybe Alabama, Ole Miss and/or South Carolina), that are excluded but are talented enough to make a run at it — if there were room. The question is how much angst SEC commissioner Greg Sankey will have over it, and whether it’s enough to prompt him to support a 14-team playoff in the next iteration. Before Texas beat Texas A&M on Saturday night, Sankey began his annual push for the SEC.
“I think going week-to-week to see things in person: The physical rigor, the intensity means that we should have three[-loss] teams fully under consideration and I said that at the beginning of the year,” Sankey said, according to the Houston Chronicle.
And if they don’t get considered? A 14-team bracket would change it. — Heather Dinich
What now for Ryan Day, Ohio State?
Day vowed all year that he wouldn’t lose to the Wolverines again. Not after three straight losses in the rivalry. Not with the program investing $20 million in name, image and likeness money to compile a super team. Not after so many key Buckeyes returned for another year just to finally defeat That Team Up North. Not against a rebuilding Michigan that had to claw its way just to reach bowl eligibility.
Ohio State closed as a 20.5-point favorite — the second-biggest point spread in the rivalry dating back to 1978. And yet, somehow, the Buckeyes flopped again, as Michigan pulled off one of the biggest upsets this college football season with a stunning 13-10 victory at the Horseshoe.
Can the reeling Buckeyes get off the mat for the playoff to salvage a season that opened with the highest of expectations? Day’s job could hinge on it on the heels of one of the worst losses in school history. — Jake Trotter
Sanders family will leave a lasting impact at Colorado
Moments after Colorado‘s 52-0 stomping of Oklahoma State, which capped a 9-3 regular season Friday, Deion Sanders posed for pictures with his three sons on the field.
Shedeur, the Buffaloes’ record-setting quarterback, had begun the day by winning the Johnny Unitas Golden Arm award and ended it with 438 passing yards and five touchdowns. Shilo, Colorado’s starting safety, recorded four tackles as the team posted its first shutout since 2021. Deion Jr., who produces social media content for the program, captured key moments on the field and behind the scenes.
Deion Sanders, who has coached his sons throughout their careers, said the finality of Shedeur’s and Shilo’s final home game brought on emotions.
“Only sprinters see the finish line from the start,” he said. “I’m a distance runner, so I never really see the finish line from the start, and today I saw it. So that’s tumultuous, that’s tremendous, that’s heartfelt.”
Deion Sanders sounded like a coach who is just getting started at Colorado. NFL overtures might come, but he wants to make Colorado a championship-level program in the coming years. He will no longer have Shedeur and Shilo by his side, but their contributions helped create a foundation, and they will continue to help the program.
“I’m going to donate to the [NIL] collective for sure,” Shedeur Sanders said, smiling. “It’s a tax write-off, so I’ll make sure we have a super team next year. I’m just happy for the new guys coming in, that we paved the way for them.”
Deion Sanders still has one game left with his sons, who will play in Colorado’s upcoming bowl. But their time together in Boulder will always be remembered, not only by them but also by those who watched. — Adam Rittenberg
Challenges persist off the field, but college football is still the best
Now that the regular season is over, let’s all be honest. College football is still the best sport on the planet.
It doesn’t matter if you love NIL or hate it, if your roster was ravaged by the transfer portal or fortified by it, or even if your school was the one that the referees, conference commissioners or (ultimately) the College Football Playoff committee “conspired” against. This was one chaotic, unpredictable and wildly entertaining season.
And in a way we’re just getting started with the first 12-team playoff beginning later this month.
The “chaotic” part this season is ironic because there is chaos and uncertainty surrounding where the sport goes from here in terms of how to pay players, which schools can find the money to keep up and how it all will impact the overall athletic department picture at schools. Sadly, more court battles are coming, meaning more billable hours and more legalese, which is a hell of a lot less interesting than what we’re seeing on the field each week.
Fans are watching as much or more than ever before. And why not?
– Indiana is going to the playoff. Yes, Indiana, and we’re not talking hoops.
– Look at what Coach Prime has done at Colorado and the way he has brought a different swag and a different gusto to college football. The Buffaloes have nine wins after seven straight losing seasons.
– Florida State finished 13-0 and won the regular season a year ago and ended this season with just two wins (only one an FBS win). In that same state, Florida‘s Billy Napier was ready to be run out of town after ugly home losses to Miami and Texas A&M the first two weeks of the season. But he never lost the locker room and stayed resolute, and the Gators won four of their past six games to finish 7-5. And by the way, few teams played a more difficult schedule.
– Army has 10 wins and is playing Saturday for the AAC championship at home against Tulane. Quarterback Bryson Daily, a street brawler at heart, has 25 rushing touchdowns, and his coach, Jeff Monken, is a coach we don’t talk enough about in college football.
– Boise State running back Ashton Jeanty has 2,288 rushing yards and 28 touchdowns and is probably not going to win the Heisman Trophy because there’s a guy at Colorado who plays on nearly every down (Travis Hunter) and has been college football’s version of Superman.
– Georgia beat Georgia Tech in an eight-overtime epic. Michigan, a three-touchdown underdog, recovered from a crummy season to upset Ohio State and extend Ryan Day’s misery in that rivalry. Shane Beamer became only the second South Carolina coach in the past 40 years to win nine regular-season games (Steve Spurrier was the other) thanks to a thrilling 17-14 comeback win at Clemson. Notre Dame inexplicably lost to Northern Illinois at home in Week 2 only to reel off 10 straight victories and will now play a home playoff game. Vanderbilt beat then-No. 1 Alabama for the first time in 40 years, and one of the goal posts was paraded through downtown Nashville by students and tossed into the Cumberland River.
We could go on and on. But, yep, college football is, as Tina Turner once sang, simply the best. — Chris Low
Let’s talk flag-planting
Rivalry week is one of the best parts of college football, and this season’s version was particularly vivacious. In Ohio, Florida, Arizona and both Carolinas, flag-plantings prompted skirmishes between bitter rivals, perhaps none bigger than Michigan-Ohio State, where police, pepper spray and some performative outrage turned one of the biggest upsets of the season into a referendum on how to lose — or win! — properly.
“Some people gotta learn how to lose,” Michigan running back Kalel Mullings said during his postgame TV interview. “You can’t be fighting just because you lost a game.”
But should you be flag-planting?
First of all, what is it about flag-planting that gets people so riled up? Of course, it’s partly about pride. Who wants to see the team you just focused on trying to beat for an entire week (or in the case of the Buckeyes, four years and counting) bask in its victory while throwing what amounts to a small parade on your own field?
There’s something to be said for Mullings’ quote. If you can’t beat your rival on the field over the course of 60 minutes, what makes you think you can stop them from celebrating, even flag-planting, afterward?
That leads us to the topic of decorum. By the time the Saturday night games came and went, coaches had already taken notes on the previous games’ brawls and were actively trying to avoid a repeat situation. Steve Sarkisian, who was seen trying to keep Texas players from doing anything along those lines after a win at College Station, even went as far as to say the Longhorns wanted to beat Texas A&M with class. Mind you, this is the same Texas team that planted its flag in Michigan Stadium after beating the Wolverines earlier this year.
Not ideal.#GoBlue pic.twitter.com/FW9uhYBa35
— The Winged Helmet (@TWH_Chris) September 7, 2024
“Rivalries are great, but there’s a way to win it with class; I just didn’t think that’s the right thing to do,” Sarkisian said. “We shouldn’t be on their logo; we shouldn’t be planting any flags on their logo; and I’d like to, whenever that day comes, get the same respect in return.”
There is no moral high ground here, and Sarkisian’s comments are convenient at best. Anyone who has ever tried to claim some kind of superiority because they didn’t plant a flag has likely been part of a flag-planting before. Coaches spend their entire week riling up their teams to play their best against their rivals — how could they expect them to react in any other fashion whether they win or lose?
As an aside: Part of me also feels like some of the indignation is due to the fact that the very act of flag planting (read: stabbing the field) can be so visceral. Or in the case of Arizona State, which tried to plant the Arizona field with a Sun Devil fork, hilarious.
ASU plants the fork in Arizona Stadium 😈🔱@ASUFootball pic.twitter.com/F1sU4qJugA
— FOX College Football (@CFBONFOX) November 30, 2024
Flag-planting is a feature of the sport, not a bug. It’s why, although this is not a space that’s advocating for fights, I think teams are allowed to be upset about said flag-plantings too. That’s part of the zest that makes this sport unique.
So, to those with decision-making power in the sport, don’t overreact and do something like try to legislate flag-planting out of college football. Let winners be winners — even if they’re loud. And let losers be losers — even if they’re sore. — Paolo Uggetti
Who should get the final CFP spot?
Eleven of the 12 playoff spots are all but set, with nine teams looking entirely secure and four more playing in win-and-in conference title games.
That leaves one spot up for grabs, and although Shane Beamer’s emotional pitch for South Carolina might resonate with plenty of folks, the numbers on paper tell a different story — one that should end with Ole Miss getting the final spot.
South Carolina might be the hottest team in the country, but six weeks of good football shouldn’t erase the fact that the Gamecocks have head-to-head losses to Alabama and Ole Miss. For the committee to put the Gamecocks in over two teams with the same records that beat South Carolina on the field would be — well, OK, nothing is quite beneath the committee, but it’d be a bad precedent, to be sure.
Then compare Ole Miss and Alabama. Both have wins over South Carolina — but Bama’s was by two, while the Rebels won by 24. Both have wins over Georgia, but Bama’s came in a nearly epic collapse by seven, while Ole Miss’ win came by 18.
SP+ has Ole Miss as the No. 3 team in the country. Alabama is No. 5, South Carolina is No. 13. Advanced metrics aren’t a ranking of performance, per se, but it’s a good indicator that the Rebels’ upside is as high as that of anyone in the playoff field.
OK, you say, but what about the losses? The Rebels have L’s to Florida and Kentucky. That’s really bad, right?
Well, sure, but all three of the Rebels’ L’s — including the one at LSU, too — came by a touchdown or less. The loss to Florida is actually far less toxic than it might’ve been a month ago, as the Gators are now 7-5. And by SP+, Kentucky is actually 10 spots ahead of Vanderbilt, which beat Alabama. Plus, if bad losses are a reason to keep a team from the playoff, the line starts behind Notre Dame and Ohio State.
It’s true, of course, that South Carolina has none of that baggage. Its losses are all defensible, which is the best argument for putting the Gamecocks into the playoff at this point. But to do so requires accepting the paradox that South Carolina is better than Ole Miss and Alabama because it lost to Ole Miss and Alabama instead of to someone worse.
Or the committee could do exactly what it did with a similar quagmire back in 2014 and take the easy way out. Miami is waiting there with one less loss than any of that trio of SEC teams, and losing to Syracuse isn’t as embarrassing as it sounds. No, seriously. Stop laughing. — David Hale
Get Cam Skattebo a ticket to New York
Everyone has their own rationale for why they vote the way they do for the Heisman Trophy. The most outstanding player in college football needs to have a résumé with the right blend of elite performances, statistics and moments. I think there’s another important factor worth weighing, too: When you’re telling the story of the season, were they a relevant and important part of it?
It sure seems as if Colorado’s two-way star, Travis Hunter, already has the trophy locked up, and deservedly so. Boise State’s Ashton Jeanty is right there with him. Those two leading the way right now tells you voters have been open-minded this season about honoring the absolute best players in the sport even if they don’t play quarterback. I think it’s time to acknowledge one more deserving underdog: Arizona State running back Cam Skattebo.
The Sun Devils’ unstoppable senior back ranks third in the FBS with 1,866 yards from scrimmage and has scored 19 total TDs to power one of the most surprising teams in the sport. Kenny Dillingham’s squad was picked to finish dead last in the Big 12 entering its first season in the conference and is now one win from a Big 12 title and potentially a top-four seed in the CFP.
What Arizona State has achieved is shocking, but it hasn’t been miraculous. The Sun Devils have developed into a darn good team that got this far led by a little-known transfer from the FCS Sacramento State Hornets who ranks second nationally behind only Jeanty in missed tackles forced and has surpassed 100 total yards in nine of 11 games. If you ask Big 12 coaches, they’ll tell you Skattebo is the toughest player they faced all year.
If Arizona State knocks off the Iowa State Cyclones to win the Big 12, Heisman voters had better be ready to put Skattebo on their ballot. He’s having a program-changing impact for the Sun Devils, and he’s not done yet. He deserves a trip to New York. — Max Olson
Are we ready to start talking about a secondary tournament?
The 24-team FCS playoffs are in full swing, and several teams are still in the mix for the first 12-team FBS playoff. Yet we still have a system that gives a single playoff participation slot to the 50-plus FBS teams outside the Power 4.
If we started from scratch and decided how to structure college football, top to bottom, there is no chance this would be the format we settled on. It’s completely illogical and is the product of incremental measures over several decades.
The bowl system is on life support. People watch them still for a very simple reason: Football is fun to watch. And if people are willing to watch stakes-less, soulless bowl games, who wants to bet there would be an even bigger audience for a Group of 5 tournament?
College football needs to stop pretending Group of 5 teams and Power 4 teams are the same tier for postseason tournaments. They’re not. And that’s fine! I’m all for allowing an opt-in system to guarantee the Group of 5 access to one spot in the top 12-team — or eventually larger — playoff field, but a separate playoff for the tier of football between the FCS and the Power 4 would add a lot to the sport as a whole. — Kyle Bonagura
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Sports
Inside the numbers: Where Connor McDavid, Leon Draisaitl rank as an all-time playoff duo
Published
1 hour agoon
June 9, 2025By
admin
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Greg WyshynskiJun 9, 2025, 07:30 AM ET
Close- Greg Wyshynski is ESPN’s senior NHL writer.
EDMONTON, Alberta — Mark Messier and Wayne Gretzky are the two highest-scoring players in Stanley Cup playoffs history. But Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl just passed the Edmonton Oilers‘ dynastic duo in the NHL record books for one particular achievement.
“They’re the best players of their generation,” said Messier, who is second (295 points in 236 games) to Gretzky (382 points in 208 games) in all-time postseason scoring.
Gretzky and Messier had 28 playoff games in which they both scored multiple points. Game 2 of the Stanley Cup Final on Friday against the Florida Panthers was the 29th game in which McDavid (three assists) and Draisaitl (goal, assist) both had multiple points in a postseason game, passing Messier and The Great One.
They trail Gretzky and Glenn Anderson by one game for second all time in this category but will need some time to match Gretzky and linemate Jari Kurri, who had 44 multipoint games together with Edmonton and Los Angeles.
“It’s actually unbelievable for a franchise like Edmonton to have had the teams and the players that have come through there, Messier said. “There are NHL teams that have been around forever and never had a Bobby Orr or Mario Lemieux. For a team that had Gretzky to now have McDavid and Draisaitl is unbelievable.”
Of course, Messier was no slouch either. The Hockey Hall of Fame center is third in NHL history with 1,887 career points. He and Gretzky won four Stanley Cups together in Edmonton, before Messier won another with the Oilers after The Great One was traded to Los Angeles. They were the engine for those teams, with Gretzky (252 points) and Messier (215 points) as the first and second playoff scorers in Edmonton history. McDavid (148 points in 92 games) is fifth, while Draisaitl (137 in 92 games) is sixth.
McDavid and Draisaitl eclipsing an achievement by Gretzky and Messier is poetic. Both sets of stars were the first- and second-line centers on the Oilers. All of them have been NHL MVPs. The current Edmonton standard-bearers are trying to bring the first Stanley Cup to the city since the Oilers’ dynasty ended in 1990.
“They’ve been in this organization for a long time now. Two of the best players in the world. Everyone knows how much they mean to the Oilers,” said their goalie, Stuart Skinner, who grew up in Edmonton as an Oilers fan.
Draisaitl was drafted third in 2014 by Edmonton behind defenseman Aaron Ekblad and center Sam Reinhart, both of whom are now on the Panthers. McDavid was the coveted first pick in 2015 whom Edmonton drafted after winning the lottery and moving up from No. 3.
McDavid and Draisaitl led the Oilers to the Stanley Cup Final last season and nearly rallied them from a 3-0 series deficit to the Panthers before losing in Game 7. McDavid finished with 42 points in 25 games. Draisaitl had 31 points in the same span.
This postseason, McDavid leads the playoffs with 31 points, while Draisaitl is second with 29 points.
Draisaitl has scored at least 10 goals in three straight postseasons, joining New York Islanders legend Mike Bossy (four from 1980 to 1993) and Gretzky (three from 1983 to 1985) as the only players to have done so.
This is McDavid’s third 30-point postseason, tying him with Messer for second-most all time behind Gretzky, who had six. Assuming Draisaitl gets to 30 points, it will also be his third 30-point postseason. Draisaitl’s next point will also set a new NHL record for him and McDavid: No other teammates in Stanley Cup playoffs history have had back-to-back 30-point postseasons.
Not even Gretzky and Messier.
“I think Oilers fans appreciate it because of the 1980s and then the long drought and now what they have with McDavid and Draisaitl,” Messier said. “There’s appreciation of their drive, work ethic, talent and determination to be the best. They’ve shown every one of those attributes.”
AT THE END of Game 1 of the Western Conference finals, as the Dallas Stars were celebrating a miraculous third-period comeback win, Draisaitl and McDavid simultaneously turned their heads to glance at each other on the Oilers bench.
The Oilers are 3-0 and have outscored Dallas 13-2 since this knowing glance pic.twitter.com/svRvq0MukK
— Mike Commito (@mikecommito) May 28, 2025
This became known on social media as “The Look.”
Fans marked time as everything that happened before “The Look” and everything that followed it. Namely that the Oilers won the next four games against Dallas, outscoring the Stars 19-5, and then won Game 1 of the Final.
While the internet bestowed gravitas to this brief but smoldering gaze, McDavid said he didn’t recall the moment. But he did confirm that, over the years, he and Draisaitl have developed some kind of telepathic communication.
“I think we’ve definitely developed a sense of understanding what the other one’s thinking in any given moment,” he said. “Sometimes, yeah, all it takes is a look to know what’s going on.”
The offense created when McDavid and Draisaitl are on the ice does speak to something extra sensory between them.
Heading into Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Final on Monday night, McDavid and Draisaitl have now factored on the same goal 73 times in the playoffs. There are only three duos in NHL history that have factored in on the same goal more often:
In 43 games over the past two postseasons, Edmonton has scored 21 goals with McDavid and Draisaitl on the ice at 5-on-5, a rate of 4.4 goals per 60 minutes. When neither of them are on the ice, the Oilers have a 2.03 goals per 60 minutes rate at 5-on-5 in their past 43 games — although it should be noted that this season’s supporting cast has that rate up to 2.71 goals per 60 in the team’s past 18 games.
This postseason, McDavid and Draisaitl have an expected goals rate of 66.4%; when neither of them are on the ice at 5-on-5, the rest of the Oilers earn 49.6% of the expected goals, according to Natural Stat Trick. When Messier and Gretzky were teammates, the Oilers rarely put them on the same line.
“No, we played on separate lines for the most part. The power play, at times, but not all the time,” Messier said. “I centered the second line, and it was one of the reasons why we became so hard to play against.”
McDavid and Draisaitl have played 167:04 together at 5-on-5 in 18 games, more than McDavid (158:43) and Draisaitl (150:06) have played away from the other. Which is to say that coach Kris Knoblauch has not hesitated to unleash the “nuclear option” on opponents this postseason, uniting his two offensive wizards on the same line.
“We’ve done it throughout the playoffs, and they have just gone off and scored at a tremendous, tremendous rate,” Knoblauch said.
But the coach said he’s cognizant of the ripple effects caused by Draisaitl moving to McDavid’s wing.
“Leon playing center just spreads out our scoring a little bit. It also gets him in the game a little bit more. He’s skating and involved,” Knoblauch said. “I think it also allows the rest of our team knowing that they’ve got a role, they’ve got to play well and we’re not just relying on this one line that it’s going to do all the work.”
Of course, the Oilers are more than happy to rely on McDavid and Draisaitl as linemates on the power play. In 43 games over the past two postseasons, Edmonton has scored 34 goals with both of them on the ice for a power play. The Oilers have scored just once on the power play without McDavid and Draisaitl on the ice over the past two postseasons.
Draisaitl has 22 career power-play goals in 92 games, tying him for 29th all time. Only Hockey Hall of Fame winger Cam Neely (25 in 93 games) had more goals having played fewer than 100 career postseason games. Draisaitl enters Game 3 needing one power-play goal to tie Gretzky (23) for the most in Oilers history — and it took The Great One 120 games to amass that total.
Alex Ovechkin has the “Ovi Spot” on the power play. Leon has “Drai Island”: Draisaitl now has 73 power-play goals from the right circle on a one-timer in the regular season and the playoffs since the shot was first tracked in 2016-17. The next-highest player? Tampa Bay Lightning star Nikita Kucherov, way back at 44 goals.
McDavid remains Draisaitl’s biggest fan.
“You can’t put a number on it. He’s invaluable. There’s so many good things he does. You name it, he does it. And he doesn’t get enough credit for his defensive abilities,” McDavid said last week. “There’s not many — maybe nobody — better.”
Draisaitl has 10 power-play goals over the past two Oilers playoff runs. McDavid had the primary assist on seven of them. That includes his cross-ice feed to Draisaitl for the overtime winner in Game 1 and that highlight-reel individual effort to feed him for a goal in Game 2 when McDavid deked Aleksander Barkov and Aaron Ekblad out of their respective skates:
0:50
McDavid wizardry sets up Draisaitl for Oilers goal
The Oilers take the lead for the second time after Connor McDavid’s sensational assist to Leon Draisaitl.
Those power-play helpers are one reason McDavid has moved up the ranks of the most multi-assist games in NHL postseason history. Heading into Game 3, he has 33 career multi-assist playoff games, the third-most behind Oilers legends Gretzky (72) and Messier (40).
“They’re the best at almost all aspects of the game,” Oilers winger Jeff Skinner said. “They are dominant every night, and that gives them the confidence to keep doing it.”
Which is to say that opponents, such as the Panthers, can only hope to mitigate the damage that McDavid and Draisaitl will inevitably do.
IN GAME 1 of the Stanley Cup Final, Florida iced the puck 21 times. Occasionally, it was its fourth line that was guilty of the infraction. When that would happen and the Panthers were forced to take a faceoff back in their own zone, Knoblauch wouldn’t hesitate to put McDavid and Draisaitl out there together to prey on them.
When that happened, Panthers fourth-line winger Jonah Gadjovich knew what to do — let someone else handle them as quickly as possible.
“Play hard. Get off the ice as quick as you can. Get the puck out and get off. That’s what we’re trying to do,” he said.
Defending McDavid is hard. Defending McDavid and Draisaitl is terrifying, even for Barkov, considered the best defensive forward in the NHL.
“You just have to know that they’re on the ice. You have to be aware of them all the times. You have to know a little bit of their tendencies as well,” said Barkov, a three-time winner of the Selke Trophy, including this season. “But at the same time, it’s five guys on ice. It’s not just one. So five guys need to know you need to know where they are and take the time and space away from it.”
That’s something Panthers defenseman Seth Jones echoed.
“When they play together, they’re obviously very creative players and they make everyone around them better. They like to look for each other, especially when they play together. Little give-and-goes, things like that,” he said. “Whether they’re playing together or apart, it’s a five-man unit, defending holdups, little things like that, just being physical on them is going to help us at the end of the day.”
1:00
Draisaitl comes up big with OT winner in Game 1
Leon Draisaitl nets the winning goal late in overtime to help the Oilers take Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final.
But the Panthers aren’t playing the same McDavid and Draisaitl from last postseason. Both players were far from 100% in 2024, having played 13 playoff games in the last two rounds before the Stanley Cup Final. This time, they’re healthy and rested, having played 10 games in those rounds in two straight five-game series wins.
Both players have talked about how the postseason journey in 2024 changed them, in particular with their mental approach to this season’s Final. McDavid has talked about being more “comfortable” than last time, with the second time around feeling more normal.
Oilers forward Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, who has been a linemate for both McDavid and Draisaitl in his career, praised their mental toughness.
“It speaks to their level of competitiveness, which is so impressive on a day-to-day basis that it pushes you,” he said. “They’re two of the most talented players that we’ve probably ever seen in the game, but there has to be more than that, and these guys have that. They’re so competitive. They want to win so bad.”
The numbers certainly back that up.
Sports
Panthers-Oilers Game 3 preview: Who will take a 2-1 lead?
Published
1 hour agoon
June 9, 2025By
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After two games of the 2025 Stanley Cup Final, the Florida Panthers and Edmonton Oilers are knotted at one game apiece — essentially turning this series into a best-of-five.
With Game 3 on the horizon Monday night (8 p.m. ET, TNT/Max), which team will inch ahead two games to one?
Here are notes on the matchup from ESPN Research, as well as betting intel from ESPN BET:
More from Game 2: Recap | Grades
Matchup notes
Edmonton Oilers at Florida Panthers
Game 3 | 8 p.m. ET | TNT/Max
With the series tied 1-1, the Panthers are now slight favorites to win the Cup according to ESPN BET; their odds are now -115, compared to -105 for the Oilers. Connor McDavid remains atop the Conn Smythe Trophy odds board at +105, followed by Sergei Bobrovsky (+350), Sam Bennett (+400) and Leon Draisaitl (+650).
The Panthers’ win in Game 2 was their ninth on the road this postseason, setting a franchise mark for road wins in a single playoff run. They are now one road win shy of tying the NHL record, which has been done six times before, most recently by the 2019 St. Louis Blues.
This is the third time the Oilers have been tied 1-1 through two games of a Stanley Cup Final. They won Game 3 and the Cup Final on both previous occasions (1984 vs. the New York Islanders, 1985 vs. the Philadelphia Flyers).
Brad Marchand‘s overtime winner in Game 2 was his fifth career OT goal in the Stanley Cup playoffs, which ties him with Edmonton’s Corey Perry, teammate Carter Verhaeghe, Patrick Kane and Glenn Anderson for third all time. Only Maurice Richard (six) and Joe Sakic (eight) have more.
Florida’s Bennett scored the opening goal in Game 2 on the power play, his 12th road goal this postseason, which sets a new NHL record.
Panthers goalie Sergei Bobrovsky made 42 saves for the second straight game, becoming the fifth goalie in NHL history to have 40 or more saves in back-to-back Stanley Cup Final games; the others are Henrik Lundqvist in 2014, Ed Belfour in 2000, Rogie Vachon in 1967 and Don Simmons in 1958.
Draisaitl scored his 22nd career power-play goal in the playoffs, moving him into a tie with Jari Kurri and Glenn Anderson for the second most in Oilers history behind Wayne Gretzky (23). Draisaitl’s goal was his 10th of the postseason, making him the third player in NHL history with at least 10 goals in three consecutive postseasons — joining Mike Bossy (four from 1980 to 1983) and Gretzky (three from 1983 to 1985).
Edmonton’s Evan Bouchard scored his 20th career playoff goal in his 71st playoff game, tying Cale Makar for the fastest defenseman to 20 career playoff goals among active blueliners. Only six defensemen have scored 20 playoff goals faster: Paul Coffey (48), Brian Leetch (49), Bobby Orr (50), Denis Potvin (52), Al MacInnis (70) and Paul Reinhart (70).
McDavid assisted on Draisaitl’s and Bouchard’s goals in the first period of Game 2, giving him his 33rd career multi-assist playoff game, breaking a tie with Sidney Crosby, Doug Gilmour and Ray Bourque for the third most multi-assist playoff games in NHL history, behind Gretzky (72) and Mark Messier (40).
Scoring leaders
GP: 19 | G: 13 | A: 6
GP: 18 | G: 6 | A: 25
Best bets for Game 3
Niko Mikkola total blocked shots; over 1.5 (+145): Already having spent almost half an hour on the ice against Connor McDavid in the first two games and currently winning the all-strengths goals differential head-to-head at 3-2 against him, Mikkola and Seth Jones should continue to see a healthy dose of McDavid now that the Panthers have last change on home ice.
Eetu Luostarinen total goals; over 0.5 (+600): If anyone is due for a tally, it’s the third member of the Panthers’ third line. Per NaturalStatTrick, Luostarinen is second to Sam Reinhart in overall scoring chances and leads the team in high-danger scoring chances across the first two games.
Connor McDavid total goals; over 0.5 (+135): Speaking of being due for a goal, McDavid and Evan Bouchard have combined for 26 shots on goal across 66:19 of total ice time in the first two games of the series. Bouchard has 15 of those shots and a goal to show for it, but McDavid is primed for a tally of his own.
Panthers to win by shutout (10-1): Though McDavid feels due to score, the Panthers playing their smothering defensive game on home ice does have a shutout feel to it. Sergei Bobrovsky has a shutout in each of the previous three rounds, after all. — Sean Allen
Sports
Oilers shrug off ‘what-ifs,’ turn page after OT loss
Published
1 hour agoon
June 9, 2025By
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Kristen ShiltonJun 8, 2025, 03:24 PM ET
Close- Kristen Shilton is a national NHL reporter for ESPN.
SUNRISE, Fla. — The Edmonton Oilers were one shot away from taking a 2-0 lead in the Stanley Cup Final against Florida.
Instead, it was one shot against them — in Friday’s Game 2 double-overtime thriller — that gave the Panthers a 5-4 win and evened the series as it shifts to the Sunshine State.
Taking the split at home was a tough pill to swallow for Edmonton. But the Oilers are determined not to dwell on what could have been.
“Right after the game, there’s frustration and the what-ifs start going through your head a little bit,” Leon Draisaitl said following the Oilers’ practice Sunday. “But the next day you move on. You have no choice. We’ve got to get ready for [Game 3] tomorrow, coming in here, looking to play our best game.”
The Cup Final has highlighted dominant stretches for both sides — making the margins for error wafer thin. Edmonton rallied to edge Florida 4-3 in Game 1 thanks to Draisaitl’s overtime marker, a dramatic start to the rematch of last year’s final that saw Florida down the Oilers in seven games. The uptick of intensity in Game 2 further cemented how tight the series projects to be from here.
Edmonton has learned from experience, carrying it over to help manage the inevitable emotions that come with vying for hockey’s holy grail.
“Especially at this point, the magnitude of the series, you just get more comfortable with [the emotions]” defenseman Darnell Nurse said. “There’s going to be highs and lows. There are two really good teams playing against each other. There’s close to zero chance there’s going to be a sweep. So, you’re going to face some challenges at some point. For us in Game 2, losing in double OT, you were coming off an emotional high [from Game 1], and then you hit an emotional low. But now we come back and just know the importance of this Game 3 and playing hard.”
Getting back on the road can help, too. Edmonton has dropped just one game in enemy territory over its past two playoff series. It’s a little different now being back in Florida — considering that’s where Edmonton lost Game 7 of the Cup Final last year — but the Oilers expect to feel at home in Sunrise.
“We’ve got a good mentality on the road — sticking together, that’s been a big one,” forward Connor Brown said. “Just the belief in our group and a belief in one another, it’s huge. It’s the name of the game here, when you get deep in the playoffs, is finding that balancing act of not getting too high or low. It was an emotional win in Game 1. Both teams have kind of felt that.”
Coach Kris Knoblauch got his team together for Sunday’s on-ice session knowing the Oilers’ biggest names — including Draisaitl and Connor McDavid — would lead by example in helping Edmonton turn the page to what’s ahead in their next crack at the Panthers.
“I’ve seen it firsthand, no matter where we are after a big win or loss, they really set the tone and a work mentality of ‘This is business,'” Knoblauch said of the team’s top skaters. “Today was a little practice day, almost a formality, but they’re getting out on the ice and there’s repetition and drills and they’re focused. Everyone knows what’s at stake right now, and it’s nothing to take lightly, [so] let’s make sure we get prepared for our next game.”
For Knoblauch, that included making a few lineup changes at practice. He mixed up the Oilers’ defense pairings, putting Nurse with Evan Bouchard, Brett Kulak beside Jake Walman and Mattias Ekholm with John Klingberg. Edmonton was also missing top-line forward Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, whom Knoblauch characterized as a “game-time decision” for Monday. Jeff Skinner skated in Nugent-Hopkins place with McDavid and Corey Perry.
“We’re always making adjustments and countering what the other team is doing, [and assessing] who’s playing well,” Knoblauch said. “Our lines and D-pairs might switch up a little bit, whether it’s in the first period or is later in the game, whatever it is. Our players are comfortable with any of the changes we do make just because of how much we’ve fluctuated our lines and pairings all season.”
Anything to gain an advantage. It has been a series quickly defined by high scores and little leeway. Edmonton isn’t expecting much to change in Game 3 — or beyond.
“You’re not going to face very many teams where you’re just running over them for 60 minutes,” Draisaitl said. “Both games have been very tight and gone the distance and extra [time], so you have two really good teams going at it. [We] have to stay detailed and know all those little bounces matter.”
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