Connor McDavid

Connor McDavid Openly Criticizes His GM After Shocking Oilers Elimination

McDavid takes a barely subtle shot at Stan Bowman after Edmonton's stunning first-round exit against Anaheim.

Esad Avdic

Esad Avdic


The Edmonton Oilers saw their season come to a stunning end in Anaheim last night, falling 5-2 to the Ducks in Game 6 of their playoff series. After reaching two consecutive Stanley Cup Finals, the Oilers were sent packing in what many considered a massive upset — but their captain didn't seem all that surprised.

Facing elimination on the road, Connor McDavid, Leon Draisaitl, and the rest of the squad needed a win to force a decisive Game 7 back in Edmonton. Instead, the young Ducks squad refused to let the series return to Alberta, delivering a dominant performance that ended the Oilers' championship aspirations.

McDavid's Pointed Comments About the Roster

What made the aftermath particularly notable was McDavid's post-game reaction. Rather than offering the usual diplomatic platitudes, the superstar captain was visibly frustrated and directed a barely veiled criticism at general manager Stan Bowman's roster construction.

"All year long, we were a mediocre team. When you're a mediocre team with high expectations, you're certainly going to end up disappointed," McDavid said after the loss.

The comments carry extra weight given the sacrifices McDavid made to help the organization compete. This past summer, he agreed to sign a two-year deal at a discounted salary specifically to give Bowman more financial flexibility to improve the roster around him. McDavid left millions on the table with the expectation that the team would be better positioned to win a championship.

The Tristan Jarry Disaster and What Comes Next

Bowman's most notable move with that added cap space was acquiring goaltender Tristan Jarry from the Pittsburgh Penguins at a significant cost. Jarry was supposed to solve Edmonton's longstanding goaltending issues, but he arrived having already endured a terrible previous season that saw him demoted to the AHL. The gamble failed spectacularly — Jarry posted a 3.86 goals-against average and an .858 save percentage across 19 games in Edmonton. He lost his starting job before the regular season even ended and was not the team's number one netminder during the playoffs.

Making matters worse, Jarry still has two years remaining on a contract that pays an average of $5.38 million per season — a significant anchor on the salary cap.

That two-year timeline is particularly significant because it matches the time left on McDavid's own deal before he becomes an unrestricted free agent. The expectation is that McDavid will be asking serious questions of the organization's leadership this summer, with major changes clearly needed. Given how events have unfolded and what many perceive as a lack of vision from his general manager, few would blame the generational talent if he ultimately requested a trade before his contract expires.

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About the author

Esad Avdic
Esad Avdic

Digital content director

A passionate devotee of hockey culture and a voracious consumer of all kinds of sports, he combines his writing talents and immense creativity in his texts, all while adding his own unique touch of humor. A graduate in Arts and Letters from Cégep de Limoilou and in Multimedia Integration from Cégep de Sainte-Foy, he combines his two passions—writing and various digital media—into one: writing online articles for several websites within the Attraction Numérique group.

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This article may have been written with the help of AI tools.

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