When Connor McDavid signed a two-year extension worth $25 million, the headline was simple: the best player in hockey was staying in Edmonton. The more interesting story was hidden underneath the numbers. McDavid could have pushed for every available dollar. Instead, he left money on the table—roughly $6.6 million per season, according to estimates. In today's NHL, that kind of gap can change the shape of a roster. It can bring in a top-six scorer, strengthen a blue line, or help solve a goaltending issue that keeps resurfacing every spring.
That is why this deal feels less like a routine extension and more like a challenge issued directly to Oilers management. The message is clear: McDavid has done his part. Now it's Edmonton's turn.
Edmonton Oilers Have No Room for Error
The Oilers are entering an offseason that suddenly feels bigger than any single roster move. A year ago, there was still time. There was room for patience. Not anymore. McDavid's decision to sign for only two years has compressed the timeline. What might have looked like long-term planning now feels like an urgent test. Every trade, every free-agent signing, every gamble between now and the 2027 deadline will be judged against one question: Is this team getting closer to a Stanley Cup?
If the answer becomes no, the noise around McDavid's future will only grow louder. That is exactly why NHL analyst Craig Button believes general manager Stan Bowman is facing the most important stretch of his tenure.
“The bottom line is Stan Bowman has a job right in front of him. And that job is significant. It’s serious. And if he doesn’t do the things to get this team back and close to Stanley Cup contention, that’s going to be a real message to Connor McDavid,” Button said.
The pressure isn't coming from the media. It isn't coming from fans. It's coming from the reality of the situation. McDavid gave the organization flexibility. He gave them room to improve. In a hard-cap league, that is one of the most valuable gifts a superstar can offer. Button sees an obligation that comes with it.
“And now for Stan Bowman, he has to deliver. There’s no other way. It doesn’t matter if I think he can or he can’t. The bottom line for him is he’s got to find a way to get the job done because if he doesn’t, I don’t like the thought of the repercussions and consequences,” Button noted.
The Blueprint Is Not Complicated
Edmonton still needs another dangerous winger who can ease the burden on its stars. The defense requires more reliability, particularly against elite playoff teams. Goaltending remains the lingering question that refuses to disappear. None of those issues are new. The urgency surrounding them is.
Because if the Oilers reach the final year of McDavid's contract without looking like a legitimate contender, the conversation changes completely. At that point, the leverage belongs to him. And that's what makes this offseason feel different from the others. The Oilers are no longer building around the future. They're trying to convince the future to stay.



