It’s time for Game 3 of the series, and the Ducks have home ice. The Oilers have yet to score a power-play goal in the series, which could give them an extra gear in the games to come.
Quick Pick Oilers vs. Ducks
- Best Bet: Edmonton Oilers ML -135 — lean only
- Confidence: 2.5 out of 5
- Win Probability: Edmonton 57% | Anaheim 43%
- Best Value Angle: The Game 2 scoreline was inflated by a 3-goal special teams swing that required multiple Oilers self-inflictions to occur simultaneously — unlikely to repeat at the same rate.

Why This Bet Has Value
Cutter Gauthier broke a late tie as Anaheim won Game 2 by a score of 6–4. Edmonton was 0-for-4 on the power play, while the Ducks went 2-for-3 and added a shorthanded goal — a 3-goal special teams swing that almost entirely explains the margin of victory. Strip those sequences out and this was a competitive 5-on-5 game decided by mistakes, not by Anaheim tactically dismantling Edmonton at even strength.
The shorthanded goal came directly from a McDavid turnover in the defensive zone while Edmonton was on the power play — Killorn was first to the loose puck and Poehling redirected home for a 4–2 lead. That kind of sequence happens once in a series. Edmonton coach Kris Knoblauch acknowledged after the game: “Special teams, they outscored us 3 there.”
That is exactly the right diagnosis. The market price of -135 on Edmonton implies roughly 57% probability, which is approximately where my assessment lands. The edge, if any, is that the market may be slightly overreacting to a decisive-looking scoreline that was built on anomalous circumstances.
Game Snapshot
- Matchup: Edmonton Oilers at Anaheim Ducks — Game 3, Western Conference First Round
- Date & Time: Friday, April 24, 2026 — 10:00 PM ET
- Venue: Honda Center, Anaheim, California
- Series Score: Tied 1–1
- Broadcast: TNT / truTV / HBO Max / SN / CBC / TVAS / KCOP-13 / Victory+
Matchup Breakdown
Key Storylines
Connor McDavid caught an edge early in the second period of Game 2 after getting tangled with Ekholm and Ian Moore, briefly leaving the game before returning to play just over 24 minutes. He said afterward: “It’s fine. I just rolled up on it a little bit.” His status deserves monitoring before puck drop but he is expected to play. Meanwhile, Leon Draisaitl, returning from the injury that cost him the final 14 regular-season games, recorded a goal and 2 assists in Game 2 and appears to be building form. That is the key internal development for Edmonton heading into Game 3.
What Happened Last Game
In Game 1, Edmonton dominated the opening period, outshooting Anaheim 13–4 and leading 2–0 through 20 minutes. But the Ducks scored twice in the first 5 minutes of the second period and led 3–2 entering the third, before Edmonton came back with 2 goals including the winner with 1:54 remaining.
Game 2 followed a similar second-period structure but with a far more damaging result for Edmonton. The Ducks scored even-strength, power-play, and shorthanded goals in the middle frame to build a 4–1 lead. Trouba made it 2–1 with a wrist shot from the point through traffic at 2:44 of the second. Killorn extended the lead on the power play when his attempted pass deflected off Bouchard’s stick and then off Ingram before Killorn put it home. Poehling then scored shorthanded — directly off McDavid’s defensive-zone turnover — to push the lead to 4–2. Edmonton pulled back to 4–4 in the third before Gauthier won it with under 5 minutes left. On Dostal’s end, he was particularly sharp tracking McDavid’s cross-ice feeds to the mid-slot — squaring up to pucks as they moved off the wall and presenting himself large.
What Changed
Quenneville’s decision to move Gauthier onto the top line with Carlsson and Terry in Game 2 was a notable tactical shift. The goal was to manufacture puck touches, and it worked — Gauthier totalled 3 shots and 6 shot attempts after just 1 shot in Game 1, with significant off-puck movement creating soft-ice opportunities. That configuration will almost certainly remain in Game 3. For Edmonton, the urgent adjustment is the power play structure after 2 consecutive goalless performances on 4 chances each game, including surrendering a shorthanded goal.
Recent Form
Series context only: Anaheim has dominated the second period in both games, generating key momentum shifts in the middle frame each time. That pattern is clear. Edmonton has shown resilience from behind in Game 1 and briefly found it in Game 2 before running out of time. McDavid’s framing of the road shift was notably confident: “We’ve been in this situation a lot, 1-1 going on the road. We’re comfortable on the road.” Edmonton won 3 of the regular-season meetings with Anaheim, and the Ducks lost 7 of their final 9 home games in the regular season, though playoff intensity makes that context less reliable.
Goaltending
Lukas Dostal is in his second full season as Anaheim’s No. 1 and plays behind a young defensive group, but when he plays well, the Ducks usually find enough support. He made 25 saves in Game 1 and 33 in Game 2, earning his first career playoff win. Connor Ingram is expected back in net for Edmonton. Ingram started the season in the AHL before working his way into the starting role. He made 25 saves in Game 1 and 22 in Game 2; some of the goals against were bounce-heavy and difficult to fully assign to positioning, though the Trouba goal drew scrutiny. Both goaltenders are operating on a minimal playoff sample — projecting form with confidence is not possible.
Key Skaters
McDavid was held without a point in Game 1. Draisaitl and Jake Walman each had 2 assists in that game. Kasperi Kapanen has been the clutch performer, scoring the series-opening game-winner and contributing in Game 2. Kapanen has 8 points across 13 career playoff games as an Oiler. For Anaheim, Alex Killorn had a goal and 2 assists in Game 2, and Poehling scored his first 2 career playoff goals. Gauthier’s elevated usage on the top line is a genuine development that has altered the Ducks’ offensive profile.
Team Performance & Metrics
| Metric | Edmonton | Anaheim | Betting Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Last Game 5-on-5 | Competitive; generated offense but gave up 2nd period | Competitive; relied on special teams for margin | Roughly even |
| Series Special Teams | 0-for-8 PP; gave up 1 SHG | 2-for-3 PP; 1 SHG; 4-for-6 PK | Clear edge to Anaheim |
| Goaltending | Ingram 22–25 saves across 2 games | Dostal 25–33 saves; earned Game 2 win | Slight edge Anaheim this series |
| Faceoffs | Won 62.7% in Game 1 | Below 40% in Game 1 | Edge Edmonton |
| Matchup Edge | Draisaitl healthy; deeper forward group | Top line elevated; first home playoff game | Lean Edmonton on paper |
| Experience | 2 consecutive Cup Finals; road-comfortable | First playoffs since 2018 | Edge Edmonton |
The expected game script involves another physically contested, high-pace match. Anaheim will attempt to seize the second period again and push Edmonton into penalties. Edmonton needs their power play to convert at least once to prevent Anaheim from neutralizing their primary structural advantage. If the game stays 5-on-5, Edmonton’s faceoff dominance and forward depth should gradually assert, but that outcome requires avoiding the self-inflicted penalties and turnovers that defined Game 2.
Market & Odds Analysis
The over/under for Game 3 is 6.5. The over is -160 and the under is +130. On the moneyline, Anaheim is listed at +114 and Edmonton at -137. The over pricing at -160 reflects both the 10-goal Game 2 and the pattern of open, back-and-forth play in this series. However, a road game with real series implications could see tighter defensive structure from both benches, making the over expensive at that juice. The moneyline at Edmonton -135 to -137 implies roughly 57% probability — which aligns closely with my own estimate. There is no meaningful gap between implied and estimated probability on the moneyline; any edge is marginal.
| Market | Odds |
|---|---|
| Moneyline — Edmonton | -135 to -137 |
| Moneyline — Anaheim | +111 to +114 |
| Total | 6.5 — Over -160 / Under +130 |
| Puckline | Edmonton -1.5 approximately +124 |
Key Edges
- Edmonton’s 0-for-6 power play in this series almost certainly corrects toward mean — even 1 conversion in Game 3 changes the game script meaningfully given how tightly these teams are playing at 5-on-5.
- Anaheim’s Game 2 win required 3 special teams goals from 4 opportunities — including a lucky Killorn rebound and a directly self-gifted shorthanded chance — conditions that are unlikely to replicate exactly on the road in Game 3.
- Edmonton’s faceoff advantage in Game 1 was dominant and is a repeatable structural edge that limits Anaheim’s zone-entry and possession cycles.
Risk Factors
- McDavid injury uncertainty — even a minor physical limitation suppresses his effectiveness on the power play and 5-on-5, and he is the primary reason Edmonton is favoured.
- Anaheim’s top line of Gauthier, Carlsson, and Terry is genuinely producing and has Honda Center’s playoff energy behind it for the first time this postseason.
- Edmonton’s power play struggles may not be pure noise — Dostal’s positioning on McDavid’s cross-ice passes has been consistently good, and the Ducks’ penalty kill has shown tactical discipline, not just fortune.
Prediction & Verdict Oilers vs. Ducks
- Best Bet: Edmonton Oilers ML -135 — lean, not strong conviction
- Score Projection: Edmonton 4, Anaheim 3
- Win Probability: Edmonton 57% | Anaheim 43%
- Edge: Small
This is not a play you chase with heavy units. The market has priced Game 3 near correctly. Edmonton is the superior team on paper — more experienced, deeper up front, and equipped with the best player on the ice — but Anaheim has demonstrated genuine quality across both games and will carry real home-crowd momentum into their first home playoff game in 8 years. The lean to Edmonton rests on one primary argument: their power play cannot stay at 0-for-6 forever, and a single conversion dramatically shifts the game in their favour. If McDavid’s health is confirmed and the power play clicks even once, Edmonton wins this game. If it does not, Anaheim at +114 would have been the sharper call.
Final Score Prediction: Edmonton 4, Anaheim 3
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