Edmonton Oilers moneyline
-132
Quick pick: Oilers vs. Ducks
Small play only
ANA 45%
Dostal’s inconsistency and Edmonton’s fast starts support the lean.
Why this bet has value
Game 5 was the clearest result of the series in terms of process. Edmonton came out and buried 3 goals on 9 shots inside the first 11 minutes, forcing Anaheim to pull Lukas Dostal before the first TV timeout. That kind of early-period body shot does real psychological work heading into a closeout game on home ice. The question bettors need to answer is whether Game 5 revealed something durable about the matchup, or was mostly a boilover from an elimination-game atmosphere at Rogers Place.
The answer is somewhere in the middle — but tilts toward durable. Edmonton’s top pair of Draisaitl and McDavid have been generating chances consistently. Anaheim’s defense has been genuinely poor at 5-on-5, ranking near the bottom in expected goals against. The problem is that the Oilers own injury situation — specifically McDavid’s ankle — and Anaheim’s home-ice energy create real uncertainty. The market has this right as a near-coin flip. The Oilers are a mild -132 road favorite, implying roughly 57% win probability. Given that we estimate Edmonton at 55%, there is no meaningful edge on the moneyline alone. The lean here is thin and situational, not structural.
Game snapshot Oilers vs. Ducks
- Matchup: Edmonton Oilers at Anaheim Ducks
- Date and time: April 30, 2026, 10:00 p.m. ET
- Venue: Honda Center, Anaheim
- Series score: Anaheim leads 3-2 — Ducks must win to clinch; Oilers must win to force Game 7
- Broadcast: TNT
Matchup breakdown
Key storylines
This series has been defined by two competing realities: Anaheim’s youth and firepower are real, but so is Edmonton’s ability to turn on the jets when staring down elimination. The Oilers were the more complete team in Game 5 and it showed emphatically. The Ducks had the chance to close it out and couldn’t. Now they have to do it again, at home, knowing a loss sends the series back to Edmonton where the Oilers just demolished them.
What happened in Game 5
Edmonton scored 3 goals on 9 first-period shots and Dostal was pulled before the game was 12 minutes old. The final was 4-1, though the shot count of 30-20 in Anaheim’s favor over the full game tells a more complicated story. After the first period disaster, Anaheim actually dominated shot volume — outshooting Edmonton 24-8 over the final 2 periods — but Connor Ingram held firm. The Oilers’ 5-on-5 execution was excellent early, and the Draisaitl line in particular imposed itself physically and tactically in a way it had not for much of the series. Evan Bouchard was invisible in Games 1-4 and then posted 3 assists. Edmonton won the faceoff battle decisively at 62% overall and controlled the game flow despite the final shot disparity.
What changed
The biggest tactical signal from Game 5 was Dostal’s removal. Ville Husso came in and stopped 10 of 11, but the question of Anaheim’s goaltending situation heading into Game 6 is genuinely open. Dostal has been a key reason this team climbed to a 3-1 series lead, but his numbers in the series have been under pressure. A benching in a close-out game would be a significant decision. On the Edmonton side, McDavid played over 24 minutes in Game 5 despite the ankle concern — his second-highest ice time of the series — and produced 2 assists, suggesting the injury is manageable but worth watching pre-game.
Series form
Edmonton won Game 1, Anaheim won Games 2, 3, and 4, Edmonton won Game 5. The pattern has been: whoever scores first wins. Anaheim allowed the first goal in every game this series. The Oilers are historically effective in elimination scenarios, but this is a road game and the Ducks have not blown a close-out in their building yet in this series.
Goaltending
Connor Ingram gets the start for Edmonton. He was excellent in Game 5 — named second star — after being benched in favor of Tristan Jarry in Game 4. His bounce-back performance matters, and Knoblauch has confirmed he starts Game 6. For Anaheim, Dostal’s status is the critical unknown. If he starts, his vulnerability in the early portions of games is a documented pattern in this series. If Husso gets the nod, the market has not fully priced that scenario yet.
Key skaters
Leon Draisaitl was the best player on the ice in Game 5 with 2 goals and has 3 goals and 6 assists through 5 games. The Draisaitl-Podkolzin-Kapanen line has been Edmonton’s most effective 5-on-5 unit all series. For Anaheim, Cutter Gauthier and Mason McTavish have the skill to generate, and the Ducks’ power play has been dangerous — converting on 2 of 4 opportunities in Game 4. Alex Killorn and the veteran presence anchoring the Ducks’ room will be tested under closeout pressure.
Team performance and metrics
| Metric | EDM | ANA |
|---|---|---|
| Game 5 5-on-5 goals | 3 | 0 |
| Game 5 faceoffs | 62% overall | 38% overall |
| Game 5 shots overall | 20 | 30 |
| Special teams (series) | PP active, PK leaking | PP 2-for-4 in G4; dangerous |
| Goaltending | Ingram confirmed; bounced back | Dostal status uncertain; Husso option |
| First-goal pattern | Scored first in 4 of 5 games | Allowed first goal every game |
The game script that makes most sense: Edmonton pushes hard in the first period to recreate the Game 5 dynamic and force an early crisis on the Ducks goalie. If Anaheim can survive the first 20 minutes with the game close, their home crowd and shot volume in the middle frame becomes a factor. Games that reach the third period tied are essentially coin flips.
Market and odds analysis
The moneyline of -132 Edmonton implies approximately 57% win probability. Our estimate sits at 55%. That is not a meaningful gap — there is no structural edge to exploit here. The market has correctly identified that Edmonton is the better team while pricing in Anaheim’s home-ice advantage and series lead. The total is set at 6.5 to 7.0 across books, with the over heavily juiced at -154. Given this series has averaged roughly 7 goals per game, the over juice reflects real series history. The under at +126 is the more interesting value if you believe both teams tighten up in a close-out game — which is historically common — but this series has shown no sign of slowing down offensively.
| Market | Odds |
|---|---|
| Moneyline — Edmonton | -132 to -134 |
| Moneyline — Anaheim | +110 to +112 |
| Total (over/under) | 6.5 to 7.0; over -154, under +126 |
| Puckline — Anaheim -1.5 | +164 |
Key edges
- Edmonton’s first-period dominance is a repeatable pattern: they have scored first in 4 of 5 games and the Ducks have allowed the opening goal every single game.
- Dostal’s goaltending vulnerability early in games is documented. If he starts and Edmonton generates pressure in the first period, a Ducks goalie change is a live scenario again.
- The Draisaitl-Podkolzin-Kapanen line’s 5-on-5 output against Anaheim’s porous back end is a genuine structural edge, not noise.
Risk factors
- McDavid’s ankle injury is confirmed and could limit his effectiveness or usage on a back-to-back emotional push. His Game 5 ice time was high, and he will be scrutinized at morning skate.
- Anaheim’s power play has been dangerous all series and Edmonton’s penalty kill has been inconsistent. Discipline will be critical for the Oilers.
- Home-ice pressure is real. The Ducks have a veteran group in Killorn, Trouba, Carlson, and Kreider who have been in tight games. The young core around McTavish and Gauthier has the skill to match Edmonton when given momentum.
- Results have swung dramatically from game to game.
- Dostal’s actual start status is unknown at time of writing. A Husso start changes the calculus in ways not fully reflected in current lines.
Prediction and verdict: Oilers vs. Ducks
- Best bet: Edmonton Oilers moneyline -132 — thin lean, not a strong play
- Score projection: 4-3 Edmonton
- Win probability: Edmonton 55% | Anaheim 45%
- Edge: Small
The lean toward Edmonton is grounded in 3 repeatable factors: they score first, their top line is better, and Anaheim’s goaltending is fragile early. But the market has priced much of this already. At -132, you are paying a reasonable price for a team that is 2-1 on the road in a series and coming off its best game. This is not a strong edge — it is a directional lean on a team with more high-end talent who tend to show up in must-win situations.
Final score prediction: Edmonton 4, Anaheim 3
Minnesota vs. Dallas: Can the Wild close it out at home Thursday?

