The Oilers have captured just one playoff series, a first-round victory over San Jose in 2017, during McDavid’s six N.H.L. seasons. The franchise had missed the playoffs every year before that series win, a drought that started after their loss in the 2006 Stanley Cup finals, which is roughly how they ended up with the No. 1 pick in the 2015 draft that scored McDavid in the first place.
The goal remains the same as when McDavid arrived in Edmonton as a fresh-faced teenager pinned with the hopes of a franchise: to restore the downhearted Oilers to their Gretzky-era level of prominence.
“I don’t think we’re the young guys anymore, but we were always considered a young team and we were always just kind of finding our way together and we’ve kind of done that and learned our lessons and I think now it’s time for us to put the whole thing together and kind of grow up in a sense,” McDavid said.
McDavid will again pace Edmonton, along with another former Hart winner, Leon Draisaitl. Ken Holland, Edmonton’s general manager, engaged in a busy off-season in adding defensemen Cody Ceci and Duncan Keith, and forwards Warren Foegele, Zach Hyman and Derek Ryan.
McDavid is the highest-paid player in the N.H.L. and in the fourth year of an eight-year contract worth $100 million, but counts himself as one of the players who needs to better himself for Edmonton to have a successful postseason, even as his play leaves him largely peerless.
“I’m just as responsible as the next guy, and I think my game is also needed to change for us to be successful and it still needs to change, and so I own that,” McDavid said.