RECHERCHE


Oilers suffer late lineup blow before pivotal Game 3 in Anaheim

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Cimon Asselin
April 24, 2026  (9:57 PM)
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Apr 20, 2026; Edmonton, Alberta, CAN; Edmonton Oilers center Jack Roslovic (28), center Jason Dickinson (16) and center Ryan Nugent-Hopkins (93) celebrate a goal on the Anaheim Ducks in game one of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs during the first period at Rogers Place.
Photo credit: Walter Tychnowicz-Imagn Images

Jason Dickinson will not dress for the Edmonton Oilers in Game 3 tonight in Anaheim, with the first-round series against the Ducks tied 1-1.

Elliotte Friedman confirmed the news Friday evening on X, a three-word post that landed like a gut punch for a team already navigating depth questions heading into a road game.

The 30-year-old centerman is listed as day-to-day with an undisclosed injury, so there's no clarity on a timeline yet.

Dickinson is not a star. But he is not nothing, either. He scored twice in the one playoff game he dressed for this series, making this absence feel bigger than his regular-season numbers suggest.

Over 64 regular-season games, he put up 7 goals and 10 assists. Not a top-six piece, but a bottom-six center with a real role on the penalty kill and the kind of physical presence that makes a difference against a Ducks team that competes hard on every shift.

Oilers' depth takes a hit with Dickinson sidelined in Anaheim

Kris Knoblauch will need to reconfigure his lineup, and the options are not deep. Trent Frederic went pointless in both playoff games and has looked flat. Colton Dach has not produced in the postseason.

This is where regular-season roster decisions come back to bite you. The Oilers dressed 21 or 22 bodies all year and the margins were already thin before puck drop in Game 3.

Kasperi Kapanen has been the surprise of the series, with 2 goals and 1 assist in two playoff games, so there is at least one bright spot in the bottom six.

But Kapanen filling in for one role does not replace what Dickinson brought. Those are different players with different deployment profiles.

Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl have been cold. McDavid is held scoreless through two games. Draisaitl has 4 points, but the Oilers dropped Game 2 at home, 6-4, which means this road game in Anaheim carries real weight.

Edmonton won the regular-season series against the Ducks. They're the more talented team on paper. But the Ducks stole Game 2, and now the Oilers are missing a forward who scored in Game 1 without explanation.

Whether Dickinson is back for Game 4 is the question nobody can answer tonight.