
Dallas Stars coach Peter DeBoer noted before Game 1 that during last year’s Western Conference finals, his team went 0-for-14 on the power play against the Edmonton Oilers.
It looked like that was going to be a problem again Wednesday after not much was going on with the man advantage in the first 1½ opportunities.
But the Stars had 58 seconds remaining on a carry-over power play heading into the third period. Miro Heiskanen scored and Dallas turned it on, scoring five unanswered goals (three on the power play) in the period for a 6-3 victory and another come-from-behind win.
“I’m happy for our power play,” DeBoer said. “It took a lot of heat last year at this point of the year. It was a difference tonight for us.”
The turnaround was stunning, considering that Edmonton led 3-1 going into the final period and was dominating play. The Stars were unable to contain Leon Draisaitl (three points) or the speed of Connor McDavid (two points) in the first two periods.
Mikael Granlund and Matt Duchene followed Heiskanen with power-play goals and Tyler Seguin scored his second goal of the game before Esa Lindell added an empty-netter.
“We have a lot of belief in us,” Seguin said. “We never really think we’re fully out of a game.”
Duchene, snake-bitten in the playoffs after a 30-goal regular season, hit teammate Roope Hintz with a shot on a wide-open net before picking up the rebound and getting his first goal of the postseason.
“That one bounced for me for tonight,” Duchene said. “Hopefully, there’s more of that to come and less of hitting my own teammate.”
Oilers goalie Stuart Skinner, coming off back-to-back shutouts, gave up five goals on 27 shots.
‘They’re competing to get goals, get guys around the net and make my life a lot harder,’ he said. ‘I just got to fight through that. I’ve got to battle them as much as battling for sight of the puck.’
The Stars won Game 1 for a second consecutive series after having lost their previous eight.
USA TODAY provided live updates from Game 1. Highlights:
Stars vs. Oilers highlights
Game recap
Stars-Oilers final score: Stars 6, Oilers 3
Stunning turnaround after the Stars trailed 3-1 heading into the third period. Their power play came to life and they scored five unanswered goals for a 1-0 lead in the Western Conference final.
Stars-Oilers score: Stars pile on
Esa Lindell scores into an empty net. Five unanswered goals. Stars 6, Oilers 3
Stars-Oilers score: Tyler Seguin scores again
Seguin deflects in a Sam Steel backhander. Stars 5, Oilers 3
Oilers go on power play
Lian Bichsel is called for hooking. Edmonton already has a power-play goal in the game. But not this time. Dallas kills the penalty, allowing only one shot.
Stars-Oilers score: Dallas strikes again on power play
That’s three consecutive power-play goals for Dallas and three goals in less than six minutes. Matt Duchene gets his first of the playoffs (after 30 in the regular season). Roope Hintz and Mikko Rantanen (20 point of the playoffs) get the assists. Stars 4, Oilers 3
Stars back on power play
Evander Kane is called for high-sticking.
Stars-Oilers score: Mikael Granlund ties it up
A second power-play goal for the Stars this period. Granlund rips a shot from the faceoff circle into the net. Officials initially waved it off but it went off the back bar, not the crossbar. Stars 3, Oilers 3
Stars go on power play
Corey Perry is called for high-sticking.
Stars-Oilers score: Miro Heiskanen scores on power play
Heiskanen scores from the point at 32 seconds as Mason Marchment screens Stuart Skinner. The power-play goal is a good sign for the Stars, who didn’t get one in the 2024 conference finals. Oilers 3, Stars 2
Third period underway
Stars start off the period with an abbreviated power play.
End of second period: Oilers 3, Stars 1
The Oilers once again are the more dangerous team, and they score twice on goals by Ryan Nugent-Hopkins and Evan Bouchard. The Stars can’t handle Connor McDavid’s speed as he enters the zone. He has two points, Leon Draisaitl has three and Nugent-Hopkins has two. Dallas forwards Matt Duchene, Wyatt Johnston and Jason Robertson are minus-2 each. Stars coach Peter DeBoer is juggling his lines a little with Dallas unable to mount much of an attack.
Stars go on power play
Brett Kulak’s second penalty of the game. Not much going on again, but 58 seconds will carry into the third period.
Oilers go on power play
Thomas Harley off for interference. The Oilers scored on their first opportunity, but Dallas kills this one.
Stars-Oilers score: Evan Bouchard adds to Edmonton lead
Evan Bouchard takes a pass, skates to the left faceoff circle and beats Jake Oettinger at 7:48. Leon Draisaitl picks up his third point of the game and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins his second. Oilers 3, Stars 1
Stars-Oilers score: Edmonton connects on power play
A Connor McDavid centering pass deflects off a Stars defender to Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, who scores to give Edmonton the lead at 6:08. Oilers 2, Stars 1
Oilers go on power play
Mason Marchment trips Zach Hyman. Oilers had four power-play goals in the 2024 conference final.
Second period underway
Game tied at one.
End of first period: Stars 1, Oilers 1
The Oilers have the more dangerous chances in that period. Connor McDavid is flying. Leon Draisaitl factors in both goal. He keeps the puck alive in the Dallas zone before scoring the opening goal. But he gives up the puck, leading to a Tyler Seguin tying goal on a breakaway. Shots are 12-9 Oilers and hits are even at 12.
Stars-Oilers score: Tyler Seguin ties it up
Seguin grabs the puck after a Leon Draisaitl giveaway and beats Stuart Skinner on a breakaway at 15:22. That ends Seguin’s 10-game goal drought and is the first goal allowed by Skinner since Game 3 of the second round.
Stars-Oilers score: Leon Draisaitl goal lifts Edmonton
The Oilers always put Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl out after the team kills a penalty, and they connect for the opening goal. Draisaitl’s shot beats Jake Oettinger to the far side at 10:19. Oilers 1, Stars 0
Stars go on power play
Brett Kulak is called for hooking. Stars power play is clicking at 30.8%. Dallas didn’t get a power-play goal in his last year’s series against the Oilers. Edmonton kills it off. No shot attempts for Dallas.
Edmonton Oilers chance
Connor McDavid uses his speed to get around the Stars defense but is stopped by Jake Oettinger. The Stars goalie stops Zach Hyman’s rebound.
Game underway
Second year in a row these teams are meeting in the conference finals. Dallas going 12 forwards, six defensemen after going recently with 11 and 7.
Starting lines
Strength vs. strength. Edmonton starting the Connor McDavid line. Dallas countering with the Mikko Rantanen line.
What time is Stars vs. Oilers NHL playoff game?
Game 1 of the NHL’s Western Conference finals between the Dallas Stars and Edmonton Oilers begins Wednesday night at 8 p.m. ET at American Airlines Center in Dallas.
How to watch Stars vs. Oilers NHL playoff game: TV, stream
- Time: 8 p.m. ET/7 p.m. local
- Location: American Airlines Center (Dallas)
- TV: ESPN
- Stream: ESPN+, Fubo
Watch Game 1 of the Stars-Oilers series on Fubo
Dallas Stars lineup
Edmonton Oilers lineup
Connor Brown taking warmups
Brown, a game-time decision, is listed as playing on the NHL roster report.
Goaltending matchup
Edmonton’s Stuart Skinner (2-3, 3.05 goals-against average, .884 save percentage) has back-to-back shutouts. Dallas’ Jake Oettinger (8-5, 2.47, .919) has won six consecutive home games.
Stars seek better power-play numbers this year
A big factor in the Oilers’ win in the 2024 Western Conference finals: Edmonton went 14-for-14 on the penalty kill vs. Dallas. The Stars, though, enter this year’s series with the top playoff power play (30.8%) among the four conference finals teams. Roope Hintz leads the way with three power-play goals. Mikko Rantanen, who was acquired at the trade deadline, and Thomas Harley are tied with six points on the power play.
Stars still deciding defense/forward split vs. Oilers
Coach Peter DeBoer said Wednesday morning he hadn’t decided whether he’ll stick with seven defensemen and 11 forwards in games against the Oilers. He did that in the last round when Miro Heiskanen returned from injury, so the defenseman didn’t have to play big minutes right away. Forward Mikko Rantanen got double-shifted.
Oilers’ Connor Brown is game-time decision
Oilers forward Connor Brown is a game-time decision, coach Kris Knoblauch said.
If Brown (undisclosed injury) can’t go, Viktor Arvidsson would get into Game 1 after missing the past two games.
“I have no hesitation to have him in the lineup,” Knoblauch said of Arvidsson.
Western Conference finals predictions
Predictions from USA TODAY staffers:
Jason Anderson: Stars in 6. Both teams have players lighting it up on the offensive end in the postseason. Mikko Rantanen has 19 points for Dallas, while Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl have combined for 25 assists. It’s at the other end where each team has had issues, with Edmonton’s goalies combining for a .886 save percentage. The Stars have given up a whopping 408 shots in the playoffs, but Jake Oettinger has been up to the challenge, leading the league in some key underlying metrics for goaltenders. Expect plenty of goals in this series, but ultimately Dallas moves on.
Mike Brehm: Stars in 7. The Oilers are deeper than they were last season, but so are the Stars, with the additions of forwards Mikko Rantanen and Mikael Granlund. Defenseman Thomas Harley took a big jump when Miro Heiskanen was hurt, and now Heiskanen is back. This series will go the distance because Oilers defenseman Mattias Ekholm will return at some point. The Stars get the edge in the series finale because they’re at home, and coach Peter DeBoer is 9-0 in Game 7.
Jace Evans: Oilers in 6. Seeking to erase last season’s heartbreak, Edmonton has some team of destiny vibes. They looked completely on the ropes against the Kings in the first round only to rally in wild fashion and win six consecutive games after switching to Calvin Pickard in net. After Pickard was injured, Stuart Skinner got his job back and responded with two consecutive shutouts to oust the Golden Knights. You need some magic to win the Stanley Cup. It certainly feels like the Oilers have it. (And having Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl also helps.)