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Dallas Stars ready for Edmonton OIlers in NHL Western Conference finals after knocking out last 2 Stanley Cup champs to begin playoffs

The Stars’ Jason Robertson, right, works the puck while under pressure from Edmonton Oilers defenseman Cody Ceci on April 3 in Dallas. (AP file photo)

DALLAS — The top-seeded Dallas Stars are in the Western Conference Final after knocking out the last two Stanley Cup champions, one of those featuring a pair of 100-point scorers.

Edmonton had the NHL’s only other duo of 100-point scorers in the regular season, with Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl now among four Oilers who are the top scorers in these playoffs. They also had the league’s best record since late November, going 45-14-5 the rest of the regular season after a 5-12-1 start.

“I think people probably would have predicted Edmonton would be in the conference final,” Stars coach Pete DeBoer said. “Since November, they’ve been an elite team in just about every category.”

Dallas has been pretty good, too, and hosts Game 1 tonight. This is the first playoff matchup between the these teams since April 2003, when their sixth postseason meeting in seven years happened the month before the Stars top goal scorer Wyatt Johnston was born.

After taking seven games in the first round to beat reigning champion Vegas, the Stars got a couple of extra days of rest after a double-overtime Game 6 clincher against ’22 champion Colorado, which had Mikko Rantanen

and league MVP finalist Nathan MacKinnon.

Dallas Stars right wing Denis Gurianov, right, and Tampa Bay Lightning center Cedric Paquette scuffle during the first period of Game 3 of their NHL Stanley Cup Final on Sept. 23, 2020, in Edmonton, Alberta. (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press via AP)

This is the second year in a row for the Stars to make it to the third round. Edmonton outlasted Vancouver in a seven-game second-round series to get back into the West final for the second time in three years, and like the Stars lost in its last trip against the eventual Cup champion.

Colorado is 1-2 this season against the Stars, with neither McDavid nor Draisaitl scoring a goal in any of those games. McDavid has only four goals in his last 15 games against Dallas.

“You’ve got to know when they’re on the ice at all times … managing the puck a little better, a little sharper, and trying not to give them free offense,” Stars forward Jason Robertson said.

McDavid has only two goals this postseason, but has had 19 assists in 12 games after 100 helpers in the regular season. Draisaitl has a league-high 24 playoff points (eight goals), while defenseman Evan Bouchard had 20 points (five goals) and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins has 16 (four goals).

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GOALIES

Stars goalie Jake Oettinger was off the ice early during Wednesday’s practice. DeBoer said Oettinger was “feeling a little under the weather” but expects him to be fine for Game 1.

Oettinger is 8-5 this postseason with a 2.09 goals-against average and .918 save percentage. The All-Star has allowed two goals or fewer nine times, with 29 saves in the finale against the Avs.

Stuart Skinner is 7-3 with a 2.87 GAA and .881 save percentage while starting 10 of the Oilers’ playoff games.

After allowing four goals on 15 shots in Game 4 against Vancouver, Skinner was replaced in the third period by Calvin Pickard, who then won Game 5 and lost Game 6. Skinner was back in net for Game 7.

“Ideally we’ve got Skinner running right through the end of the season,” Oilers coach Kris Knoblauch said. “Because, really, does a coach change his lineup after a win, especially the starting goalie.”

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INJURED GUYS BACK?

Edmonton forward Adam Henrique returned to practice after missing the last five games with an ankle injury. He got hurt in the Game 5 first-round clincher against the Los Angeles Kings. His only action since was 11 1/2 minutes in Game 2 against Vancouver.

“We believe he’s really close and we expect him early in the series, whether that’s Game 1, 2 or 3,” Knoblauch said.

Stars top-line center Roope Hintz left in the first period of Game 4 against Colorado with an upper-body injury, missed the last two games and likely wouldn’t have played in a Game 7.

DeBoer said Hintz “skated pretty extensively” on Wednesday before the Stars’ full practice, and said he was day-to-day.

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SPECIAL TEAMS

The Oilers have had the best power play this postseason, converting on 37.5% of their chances (15 of 40). They just may not get too many chances in this series.

After being the NHL’s least-penalized team in the regular season at only 6.8 minutes per game, Dallas is even better in the playoffs at 5.2 per game.

“The best penalty kill is staying out of the box. We don’t take penalties, and I don’t anticipate that changing,” DeBoer said. “They build momentum off that. … Colorado had a great power play, and we had to deal with that. Vegas actually had a really good power play. This one’s probably a little bit of a different level than those.”

Edmonton has also been the best team short-handed in the playoffs, killing off 32 of 35 penalties (91.4%) after ranking in the middle of the league during the regular season.

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DROPPING OPENERS

Dallas has lost Game 1 in each of its past six playoff series, including both openers at home this postseason.

All three of the Stars’ Game 1 losses during the 2023 postseason were in overtime, as was the opener against Colorado in the last round. The Avalanche never led that game until scoring the OT goal for a 4-3 win — the same final score for the Stars in two Game 1s against the Golden Knights, in the first round this season and in West final at Vegas last year.

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AP NHL playoffs: https://apnews.com/hub/stanley-cup and https://www.apnews.com/hub/NHL

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