2025 NHL playoff preview: Los Angeles Kings vs. Edmonton Oilers

By Dom Luszczyszyn, Sean Gentille and Shayna Goldman When the NHL moved to a divisional playoff in 2014, the main hook was leaning into regional rivalries by forcing repeat series within the bounds of the playoff structure.
Its a fine idea in theory and its led to a lot of marquee matchups.
It may often seem unjust due to division discrepancies, but its also given us some entertaining hockey.
Thats a win.
Advertisement Its also given us yet another series between the Los Angeles Kings and the Edmonton Oilers.
The city of Los Angeles is hoping the fourth times the charm.
The odds In each of the last three meetings between these two teams, the Oilers were heavy favorites, around 70 percent, winning each series in progressively fewer games.
Over the last three playoffs, the gap between the Oilers and Kings seemed to grow even larger.
Thats changed this season.
If ever there was a chance for the Kings to slay the dragon, this is it.
The series is a dead heat, with the Kings holding a slight 50.2 percent edge.
Home ice plays a role here, as does Mattias Ekholms injury .
With the Oilers at home and Ekholm in the lineup, theyd be right around 60 percent much closer to the usual ballpark.
Closer, but not nearly as high.
Thats because the Kings are better than the version the Oilers played a year ago.
And the Oilers are also definitely worse.
The numbers The story is the same between the Kings and Oilers.
Its a matchup between a defensive powerhouse and an elite offensive squad.
The Oilers plus-33 Offensive Rating ranks second among playoff teams; Connor McDavid, Leon Draisaitl and Evan Bouchard have a lot to do with that, as does Edmontons five-on-five play.
These two teams are neck-and-neck in expected goal share, ranking third and fourth in the league their processes to get there are just different.
The two are pretty even in the shot department; quality is where they separate.
Edmonton is a more dangerous offensive team, with the second-highest expected goal creation of 2.88 per 60.
The scoresheet doesnt always reflect it, though, as the team has shot below 8 percent.
The lack of tangible finishing ability is a big concern for the Oilers this time and is partly why their Offensive Rating has dropped precipitously compared to last season.
Its why this series is close.
Advertisement The Kings, on the other hand, have the results to show for it especially on home ice.
While L.A.
has outscored opponents 100-48 at home, its scoring isnt as potent on the road.
The real strength of this team is on the other end of the ice.
The Kings are extremely stingy, with a league-low 2.13 xGA/60.
Can they maintain that against the Oilers? Or will holes in Edmontons defensive coverage give a team like the Kings a chance to shine offensively? Those same questions extend to special teams situations.
The Kings suppress more chances and goals, but the Oilers have more weapons on the power play.
A scoring rate of 9.07 GF/60 is low by their standards, but it beats the Kings bottom-10 rate of 6.3.
The big question Can Quinton Byfield go toe-to-toe with the best in the world? Quiton Byfields season and really his last two should serve as a reminder that progress isnt always linear.
The No.
2 pick in 2020, Byfield spent his first three professional seasons making incremental gains but never quite breaking through.
Each year, he spent a little more time in the NHL.
Each year, he produced a little more.
In 2023-24, after shifting to the wing for his 21-year-old season, he popped, putting up 55 points and producing more efficiently than players like Jack Hughes, Nick Suzuki and Bo Horvat.
Playing nearly all his minutes at left wing on a line with Anze Kopitar and Adrian Kempe, he also increased his offensive impacts overall, helping the Kings generate plenty of shots and chances and showing signs of a more fully rounded game.
That gave the Kings even more cover to ship out Pierre-Luc Dubois after a single, disastrous season in Los Angeles and move Byfield back to center on a full-time basis.
The pump seemed primed for a second consecutive level-up season.
Initial returns, though, werent great; Byfield had three goals and eight assists in his first 29 games.
The Kings were winning his minutes, though, and he was on an unlucky streak in that span, he was third on the team with 8.24 expected goals.
Advertisement From mid-December to March 3, the shots began to fall, and he began to dial up his production; in those 30 mid-season games, he led Los Angeles in points (31), expected goals percentage (58.5) and goals percentage (67.6).
On March 5, though, he started a six-game goal streak and a run of high-end production that lasted through the end of the regular season.
In that span, he scored as many goals as Alex Ovechkin (14) and more than anyone in the NHL outside of John Tavares, Tage Thompson and Sidney Crosby.
His underlying numbers at five-on-five have held steady, too; the Kings continue to decisively win his minutes.
The combination of Byfield between Kevin Fiala and Alex Laferriere has been one of the NHLs best, with the Kings outscoring opponents 20-6 while theyre on the ice.
Of the 79 line combos to play at least 200 minutes together in 2024-25, only Nathan MacKinnon between Martin Necas and Artturi Lehkonen had a higher goal percentage.
Fiala deserves some credit there; hes been one of the leagues top playmaking wingers for several seasons, and 2024-25 has been no different.
Still, what Byfield has done over the last month once again suggests hes growing into the player the Kings always believed hed be and the player they need, if one of the NHLs highest-profile streaks of futility is ever going to end.
Their best shot at overcoming Edmontons elite talent is to cultivate some of their own.
Nobody is closer to fitting the bill than Byfield.
The X-factor Can Darnell Nurse step up in Mattias Ekholms absence? Ekholms injury, which will keep him out for the first round and perhaps beyond, is bad news for the Oilers.
Theres no sense in pretending otherwise; hes second among Edmontons defensemen in Net Rating, behind only Bouchard, and leads the group with a Defensive Rating of 1.9 despite playing against top competition.
Thats quite a lot to lose.
Advertisement Itll fall on the rest of the Oilers blue line to make up the difference and nobody more than Nurse, whos rebounded from a disastrous 2024 postseason to show hes capable of doing just that.
Since Ekholms injury issue cropped up in early March (hes played in seven of 21 games since March 1), Edmonton has put up an expected goal share of nearly 61 percent in Nurses minutes.
Hes first among their defensemen in on-ice expected goals/60 (3.33) and second only to Ekholm in expected goals against/60 (2.12).
Playing Nurse with Bouchard and Jake Walman leads to higher-event hockey on both sides; playing him with Troy Stecher and Brett Kulak slows things down.
In that regard, Edmonton has a choice to make with Nurse, but his overall results are strong post-March 1, regardless of his partner.
The rosters By Net Rating, the best player in the world is McDavid (duh).
Draisaitl, after the MVP-worthy season hes had, is second.
That one-two punch is hockeys biggest advantage and the reason the Oilers are an annual contender.
McDavid and Draisaitl are a force thats difficult to stop, and these Kings know that firsthand.
Over the last three playoffs, McDavid has 36 points in 18 playoff games against the Kings while Draisaitl has 17 goals and 30 points.
Despite being one of the leagues best defensive teams during that time, Edmontons dynamic duo still put up video game numbers against the Kings.
Whether at five-on-five or on the power play, it didnt seem to matter McDavid and Draisaitl had their number.
Can that change this season? The Kings certainly have the personnel for it with three elite defensive centers and three elite defense defenders we just need to see it actually happen first.
What works in Los Angeles favor is that the teams defensive core has taken things up a notch this season.
Mikey Anderson and Vladislav Gavrikov are now rated as two of the best defensive defensemen in hockey due to significant improvements in their defensive numbers.
Andersons xGA/60 has gone from 2.21 last year to 1.97 this year, and the Kings allow just 1.39 GA/60 with him on the ice.
Gavrikovs jump has been even larger.
Add Drew Doughtys continued defensive excellence to that and the Kings have a three-headed monster that looks scarier than ever.
Advertisement The same applies to their center core, though not to the same magnitude.
With Byfields maturation in particular, the Kings look well-poised to stop anyone.
Their first challenge, though, is the two guys theyve failed to slow down for three straight seasons.
The path to victory for the Kings starts and ends there, because they have the edge otherwise.
After Zach Hyman and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins two usually strong forwards who have not lived up to expectations this season for Edmonton the Kings depth shines in comparison.
Kempe and Fiala are quality scorers, Warren Foegele has been a revelation and Laferriere and Trevor Moore have scored at 20-goal paces.
Thats firepower that the Oilers cant compete with down the lineup.
With Viktor Arvidsson and Jeff Skinner not working out as expected, theres a massive drop-off in offensive talent after Nugent-Hopkins.
And thats saying a lot, considering Nugent-Hopkins has only scored at a 52-point pace this season.
Suffice to say, this isnt the same explosive Oilers team were used to, and theyll have it extra tough against this version of the Kings.
If Los Angeles can slow down McDavid and Draisaitl even a little bit, the Kings depth advantage should be able to take care of the rest.
In past years, when the Oilers were deeper, that equation wasnt as simple, and the Oilers were heavy favorites for good reason.
They were a team to fear even beyond their big two.
Thats not the case this season.
The equalizer for the Oilers is their defense group, even without Ekholm.
While the Kings big three on defense are all defensively elite, none of them can dependably drive offense.
They lack the dynamic puck-moving instinct necessary to be offensive assets, and its the main reason the Kings arent an offensively gifted team despite their depth up front.
Not trusting Brandt Clarke to play in the top four (for good reason, given his defensive inefficiencies) is part of that.
Thats not the case for the Oilers, who have Bouchard, Nurse and Walman a potent offensive trifecta that doesnt sacrifice much defense to get there.
No team creates more offense from the back end than the Oilers.
Advertisement As poor as Edmontons forward group is, having a mobile defense puts them in more advantageous situations more often.
For the teams stars, its rocket fuel.
Bouchard is the leader of that as one of the games very best offensive defensemen, though well see how he fares without Ekholm by his side in a playoff setting.
Thatll be a big defensive challenge for him, and while the model believes hes equipped for that, a real-life pressure cooker could prove otherwise.
For a defenseman so prone to making The Big Mistake, the first round will be a huge test.
The last piece of the puzzle is in net.
In previous seasons, the Kings netminding situation looked just as much of an afterthought as the Oilers.
This year, the way Darcy Kuemper has played down the stretch, its a real advantage.
Kuemper has bounced back toward Vezina Trophy-caliber play, creating a healthy chasm between him and Stuart Skinner, his counterpart in Edmonton.
The two have both played 50 or so games this year, and Kuemper has saved 24 more goals above expected in that time.
This matchup always comes down to McDavid and Draisaitl, but they werent the only reason for the Oilers success against Los Angeles.
Edmontons depth was strong enough to leave the teams star power as an overwhelming advantage.
Thats not the case this time around.
The Oilers may have the three best players in this matchup, but that alone might not be enough.
Thanks to Los Angeles depth advantage making up much of the gap, these rosters are much closer than usual.
The key matchup Phillip Danault vs.
Leon Draisaitl With any Kings-Oilers matchup, the question is whether L.A.s shutdown talent can contain the Oilers best.
This year, that conversation starts with Draisaitl, who has been a force in all three zones.
On paper, the Kings have two advantages: home ice to drive the matchups and three shutdown options.
But this could easily become a headache for them if things go south in Game 1.
Danault likely opens the series in this matchup; he went head-to-head with Draisaitl at home earlier this season and has shouldered the toughest assignments since the 4 Nations Face-Off.
Advertisement But if the coaches start swapping out centers for Game 2, it means things didnt go according to plan with the first option, which is a sign of early trouble.
That was the case last spring when the series shifted to L.A.
after a 6-1 loss in Game 3, McDavid matchups shifted from Danault to Kopitar.
The bottom line If the Kings are going to pull this off, the time is now.
Their depth and all-around game are stronger than ever, and the Oilers are limping into the postseason.
Ultimately, though, its impossible to pick against McDavid and Draisaitl.
Too much talent on one end and too much baggage on the other.
How these projections work Understanding projection uncertainty Evolving Hockey Natural Stat Trick Hockey Reference NHL All Three Zones Tracking by Corey Sznajder (Photo of Leon Draisaitl and Quinton Byfield: Gary A.
Vasquez / Imagn Images).
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