Canucks End Losing Streak with Overtime Win Over Oilers

Graphic featuring hockey jerseys representing the Edmonton Oilers and Vancouver Canucks, along with a hockey puck and ice rink design. The background is divided with orange and blue colors.

By Andrew Phillip Chernoff | CanucksBanter

October 27, 2025

The Vancouver Canucks snapped a 3-game losing streak, defeating the Edmonton Oilers in overtime at Rogers Arena. Kiefer Sherwood was the hero for the Canucks, scoring his second goal of the night 1:42 into the extra period.

The Canucks, playing without their captain Quinn Hughes (day-to-day, lower-body injury), saw the Oilers erase a 3-1 deficit in the third period sending the game into overtime.

Game Summary

First Period – The Canucks opened the scoring when Brock Boeser found the back of the net, giving Vancouver a 1-0 lead.

Second Period – Vancouver extended its lead to 2-0 early in the period on a power play, with Elias Pettersson capitalizing. The Oilers answered back later in the frame when Leon Draisaitl scored on a breakaway (in his 800th career NHL game) to make it 2-1.

With under a minute left in the period, Kiefer Sherwood scored on a skilled individual effort to restore the Canucks’ two-goal lead, making it 3-1 heading into the final frame.

Third Period – The Oilers mounted a comeback in the third. Jack Roslovic scored his first goal as an Oiler early in the period to cut the lead to 3-2. Then, with 5:03 left in regulation, Leon Draisaitl scored his second of the night on a power play, tying the game 3-3 and forcing overtime.

Overtime – Kiefer Sherwood ended the game at 1:42, deflecting a pass from Brock Boeser past Oilers goalie Calvin Pickard for the 4-3 win.

Post-Game Comments

Goaltender Thatcher Demko was outspoken about his pride in the team’s effort, especially coming off a three-game losing streak and dealing with so many injuries.

  • On the win: “We’re battling our asses off in here. I’m really proud of the group today. It’s a hard game against a really good team… and to give that effort, you know, it’s really inspiring.”
  • On the team’s mindset: “Obviously we know the injury situation we’re in right now. But I think it’s not something you can dwell on. You start feeling bad for yourself, it’s easy to let even more games slip away.”

Overtime hero Kiefer Sherwood (who scored two goals, including the winner) was the primary voice for the team’s hard-working identity.

  • On the team’s mentality: “You just trust the process and, you know, stick to the blue-collar mentality that we’re trying to build… We just have to pull on the rope together and stick to our identity every day.”
  • On his line’s role: “Our line is trying to maintain a blue-collar mentality and it’s contagious for the next line.”

Drew O’Connor earned praise from Head Coach Adam Foote, who hit a post and had the primary assist on on Sherwood’s disallowed goal, “That was O’Connor’s best game of the year…He played so well defensively, his best defensive game without the puck.”

The Canucks won the game without captain Quinn Hughes, and Head Coach Adam Foote provided an update.

  • Adam Foote confirmed Hughes is “day-to-day” with a lower-body injury.
  • Kiefer Sherwood spoke on filling the void: “Obviously, you can’t replace guys like that, but you can try to plug in holes by group committee.”

Scoring Summary

Vancouver Canucks (4)

  • Brock Boeser (1G, 2A)
  • Elias Pettersson (1G – PP)
  • Kiefer Sherwood (2G – including OT winner)

Edmonton Oilers (3)

  • Leon Draisaitl (2G – 1 PP)
  • Jack Roslovic (1G)

Goaltending

  • Thatcher Demko (VAN): 26 saves on 29 shots
  • Calvin Pickard (EDM): 23 saves on 27 shots

Upcoming Canucks games:

  • Vs New York Rangers: October 28/25 @ 07:00 pm PDT
  • At St. Louis Blues: October 30/25 @ 05:00 pm PDT
  • At Minnesota Wild: November 01/25 @ 4:00 pm PDT

Until next time, hockey fans

Vancouver Canucks Look to Break Losing Streak Tonight

Graphic featuring hockey jerseys representing the Edmonton Oilers and Vancouver Canucks, along with a hockey puck and ice rink design. The background is divided with orange and blue colors.

By Andrew Phillip Chernoff | CanucksBanter

October 26, 2025

The Vancouver Canucks host the Edmonton Oilers tonight in a Pacific Division showdown at Rogers Arena, with puck drop set for 7 p.m. PDT. This is a key divisional matchup as both teams aim to build momentum after uneven starts to the season.

Vancouver Canucks (4-5-0) Outlook

Vancouver enters the contest on a 3-game losing streak, having most recently blown a 2–0 lead in a 4–3 loss to the Montreal Canadiens on Saturday.

Conor Garland continues to pace the Canucks in scoring with 9 points and 6 assists, while Elias Pettersson added two helpers in that loss against Montreal for 7 points on the season.

However, the Canucks’ scoring depth is hampered by injuries to forwards Jonathan Lekkerimaki, Teddy Blueger, Nils Höglander, and Filip Chytil.

Vancouver’s power play has struggled at just 16.1% efficiency — 25th in the NHL — and their faceoff percentage is 31st in the league at 42%. The penalty kill is 73.5% for 22nd in the NHL.

Coach Adam Foote has emphasized to his team of staying resilient through a gruelling early-season schedule and an injury stretch at this juncture.

A scoreboard displaying the standings of the Pacific Division in the NHL, showing the rankings, games played, wins, losses, overtime losses, points, and goal differentials for each team.
nhl.com

Edmonton Oilers (4-4-1) Preview

The Oilers are coming off a 3–2 loss to the Seattle Kraken on Saturday, where defensive lapses in transition cost them key goals.

Head coach Kris Knoblauch noted his team has generated strong scoring chances but must tighten up off the rush. Edmonton’s special teams remain a bright spot: their power play has scored in three straight games, led by Evan Bouchard and Darnell Nurse, while Leon Draisaitl, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, and Mattias Ekholm each carry multi-game point streaks.

Connor McDavid, despite generating over 3.6 expected goals this season, he has struggled to finish, converting only 4.5% of shots — far below his career average of nearly 15% and the league average this season of 12.7% for forwards — and is viewed as due for a breakout game against Vancouver.

Key Stats & Matchup Trends

Infographic comparing the Vancouver Canucks and Edmonton Oilers team statistics for the regular season, including power play percentage, penalty kill percentage, face-off percentage, goals for per game, and goals against per game.
nhl.com

Expect Vancouver to lean on Thatcher Demko for stability in goal tonight, while Calvin Pickard likely starts for the Oilers.

Special teams and puck management will decide whether the Canucks can halt their multiple game losing streak or if Edmonton’s stars capitalize on defensive lapses and hand Vancouver their fourth consecutive loss en route to the basement of the Pacific Division.

OILERS (4-4-1) at CANUCKS (4-5-0)

07 p.m. PDT; SN1, SNP

Oilers projected lineup

Andrew Mangiapane — Connor McDavid — Jack Roslovic

Vasily Podkolzin — Leon Draisaitl — Matthew Savoie

Adam Henrique — Ryan Nugent-Hopkins — Isaac Howard

Trent Frederic — Noah Philp — David Tomasek

Mattias Ekholm — Evan Bouchard

Darnell Nurse — Jake Walman

Brett Kulak — Ty Emberson

Calvin Pickard

Stuart Skinner

Scratched: Curtis Lazar, Troy Stecher

Injured: Zach Hyman (wrist), Mattias Janmark (undisclosed), Kasperi Kapanen (knee), Alec Regula (undisclosed)

Canucks projected lineup

Jake DeBrusk — Elias Pettersson — Conor Garland

Evander Kane — Lukas Reichel — Brock Boeser

Drew O’Connor — Aatu Raty — Kiefer Sherwood

Arshdeep Bains — Max Sasson — Linus Karlsson

Quinn Hughes — Filip Hronek

Marcus Pettersson — Tyler Myers

Elias Nils Pettersson — Victor Mancini

Thatcher Demko

Kevin Lankinen

Scratched: Kirill Kudryavtsev, Nils Aman, P.O. Joseph

Injured: Filip Chytil (concussion protocol), Jonathan Lekkerimaki (upper body), Teddy Blueger (lower body), Nils Hoglander (lower body), Derek Forbort (undisclosed)

Status report

Neither team held a morning skate. … Pickard is expected to start after Skinner made 20 saves in a 3-2 loss at the Seattle Kraken on Saturday. … Howard started the game in Seattle on the top line but was replaced by Roslovic in the third period. … The only expected change for the Canucks is Demko starting after Lankinen made 20 saves in a 4-3 loss to the Montreal Canadiens on Saturday. … Kudryavtsev, a defenseman, was recalled from Abbotsford of the American Hockey League on Sunday, but there was no indication if he would play. Forward Joseph LaBate was sent to Abbotsford.

Source: nhl.com