Oilers forwards Curtis Lazar and Noah Philp have been shut down for the remainder of the team’s road trip due to upper-body injuries, head coach Kris Knoblauch told reporters today (including the team’s Bob Stauffer). With no available cap space for a corresponding recall, the Oilers will dress 11 forwards and seven defensemen for the remainder of the trip, Knoblauch said.
Both played in Monday night’s 5-1 loss to the Sabres on Edmonton’s fourth line with Mattias Janmark. Lazar finished the game, but Philp’s last shift came with 16:50 remaining in the third period. It’s unclear when either player got banged up.
Lazar, 30, had been an infrequent option for Edmonton to start the year but had been getting more reps as of late, making five straight appearances. A spot in Edmonton’s forward group had opened up courtesy of an undisclosed injury to Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, as well as the club’s reassignment of Isaac Howard to AHL Bakersfield. Still, he’s been a virtual non-factor after signing a league-minimum deal with the Oilers over the summer. He’s been limited to one goal in nine games and had a -3 rating while averaging 9:34 of ice time per game. He’s been somewhat valuable as a defensive-zone faceoff specialist, though, winning 55.9% of his draws. His usage means he won’t be sniffing the career-high 25 points he set two years ago with the Devils, though.
The 27-year-old Philp has drawn in on Edmonton’s fourth line with more consistency. He was scratched for a couple of stretches in October but has remained in the lineup since then, meaning tonight’s game against the Capitals will be his first missed game since Oct. 30. The right-shot center has occasionally factored in on the Oilers’ penalty kill and averaged 10:02 per game at all strengths in his most extended stint on an NHL roster thus far. Through 15 appearances, the Alberta native has two goals and an assist with a -7 rating, 24 hits, and two blocks. His 56.9% winning percentage in the dot is the second-highest on the team behind Adam Henrique.
Their unavailability for the next three games at a minimum makes the Oilers’ financial situation quite dicey. As they’re rolling 11-7, they don’t have any healthy extra skaters available. If someone were to sustain an injury tonight and be unavailable to play tomorrow against the Lightning, Edmonton would have to play a skater short in Tampa before being eligible to recall a no-cap-hit emergency exception from Bakersfield for the final game of their road trip against the Panthers on Saturday.
The Oilers could also avoid that by shifting Nugent-Hopkins to long-term injured reserve, but doing so would rule him out for the rest of the month. Considering he’s already past his initial projected return date, that’s unlikely.