Edmonton Oilers Expecting Big Year From Matt Savoie
As the focal piece acquired by the Edmonton Oilers in the trade that sent center Ryan McLeod to the Buffalo Sabres last summer, many believed Matt Savoie would become a low-cost, high-upside option that the Oilers could put next to Connor McDavid or Leon Draisaitl in the team’s top-six. Hindsight being 20/20, Savoie only played in four games with Edmonton throughout the 2024-25 season, spending much of his time with their AHL affiliate, the Bakersfield Condors.
Still, the team expects Savoie to register his rookie campaign during the 2025-26 campaign and be a potent contributor. In a recent piece by Derek Van Diest of NHL.com, Oilers’ General Manager Stan Bowman laid out his expectations for Savoie, saying, “There is some growth from within. I think Matt Savoie is probably poised to take a big step next year.”
The team’s head coach, Kris Knoblauch, shared similar sentiments, saying, “With Savoie, the one thing that I’m very optimistic about is penalty kill and how good he was in Bakersfield in that role. He didn’t have any penalty-kill time when he was with us but certainly, we saw him being a reliable two-way player at 5-on-5. The opportunity for Savoie is on the penalty kill, not that he can’t be on the power play, but I definitely see him being a big part of our penalty kill.”
Interestingly, Knoblaugh highlighted the penalty kill regarding Savoie. He’s been an efficient scorer at the AHL level over the past two years, scoring 21 goals and 59 points in 72 games between the Condors and the Rochester Americans. There’s little expectation that Savoie earns a spot on the team’s first power-play unit. Still, there’s reason to believe he should be viewed as a top candidate for the Oilers’ second iteration of their man-advantage deployments.
Savoie only has five NHL contests to his name, so it’s difficult to tell how effective he would be on the penalty kill. He finished last season with a +21 rating, which is impressive given that Bakersfield as a team finished with a -9 differential. He’s not an overly physical player, but his high pace and skating ability could be viewed as a positive variable to plug into a penalty kill unit.
At any rate, Edmonton is expected to insert some high-upside youthful talent into its group next season. Especially after acquiring the 2024-25 Hobey Baker Award winner, Isaac Howard, a few weeks ago from the Tampa Bay Lightning, the Oilers will have a lot of options to play around with in their top-six as they pursue their first Stanley Cup championship since 1990.
Edmonton Signs Cameron Wright, Recall Matt Savoie
The Edmonton Oilers are bringing up some depth from their AHL affiliate, the Bakersfield Condors. The team announced they have signed forward Cameron Wright to a one-year, two-way contract worth $925K and have recalled forward Matthew Savoie.
Wright has been bouncing around the AHL and ECHL over the last few years after finishing his college tenure at the University of Denver in 2021-22. His first professional season came a year later in the Colorado Avalanche organization, where Wright played 64 games for the ECHL’s Utah Grizzlies and two for the AHL’s Colorado Eagles.
His first year with the Oilers organization came last season where Wright managed 48 games for the Condors. He became an effective goal scorer at the bottom of the lineup with 12 goals and 21 points in total.
It will be interesting to see how long Wright and Savoie stick around on Edmonton’s roster to begin the 2024-25 NHL season. The latter recently joined the Oilers organization in the offseason in a trade with the Buffalo Sabres and quickly became one of Edmonton’s top prospects.
This year would mark his first full year in professional hockey after small appearances with the AHL Rochester Americans and Sabres last year. The Oilers have yet to put Evander Kane on LTIR which will inevitably open up much-needed financial flexibility for the roster.
Oilers Pathway Toward Cap Compliancy
If their cap struggles weren’t already bad enough this summer, the Edmonton Oilers were struck a significant blow last week when the St. Louis Blues signed defenseman Philip Broberg to a two-year, $9.16MM offer sheet and forward Dylan Holloway to a two-year, $4.58MM offer sheet. Oilers’ general manager Stan Bowman has until tomorrow to match both or either respective offer but could allow both to walk and receive draft compensation in return.
PuckPedia gave a solid breakdown of how Edmonton could find its way back to salary cap compliance after the separate trades that brought Vasily Podkolzin to Alberta and sent Cody Ceci to the San Jose Sharks. The salary cap website asserts that if the Oilers place Evander Kane on long-term injured reserve to start the year, send down Troy Stecher and Derek Ryan, and call up prospect Matt Savoie to the NHL, they will be compliant to start the 2024-25 NHL season if they choose to match both offer sheets.
All things considered — this is a decent scenario for Edmonton. Savoie gives the team a low-cost option to plug into the top six and allows the team some flexibility with newcomers Jeff Skinner and Viktor Arvidsson on the wing. By moving either Skinner or Arvidsson down to the third line, Holloway could play the wing on the team’s fourth line while moving Mattias Janmark to fourth-line center in this scenario.
The team would still have seven available defensemen to choose from to start the year and Stecher likely would have been light on playing time regardless. Josh Brown and Ty Emberson could split time based on matchups leaving Edmonton’s only glaring hole at the fourth-line center position.
Edmonton is not necessarily out of the woods just yet as it’s uncertain when Kane will ultimately return from his offseason surgery. It’s expected he will be placed on LTIR to begin the season which will keep him out of the lineup for the first 10 games and 24 days of the 2024-25 NHL season. Once the season begins, however, the Oilers will again be in a situation where tough decisions must be made. The Oilers could still allow both players to walk giving them just over $6MM to start the year after placing Kane on LTIR.
It will be interesting to see how aggressive GM Bowman is in bringing back two pieces that haven’t had much opportunity with the organization up to this point. All in all, even with clearing Ceci’s salary and having a clear pathway toward cap compliance to start the year — it will take some time for Edmonton to exit this precarious scenario.
Sabres Recall Matt Savoie, Place Brandon Biro On IR
The Buffalo Sabres have recalled top prospect Matthew Savoie to the NHL and placed recent call-up Brandon Biro on injured reserve. Savoie is coming up from the AHL, after a conditioning stint to help nurse an upper-body injury. The reason for Biro’s assignment to IR hasn’t yet been disclosed.
The news of Savoie’s recall is exciting for Sabres fans who missed the rookie punch that Zach Benson brought to the lineup. Benson is also on IR with a lower-body injury that’s holding him out week-to-week. Savoie and Benson were linemates on the Winnipeg Ice last season and would be slated to be teammates again on the Wenatchee Wild if neither of them can hang onto an NHL roster spot. Benson has two points, both assists, through his first six NHL games.
Savoie has performed well with the Rochester Americans, playing in his first professional hockey games on this conditioning stint. He’s totaled five points and six penalty minutes through his first six games, ranking 10th on the Rochester Americans in terms of points per game so far this season. That’s an encouraging sign for the 19-year-old centerman, who seems to be adjusting well to the pro scene. Savoie alternated line rushes with Victor Olofsson at the team’s Monday practice, suggesting that he may get a chance to replicate his AHL success at the top level, if the team opts to healthy scratch Olofsson again.
And while all attention will surround Savoie, Sabres fans shouldn’t forget about Biro, who has scored his first two NHL goals in the two games he was provided this season. Biro did record a team-low CF% (Corsi-For Percentage) in his two games, although his low sample size makes that metric slightly less concerning. Either way, his value as an NHL talent will likely be tested whenever he’s able to return from injured reserve.