The Edmonton Oilers made three key moves this season when it comes to their blue line. Signing John Klingberg and trading for Jake Walman and Ty Emberson were incredibly astute decisions that have paid off in spades. Each has contributed in their own way before and during the playoffs, but their impact can’t be ignored.
John Klingberg: Has Lots Left in the Tank
John Klingberg was viewed as a risky signing when Bowman brought him aboard in mid-January. Battling chronic hip injuries and a forgettable stint with Toronto, the 32-year-old defenseman had become the kind of player no teams wanted to take a chance on. Bowman did.
The plan wasn’t to sign a stay-at-home defenseman outright. The Oilers felt they needed another puck-moving defenseman, and Bowman believed Klingberg still had something left to offer. He was right. Most teams wouldn’t have gone this route.
Things didn’t look promising after he suffered another minor injury, but Klingberg found his rhythm and has emerged as a top-four blueliner in the playoffs. Paired with fellow newcomer Jake Walman, Klingberg has often played over 20 minutes per night and ranks among the Oilers’ top defensemen in Grade A shot differential at even strength.
“He’s looking like his vintage self,” said Evan Bouchard. “It’s been awesome to see.”
Head coach Kris Knoblauch has praised Klingberg’s vision and transition ability, which have helped stabilize Edmonton’s blue line in the absence of injured veteran Mattias Ekholm. With Ekholm now back, the Oilers’ blue line is arguably as deep as it’s ever been.
It’s a remarkable comeback for a player who, just months ago, might have been done in the NHL for good. Klingberg has earned another contract for the upcoming season. It will be interesting to see what he costs to keep.
Jake Walman: The Big Deadline Deal That Worked
Of all Bowman’s stealth moves, the acquisition of Jake Walman may be the most remarkable. Detroit had dumped the 29-year-old and a second-round pick to San Jose just to clear his $3.4 million cap hit (at least, that’s the public excuse, as many believe something else…
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