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A source confirms a last-minute change in Connor McDavid’s situation before the game

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Vincent Carbonneau
April 28, 2026  (5:19 PM)
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Apr 24, 2026; Anaheim, California, USA; Edmonton Oilers center Connor McDavid (97) controls the puck against Anaheim Ducks center Tim Washe (42) during the first period of game three of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Honda Center.
Photo credit: Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images

Connor McDavid and Kris Knoblauch head into Game 5 with Edmonton's season hanging on a game-time call.

That is the real story around the Oilers now, not just the 3-1 series hole against Anaheim. McDavid is a game-time decision for a do-or-die night.

Knoblauch confirmed the uncertainty Tuesday, and that instantly changed the mood around Edmonton. When the best player in the world is not a lock for an elimination game, the whole bench feels it.

The reason is not hard to spot. The report says McDavid suffered an ankle injury in Game 2, and it is clearly limiting him in this series.

That makes every shift feel heavier. Edmonton is not just trying to solve Anaheim now. It is trying to figure out how much of Connor McDavid it can still get.

“It would be shocking if he doesn’t play.” Adam Proteau via the Hockey News

The strange part is that even while looking limited, McDavid still has 4 points in 4 games. That says plenty about his talent, but it also shows how much the Oilers still lean on him.

And that is where this gets uncomfortable for Edmonton. A half-speed McDavid may still be more dangerous than most healthy stars, but the playoffs do not care about names when a body will not cooperate.

“The stakes couldn’t be much higher for him, so you have to imagine we’re going to see McDavid playing as much as he can in Game 5.” - Proteau

Edmonton is betting on pain tolerance and legacy

The file puts it plainly. Players at this time of year will play through almost anything if they believe they can still help.

That is why the examples matter. Thomas Chabot played this spring only weeks after breaking his arm, and the report also points back to Leon Draisaitl and Matthew Tkachuk playing through serious issues in past playoff runs.

“Players managing to play through injuries in playoff games is a tale as old as time.” - Proteau

So nobody in Edmonton is going to lightly assume McDavid sits. The expectation around the league is that if he can give them 10 or 15 shifts, he will try.

Still, there is a line. The same report says if the risk is long-term damage, McDavid should put his health first and rest.

That is what makes this such a loaded moment for the Oilers. If he plays, the room gets a jolt. If he cannot, the whole weight of the series shifts onto everyone else fast.

This has not been an easy season for McDavid, and the chance to go deep again is not something he takes lightly. That is why Game 5 feels bigger than one lineup note. It feels like the entire Oilers spring is waiting on one ankle and one decision.

Source : There's No Way Oilers' Connor McDavid Doesn't Play Game 5, Right?


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