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Serious tension emerging in Edmonton and Knoblauch may be feeling it

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Vincent Carbonneau
May 10, 2026  (7:08)
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Apr 7, 2026; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; Edmonton Oilers head coach Kris knoblauch watches play against the Utah Mammoth during the first period at Delta Center.
Photo credit: Rob Gray-Imagn Images

Kris Knoblauch and Stan Bowman are now tied to the ugliest Oilers question of the summer.

The latest talk around Edmonton goes past a normal coaching review. It points to a real disconnect between the bench and management, and that changes the whole feel of this story.

Tom Gazzola's read was sharp. He floated that Knoblauch used certain lineups during the season in spite of Bowman, not with him.

If that is even close to the truth, this is no longer just about results. This becomes a power struggle inside a team that cannot afford one.

That is why the second part of the report lands so hard. Management and the coaching staff reportedly did not see eye to eye, which is about as bad a sign as you can get for a team in Edmonton's spot.

And once that gets out, the rest follows fast. Gazzola and Dustin Nielson both believe Knoblauch is done behind the Oilers bench.

That is not a small call. It suggests the problem may have grown beyond systems, slumps, or one bad playoff stretch.

Tom Gazzola speculated that Kris Knoblauch put out specific lineups for the Edmonton Oilers during the season in SPITE of Stan Bowman.

Added that management and the staff don't see eye-to-eye.

Gazzola & Dustin Nielson believe Kris Knoblauch is done behind the Oilers' bench.

Kris Knoblauch facing growing pressure amid tension in Edmonton

If the front office really felt the bench was going its own way, the ending almost writes itself. Teams can survive losses. They do not survive long when the coach and management are pulling in different directions.

That is what makes this more serious than a standard firing rumor. It is not only about whether Knoblauch won enough. It is about whether Bowman still trusted him to run the roster the way the organization wanted.

And in Edmonton, that matters more than ever. A team built around Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl does not have room for internal static while trying to fix a roster that already needs major work.

The lineup angle matters because it gets right to control. When a coach starts dressing players or building combinations in a way management does not support, somebody usually loses that fight.

Knoblauch may still have people in the room who back him. That is often how these things go. Players like knowing where they stand, and coaches earn loyalty when they trust their own read.

But front offices do not like being challenged on roster usage, especially after a season that already left the organization under heavy pressure.

So this is where the Oilers sit now. Kris Knoblauch is not just facing heat because of wins and losses. He is facing the idea that the relationship with Stan Bowman may have cracked underneath the surface.

And once that becomes the story, coaching changes stop feeling like overreaction. They start feeling like the next move.