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Bad news in Edmonton: this latest blow sets the Oilers whole process back

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Jonathan Ouimet
May 29, 2026  (11:20 PM)
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Mar 26, 2026; Las Vegas, Nevada, USA; Edmonton Oilers defenseman Evan Bouchard (2) celebrates with center Matt Savoie (22) and center Connor McDavid (97) after scoring a goal during an overtime period to give the Oilers a 4-3 victory over the Vegas Golden Knights at T-Mobile Arena.
Photo credit: Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images

The Edmonton Oilers prospect pipeline just lost a potential reinforcement before he ever crossed the Atlantic.

Lowetide reported on Thursday that rumors out of Russia have Maxim Berezkin staying in the KHL for the next two seasons rather than signing with Edmonton.

"He's NHL-ready," the longtime Oilers insider posted on X. "Now is the time for him to push."

The frustration in that line tells you everything about how Edmonton's player development group views the situation. Berezkin is the kind of prospect the Oilers were counting on to add depth to their forward group sooner rather than later.

Stan Bowman's front office just spent the past week restructuring almost every department in hockey operations. Michael Parkatti got promoted to VP of Analytics and Technology. Kirt Hill came in as Assistant GM of Player Procurement.

Toby Salmelainen leads the new European operations group. The whole point of those moves was to better track exactly this kind of overseas timeline. Losing Berezkin to a two-year KHL extension undermines part of that strategy.

Why this slows down the entire Edmonton off-season plan

Edmonton finished 41-30-11 with 93 points, 14th overall, and got swept out of the first round by Anaheim. The roster needs more young, cost-controlled forward depth around Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl.

A KHL-bound prospect who decides to stay home for two more seasons is a delay the Oilers can't really afford.

McDavid's window keeps narrowing. Every off-season counts. Every roster gap that has to be solved with a free agent costs cap space.

Berezkin would have arrived as a low-cost option to fill a bottom-six role. That's gone now. Bowman has to find that depth elsewhere, which typically means spending money he'd rather save for top-six and goalie additions.

What does the front office do next? The free agent market is the obvious answer. The trade route is the other one. Both come with bigger price tags than a developing prospect would have carried.

The head-coach search keeps dragging too. Reports have linked Edmonton to Craig Berube and Bruce Cassidy.

Vegas is still blocking Cassidy from formal interviews until their season ends.

Honestly, this kind of overseas prospect news rarely makes a huge story on its own.

The timing makes this one feel different. The Oilers are stuck waiting on multiple decisions at once, and now another one moved out two more years.

Stan Bowman's overall summer plan involves multiple moving parts. The bench voice. The crease. The prospect pipeline. The cap structure around Evan Bouchard and the core. Losing optionality at any layer matters.

Connor McDavid hasn't said anything publicly about any of these moves. He doesn't have to. The clock is loud enough on its own.

Berezkin's choice is his own to make. The Oilers just have to live with it. The next development call belongs to a different prospect who has yet to be named.