Connor McDavid has made it clear he wants more than personal accolades — he wants to win the Stanley Cup in Edmonton. With training camp behind them and the regular season just days away, the Oilers’ captain remains unsigned, and
NHL insiders believe his decision is less about money and more about sending a message.
Connor McDavid’s holdout is about pressure, not paychecks
On OilersNow, Elliotte Friedman explained that Connor McDavid’s contract negotiations are on pause as a way of raising the stakes for the organization. “What I’m hearing on McDavid is they’re waiting. I know there’s been rumours about deferred money, I don’t think that’s happening. I think the number will be lower than people think. I believe it could be lower than 16, it wouldn’t surprise me. I don’t think it’s gonna be long-term,” Friedman said.
Elliotte Friedman talk Kaprizov contract, McDavid extension, & more with Bob Stauffer on Oilers Now
More importantly, Friedman added: “To me, what this is all about is that McDavid wants to win so bad. The two losses the last two years have bothered him so much, I think this is his way of making sure the Oilers know how much winning matters to him.”
By holding off, McDavid is applying subtle pressure on management to build a roster capable of winning now, not later.
A decade in Edmonton, but still no Stanley Cup
McDavid has spent 10 seasons with the Oilers, lifting the franchise back to relevance and making back-to-back Stanley Cup Final appearances.
But consecutive losses, combined with a roster facing age-related decline, have created a sense of urgency. Edmonton’s front office now faces a defining test: show their superstar that winning is the top priority, or risk unsettling the very core of the team.
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“Just devastated”: Connor McDavid claps back at narrative of devastated Oilers after Stanley Cup defeatsFor McDavid, this season feels like “Cup or bust.” By refusing to commit long-term just yet, he’s making sure everyone in the organization feels the same pressure he does — that the ultimate prize must come before everything else.