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Edmonton is quietly setting up a move that will leave fans stunned

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Jonathan Ouimet
May 11, 2026  (0:58)
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Apr 28, 2026; Edmonton, Alberta, CAN; The Edmonton Oilers celebrate a 4-1 win over the Anaheim Ducks in game five of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Rogers Place.:
Photo credit: Perry Nelson-Imagn Images

The latest piece of Edmonton Oilers cap chatter dropped Sunday, and it puts Mavrik Bourque squarely in the middle of a Dallas Stars summer headache.

The analyst's pitch is simple. If Jason Robertson signs for 12 million and Jamie Benn comes back at 1 million, Dallas runs out of room to keep Bourque.

That's where Stan Bowman supposedly slides in with an offer sheet. The 24-year-old right-handed center is exactly the kind of fit Edmonton has been hunting for years.

Bourque finished the regular season at 20 goals and 41 points in 82 games for Glen Gulutzan. The cap hit was 950 thousand. The deployment was bottom-six minutes.

That production at that price won't survive a real negotiation. RFAs with 20-goal seasons get paid.

The bigger picture for Jim Nill is the math. Robertson just lit up the regular season with 96 points, and the Stars built their playoff identity around him.

Knoblauch's 3C problem keeps Bowman busy this summer

The Oilers ran out of legitimate center depth in the regular season. Edmonton finished 41-30-11 for 93 points, a steep drop from their recent ceiling.

That's the part that makes this rumor sing. Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl carry the offense, and the third line keeps turning over.

Bourque would slot in immediately. Right shot, signable age, two-way upside, and a contract structure that fits the Oilers' urgency window.

The catch is whatever Dallas would need to clear in return. The analyst's argument hinges on a 3.25 million blue line contract that Edmonton would have to move to match.

That's not the kind of money you dump in a week.

Offer sheets remain rare in this league for a reason. The compensation math, the front office relationships, the fear of starting a war that comes back next summer.

But the Oilers have been close to this conversation before. Bowman has been on both sides of cap squeezes in his career, and he knows the calendar.

The Stars haven't blinked publicly. Robertson hasn't signed. Until both happen, this is theater.

The offer sheet window opens this summer. So does the part where Edmonton's window starts asking harder questions.