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Elliotte Friedman just revealed a wild twist in Edmonton's coaching search

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Vincent Carbonneau
May 19, 2026  (12:04)
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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

Bruce Cassidy is looming over Kris Knoblauch's old job in Edmonton, and that tells you where this Oilers search still wants to go.

That was the feel from Elliotte Friedman's latest read on the coaching hunt. Even while tossing out John Tortorella as a type of coach who might fit what Edmonton wants, Friedman still said the whole thing «just screams Bruce Cassidy.»

That matters because Edmonton is no longer at the rumor stage of wondering whether change might come. The Oilers officially fired Knoblauch and assistant Mark Stuart on May 14, so the bench is open and the pressure is already on.

And once that move was made, this stopped being about style in the abstract. It became about which voice the organization believes can push Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl's group where it still has not gone.

Cassidy fits that line of thinking cleanly. He has the résumé, the edge, and the kind of direct bench presence that keeps getting tied to what Edmonton is looking for next.

The problem is that wanting Cassidy and getting Cassidy are still 2 different things. Vegas fired him on March 29 and replaced him with Tortorella, but Cassidy remains the name hanging over Edmonton's process.

Elliotte Friedman: Re Oilers coaching search: I was thinking, if Vegas doesn't keep John Tortorella, he might be a guy that fills kinda what they want, but to me it just screams Bruce Cassidy - 32 Thoughts (5/15)

The Oilers coaching situation just took a wild turn after Friedman's latest report

That is the strongest read on Friedman's comment. Tortorella may fit the profile on paper if Vegas changed course again, but Cassidy still sounds like the coach Edmonton actually sees when it looks at this opening.

That says a lot about how the Oilers view the job. They are not chasing a soft reset. They are chasing a coach who can grab a high-end roster and tighten it up fast.

Stan Bowman is the executive holding that call, and this search is shaping up as one of the first major identity moves of his Edmonton run. The Oilers list him as general manager and executive vice president of hockey operations.

The risk is pretty obvious now. If the Oilers lock too hard onto Cassidy and the path stays blocked, the search starts to drag and the rest of the board gets thinner.

That is why Friedman even floating Tortorella matters. It shows there are other names that can fit the mold. It also shows Cassidy is still the standard everyone gets measured against.

Edmonton can talk all it wants about exploring the field. Right now, the field still looks like it bends back toward 1 coach.

And that is Bruce Cassidy.