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The latest Evan Bouchard development is sending shockwaves through Edmonton

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Vincent Carbonneau
May 31, 2026  (7:02 PM)
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Apr 24, 2026; Anaheim, California, USA; Edmonton Oilers defenseman Evan Bouchard (2) skates with the puck during the third period against the Anaheim Ducks in game three of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Honda Center.
Photo credit: Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images

Evan Bouchard and Edmonton's next head coach just got another reminder of how dominant Bouchard had become for Canada.

This was not a quiet tournament from him.

It was the kind of run that changes games even when the scoresheet does not scream every night.

One stat says almost everything.

Before the hit from Ryan Lindgren took him out, Bouchard had played 8 games, carried the most ice time in the tournament to that point, and had not been on for a single minus.

That is absurd.

Jonathan Willis put the plus-minus part even sharper. He had Bouchard at plus-14 and minus-0 for Canada before the hit sent him out of the event.

That is not normal defenseman production.

That is a player controlling the game from the back end, driving play, cleaning up exits, and making life easier for everybody around him.

It also explains why people in Edmonton should read this as more than a Team Canada note.

"Evan Bouchard was +14/-0 for Canada before Lindgren's headshot knocked him out of the tournament. Pretty decent case that it cost them a medal.
"

"One of the craziest stats in World Championships history potentially: Evan Bouchard played in 8 games, the most TOI in the tournament up to that point, and didn't record a minus at any point

He's a cheat code for any team and is elite on both ends #LetsGoOilers "

Massive development just changed everything for Evan Bouchard in Edmonton

The easy read on Bouchard has always started with offense.

Big shot.

Power play touch.

Puck-moving ability.

But this tournament underlined something bigger. He was not only producing. He was staying clean territorially while logging the heaviest minutes on the roster.

That is elite stuff.

And when a defenseman is playing that much, against that level of competition, without slipping into the negative side even once, it tells you he was dictating far more than surviving.

That is why the injury hit so hard.

There is a real case Canada lost more than a top-pair defenseman the second Bouchard went out. It lost the player who had been holding the whole blue line together shift after shift.

That is why the medal talk is fair.

Maybe Canada still falls short anyway.

Maybe not.

But once a player carrying that kind of workload disappears, the rest of the lineup feels it immediately.

For the Oilers, there is a strange split in all this.

The good news is that Bouchard looked every bit like the type of defenseman Edmonton already knows it has. The bad news is that the tournament became another reminder that he is far more important than people outside Alberta sometimes admit.

A player with that ice time, that territorial impact, and that kind of plus number is not replaceable.

Not for Canada.

Not for Edmonton.

And that is why these stats matter so much.

They do not only show Bouchard played well.

They show he was becoming one of the tournament's most valuable players before it got ripped away.