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What Elliotte Friedman just revealed could have massive implications for the Oilers

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Vincent Carbonneau
June 6, 2026  (1:25 PM)
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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

Connor McDavid's next bench boss may not be Bruce Cassidy, and Edmonton's head-coach search just took a sharper turn.

A post from The Mug NHL relayed Elliotte Friedman's latest read: Edmonton may no longer be waiting on Cassidy. That doesn't settle the hire, but it changes the pace of the story.

The Oilers are no longer sitting in a quiet holding pattern. Once that kind of signal gets out, every day without a move starts to say something.

Stan Bowman is listed as Edmonton's general manager, and the team's current coaching slot is still open in the league management file.

That vacancy matters because this isn't a rebuild job. The Oilers finished 41-30-11 and still landed 93 points.

They also scored 282 goals, so the top-end talent is still there. The issue is that the next coach has to organize the rest of the bench fast.

Edmonton also gave up 269 goals, which is where this search gets serious. The roster can still win, but the structure behind the puck has to tighten.

"Elliotte Friedman is hinting that the Edmonton Oilers may no longer be waiting for Bruce Cassidy.

«I thought that they were going to wait for Cassidy, I'm starting to get some signal that maybe they won't.» "

A major Elliotte Friedman revelation may have just changed the Bruce Cassidy conversation in Edmonton

The market isn't standing still. Boston hired Marco Sturm on 2025-06-05, Pittsburgh hired Dan Muse on 2025-06-04, and Seattle hired Lane Lambert on 2025-05-29.

That's the pressure point here. If Bowman thinks his first choice won't be available on his timeline, waiting becomes a risk, not a plan.

Cassidy's name carried weight because Edmonton needs a coach with instant credibility in a room built around McDavid and Leon Draisaitl. A long search only adds noise to that room.

The Oilers also finished with a 13 goal differential, which tells you how thin the margin felt over 82 games. This was not a team built to drift into June without clarity behind the bench.

There's another layer to it. Edmonton went 22-14-5 at home, so this wasn't a club that collapsed everywhere. It was good enough to stay in the mix and flawed enough to need a sharp coaching call.

If Friedman's read is right, the takeaway is simple: the Oilers may be done waiting for the cleanest name and ready to make the fastest decision that fits their window.

That would be the strongest message yet from Bowman's front office. Edmonton doesn't need a drawn-out search now. It needs a coach, a direction, and a date for puck drop on the next phase.