General manager Stan Bowman’s decision to fire head coach Kris Knoblauch brought a dramatic era in Edmonton to an abrupt end.
Knoblauch made NHL history by becoming the first coach in more than 55 years to lead a team to the Stanley Cup Final in each of his first two seasons behind the bench. But after the Oilers regressed badly during the 2025-26 regular season and crashed out in six games against the Anaheim Ducks in the first round, the organization decided major changes were necessary as pressure mounted around their shrinking championship window.
Now, an Oilers insider is pushing back hard against one of the biggest rumors tied to Knoblauch’s hiring and Connor McDavid’s involvement in that turn of events.
Connor McDavid Rumors Around Knoblauch Shut Down
The rumor quickly gained traction because of the history between Connor McDavid and Kris Knoblauch. Since Knoblauch coached McDavid during their days with the Erie Otters, many assumed the Oilers captain played a major role in both bringing him to Edmonton and eventually pushing him out after the team’s playoff collapse against Anaheim.
But according to Oilers insider Bob Stauffer, that belief is simply false. “There is a perception, incorrect by many, that Conor McDavid had significant input in the decision to bring Kris Knoblauch into Edmonton. That is as factually inaccurate as there is,” Stauffer explained.
Stauffer added that McDavid and Leon Draisaitl only learned about the coaching change after Jeff Jackson informed them that Jay Woodcroft had been fired and Knoblauch was taking over. He also revealed that many players inside the locker room were unhappy with the timing of Woodcroft’s firing at the time.
The comments strongly push back against the growing belief that McDavid operates as the driving force behind major organizational decisions in Edmonton.
Ultimately, Knoblauch’s firing came down to the Oilers’ disappointing performance this season. Edmonton spent much of the year stuck as “average,” in the middle of the pack, and never developed the defensive structure needed to properly support its superstar core.
Now, with the search underway for the sixth head coach of the Connor McDavid era, pressure is rapidly building on Stan Bowman.
McDavid has only two years remaining on his current contract, and Bowman openly admitted the franchise understands the pressure attached to that timeline. “We’re trying to find a way to win and we’ve been doing that. So the same page as Connor, we want to win too, so all the moves we make are geared towards trying to win the cup,” Bowman said.
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That reality means Edmonton’s next head coach will face enormous expectations immediately, with no room for a slow transition. The Oilers are looking for someone capable of installing a true championship-level defensive system from the opening day of training camp.
