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Pierre LeBrun drops major Connor McDavid update that worries Oilers fans

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Vincent Carbonneau
May 8, 2026  (9:20)
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Apr 22, 2026; Edmonton, Alberta, CAN; Anaheim Ducks forward Cutter Gauthier (61) tries to knock the puck away from Edmonton Oilers forward Connor McDavid (97) during the first period in game two of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Rogers Place.
Photo credit: Mandatory Credit: Perry Nelson-Imagn Images

Connor McDavid and Kris Knoblauch are staring at a summer that suddenly feels like a countdown in Edmonton.

Pierre LeBrun's read cuts right to the pressure point. He believes McDavid probably gives the Oilers at least 1 more year, then makes the real call next summer.

That lands hard because it changes the frame. This is not about McDavid walking out tomorrow. It is about Edmonton getting one more shot to prove the group is still worth his time.

And that puts every decision under the glass. The bench, the blue line, the crease, and the front office all become part of the same file once McDavid's future starts getting read this way.

McDavid did his part again. He played all 82 games and put up 48 goals and 138 points, which tells you this season did not slip because the captain stopped driving the team.

Edmonton still finished 41-30-11, and for a team built around McDavid and Leon Draisaitl, that record leaves room for real frustration. Draisaitl added 97 points in 65 games, so the top-end talent was still there.

LeBrun's other point matters just as much. He does not see McDavid as the type to leave for nothing if the Oilers reach that stage, which puts even more weight on how Edmonton handles the next 12 months.

Pierre LeBrun: Re Connor McDavid: If you ask me, I think he'll probably give the Oilers at least another year, and then next summer's the big decision; I don't think McDavid would ever wanna...just walk out as a free agent and not have the Oilers get any value - Oilers Now (5/1)

Pierre LeBrun shares concerning update on Connor McDavid's future

Knoblauch is right in the middle of that pressure now. He has been the Oilers' head coach since November 12, 2023, and he is coming off a season that ended with more questions than answers.

Stan Bowman is in the same lane. He has been Edmonton's general manager since July 24, 2024, so this roster is now fully tied to his choices, not somebody else's leftovers.

That is why the McDavid angle feels bigger than standard summer chatter. Once the best player in the world is being discussed in terms of one more year, every move starts to carry consequence.

There are still enough pieces here to sell a rebound. Evan Bouchard posted 95 points, and Edmonton finished second in the Pacific despite a season that never fully settled into a clean rhythm.

But the Oilers do not need a decent pitch. They need a better team. McDavid has already shown he can drag a roster a long way. The question now is whether Edmonton can build one that makes staying the easy choice.

That is the real takeaway from LeBrun's line. Connor McDavid may give the Oilers another year. In Edmonton, that should not sound comforting. It should sound like a deadline.