Katy Perry was scheduled to be on tour at the Dallas Stars’ arena on Wednesday night. Instead, it will be Corey Perry and the Edmonton Oilers.

Dallas will welcome Edmonton to the American Airlines Center for the first two games of the NHL Western Conference final. Game 1 is scheduled for 8 p.m. EDT on Wednesday, May 21, and Game 2 is set for 8 p.m. on Friday, May 23.

You can purchase tickets for the first two games at these links: StubHub | SeatGeek | Viagogo | Vivid Seats

Games 5 and 7, both if necessary, will also be played in Dallas, and you can buy tickets for those games at the above links.

Games 3, 4, and 6 (if necessary) will be played at Edmonton’s Rogers Place. You can purchase tickets for those games at these links:

StubHub | SeatGeek | Viagogo | Vivid Seats

Eager to see these teams live? Tickets are available at the following sites, with the lowest prices as of 7:35 p.m. Sunday.

Game 1

8 p.m. Wednesday, May 21, American Airlines Center, Dallas

StubHub starting at $234

SeatGeek starting at $226

Viagogo starting at $222

Vivid Seats starting at $226

Game 2

8 p.m. Friday, May 23, American Airlines Center, Dallas

StubHub starting at $287

SeatGeek starting at $299

Viagogo starting at $273

Vivid Seats starting at $287

Some additional insights on the series, from reporter Stephen Whyno of The Associated Press:

DALLAS (AP) — This is the third chance that goalie Jake Oettinger and the Dallas Stars have been waiting for the past year.

The Stars are back in the Western Conference final for the third season in a row and facing a familiar opponent in Edmonton. They want to still be playing after that this time.

“I think we’ve learned a lot the last two years. That’s all we wanted after we lost last year, is this opportunity,” Oettinger said. “The fact that we get to play Edmonton again makes it even better. … It’s up to us as a group to take the next step.”

Dallas advanced again with a 2-1 overtime win in Game 6 of their second-round series against Winnipeg, and host the Oilers in Game 1 on Wednesday night.

The Stars lost in six games in each of the past two West finals to fall short of playing for the Stanley Cup — they won that for the only time in 1999, and were runner-ups in 2000 and 2020. Before losing in the West last year to superstar Connor McDavid and the Oilers, it was Vegas in 2023 when the Golden Knights were on the way to their only Cup title.

“I think we’ve still got another gear,” said Miro Heiskanen, the standout defenseman who has been back for only three games since missing 3 ½ months with a left knee injury.

Stars players had the first of consecutive days without practice Sunday. It is a much-needed break after wrapping up the second round series against Presidents’ Trophy-winning Winnipeg on Saturday night, following a seven-game series against a Colorado team that many considered a Stanley Cup favorite.

To get this far last year, the Stars had to beat the previous two Cup champions.

“Yeah, it’s hard to believe we’re halfway, right?,” third-year Stars coach Pete DeBoer said with a laugh. “It sure feels like we’ve been through a lot, but that’s the beauty of the NHL playoffs. We’ll take a couple days. I think we’ve got a lot left. I’ve said it here, I think we’ve got something special going on. We’re gonna have to prove it again. We’ve been to this spot the last two years and haven’t taken the next step, so that’s the challenge.”

Defenseman Thomas Harley scored on a power play 1:33 into overtime of Game 6 on Saturday night to eliminate the Jets, and keep Dallas from having to go back to Canada for Game 7.

The Oilers will go a week between games after ending their second-round series with a 1-0 overtime win in Game 5 over Vegas last Wednesday night. McDavid and Leon Draisaitl were the NHL’s only 100-point teammates in the regular season, and have kept scoring in the playoffs — McDavid with 17 points (three goals, 14 assists) and Draisaitl with 16 (five goals, 11 assists).

“Boy, I don’t know if you ever ask to play Draisaitl and McDavid,” DeBoer said. “But we knew going in, what a gauntlet of teams. … The way this has rolled out sure hasn’t been easy.”

Stars forward Mikko Rantanen is still the NHL playoffs leader with 19 points (nine goals), even with no goals and only one assist in the last three games against Winnipeg.

Golden Knights Oilers Hockey

Edmonton Oilers’ Adam Henrique (19), Jake Walman (96) and Zach Hyman (18) celebrate after a goal against the Vegas Golden Knights during the first period of Game 4 of a second-round NHL hockey playoff series in Edmonton, Alberta, Monday, May 12, 2025. (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press via AP)AP

Oettinger has a .919 save percentage this postseason, including a spectacular lunging save late in regulation that kept Game 6 against the Jets tied. The latest of the 26-year-old goalie’s six playoff series wins came against two-time Vezina Trophy winner Connor Hellebuyck, the odds-on favorite to win that top goalie award again this season and who Oettinger backed up for USA Hockey during this year’s 4 Nations Face-Off.

“Our goaltending’s been exceptional. He just went head-to-head with maybe the MVP of the league, and what everyone is saying is the best goaltender in the world. And he probably was this year, in Hellebuyck,” DeBoer said. “And he went toe-to-toe with him, nose-to-nose with him the entire series. Great character, gut-check by Jake. And he’s delivering at a real key time for us.”

AP NHL playoffs: https://apnews.com/hub/stanley-cup and https://apnews.com/hub/nhl