Here’s the good news: the Seattle Kraken scored four goals. Here’s the bad news: [gestures wildly] everything else about this godawful game.
There was a fleeting moment late in the first period when the Kraken looked like they had woken up and were going to overcome a 3-0 deficit. Eeli Tolvanen scored as a power play expired (officially, it goes as an even-strength goal, so the PP remains scoreless since… gosh, I don’t even know), and Freddy Gaudreau stripped Leon Draisaitl and scored his first as a Kraken.
FREDDY BE GOOD! 🚨
Joey robs Matt Savoie at one end after a hocus focus play creates a breakaway.
Freddy Gaudreau strips Draisaitl and scores his first as a #SeaKraken at the other end.
Seattle JUST MISSED tying it in the closing seconds of the 1st.
3-2 Oil through 20. pic.twitter.com/QUebFuGsli
— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) December 5, 2025
But from there, it was alllllllll Edmonton. The Oilers began pouring it on and didn’t stop until they had nine goals on the board, their fans were doing the wave, and it felt like the merciful final horn would never come. Connor McDavid had a hat trick, Draisaitl had four points, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins and Evan Bouchard each had three points, and Matt Savoie had two goals. Yuck.
Here’s how coach Lane Lambert summed it up: “Their power play scores four, we gave up a shorthanded goal when the score was 3-2, and we had an opportunity to get back into the game because we’re not aware of somebody behind us, and it ends up in a breakaway. [We made] mistakes, and I didn’t think our goaltending was great tonight. So, if you add it all up, it equals nine.”
Also, when Piper Shaw asked a seething Lambert what he says to the team after a game like this, Lambert somewhat aggressively replied, “Nothing.”
Here are Three Takeaways from an embarrassing 9-4 Kraken loss to the Oilers.
Takeaway #1: Bad night to be a Kraken goalie
Let me preface this by saying the Kraken defense—facing an extremely dangerous Edmonton offense—was the worst it’s been all season. Rushes, backdoor passes, breakaways, you name it… Seattle allowed all of it.
With that disclaimer said, I’ve always been a proponent of switching goalies early in a game when you recognize the starter is not at his sharpest. It’s not about saying it’s the goalie’s fault; it’s about giving your team a chance to reset, get a fresh-minded goalie in there before your No. 1 guy gets too rattled, and perhaps spark something for your group, especially if the backup can come in and stop the bleeding. You can see when your guy doesn’t have it from the jump. It happens, and I’ve always believed the best thing for the goalie’s psyche in that scenario is to get him out of there while the game is still within reach.
Joey Daccord and the Kraken actually got a lucky break early in this game, when Andrew Mangiapane (and the entire arena) thought he had scored, but replay showed he had hit both posts and the puck had somehow stayed out. Soon after that, McDavid got his first of three goals with a snipe at 7:17, and Vasily Podkolzin squeezed one through the wickets just 17 seconds later.
Uh oh. 2-0 Oilers. Podkolzin leaks one through Daccord, who has not been sharp so far. pic.twitter.com/x7hTmVYwoI
— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) December 5, 2025
That’s when I would have made the change. Yes, it’s only 2-0, but Daccord had been beaten three times in a row at that point.
Instead, Daccord stayed in until the Oilers had hung five goals on him, capped off by McDavid’s second of the game, a stinker at 6:14 of the second. Daccord allowed five goals on 14 shots for a .643 save percentage.
Of course, Philipp Grubauer didn’t fare much better, relenting four goals on 18 shots for a .778 save percentage, but by the time he came in, it felt like Seattle had no chance of getting back in.
This was a bad night for everybody. Let’s hope both goalies can recover quickly from this one, because this is the kind of game that can stick with netminders for a while.
Takeaway #2: The penalty kill… My God, the penalty kill
What is up with this PK? I know the Edmonton Oilers have an incredible power play, but every time the Kraken took a penalty in this game, they could have just said, “Ok, take the goal, and let’s move on.”
In fact, on the first power-play goal against in the game, it took SEVEN SECONDS for the Oilers to win the face-off, work it from high to low and across to Leon Draisaitl, and he banged it home for his 16th goal of the season.
They made it look… VERY… easy.
Lots of talk about #SeaKraken special teams the last couple days…
The Edmonton power play converts in 7 seconds.
3-0 pic.twitter.com/MFCYiF9D0a
— Sound Of Hockey (@sound_hockey) December 5, 2025
“We can’t give up four power-play goals,” Lambert said. “I don’t care if it’s McDavid, whatever, but it’s not good enough.”
What’s distressing is that special teams was a huge point of focus during Seattle’s three days of practice this week. You wouldn’t have known it watching this game. I do think it’s time for a change of formation. We’ve seen them try more complicated PK systems in the past, get lit up in this area, and then shift to a simpler box. It’s past time to try something different.
Takeaway #3: Is the early-season magic fading
The Kraken got off to a nice start to their season, planting themselves firmly into a playoff spot and making us believe that their staunch defensive approach could carry them all the way to the postseason. That magic seems to have faded, as the Oilers have exposed their flaws in these two consecutive matchups in which Edmonton won 14-3 on aggregate. The Kraken have gone 0-3-1 in their last four, getting shut out twice in that stretch, and dropping out of the playoff bubble.
Of course, there are highs and lows in the course of any season, and this is certainly a low point of the campaign to date. But it also feels like an inflection point. The Kraken can find a way to stop the bleeding here, rack up a couple wins against good teams at home, and get things going back in the right direction.
Or they can keep playing like this, pile up a bunch of losses, and plummet down the airtight standings.
