THE LAST WORD
There is a different buzz in a visiting NHL arena when McDavid comes to your town. Generational players like the Oilers superstar have that effect.
It is multiplied whenever he comes to Toronto to play the Maple Leafs at Scotiabank Arena like he will this Saturday (7 p.m. ET; CBC, SNO, SNP, NHLN).
The 27-year-old is from Newmarket, Ontario, about 35 miles north of Toronto and has never been shy about his love of southern Ontario. He spends his offseasons there. He trains there in the summer under the watchful guidance of former NHL forward-turned super-trainer Gary Roberts. He owns a lakeside vacation home in the fashionable Muskoka, a couple of hours north of Toronto, and got married in the area this past summer.
During a 1-on-1 sit-down he had with yours truly at Erie Insurance Arena on Feb. 8, 2015, McDavid, an 18-year-old forward with the Erie Otters at the time, opened up about what it would be like to play for the Maple Leafs.
“That would be an absolute dream come true,” he said. “It’s pretty crazy to even think about.”
“I’m from Toronto,” he continued. You have to be a Leafs fan, so of course I was. Of course. My dad was a Leafs fan. Every Saturday night watching Hockey Night in Canada would be my favorite time.
“I still remember going to my first ever Leafs game. It was a Rangers-Leafs game. The Leafs won 4-1. I don’t remember (which players) were playing or who was scoring. I just remember that when my dad and I would drive down, we always used to joke who could guess the score. And for whatever reason, I picked Leafs to win 4-1. And that’s what happened.
“I’ll remember that forever.”
Fast forward nine years. McDavid, who was selected No. 1 by Edmonton at the 2015 NHL Draft, has constructed an ongoing legacy there and came just one goal short, along with his teammates, in the Stanley Cup Final against the Florida Panthers last spring. He has consistently stated his appreciation of Oilers fans and has become embedded in the fabric of the Edmonton community.
During a sit-down at the NHL/NHLPA North American Players Media Tour in September in Las Vegas, the Oilers captain cited exactly that as being significant in eventually deciding where his career will take him long term. He’ll be eligible to sign a new contract with Edmonton on July 1, 2025, before he enters the final season of the eight-year, $100 million contract ($12.5 million average annual value) he signed July 5, 2017.
“Everything’s a factor,” he said. “Obviously, my loyalty to Edmonton, the fans, the organization, the loyalty to the players, all while understanding my will to win, my desire to win. All while balancing my family, my need to see them and spend time with them and make sure the people I care about are good.
“I think there are so many factors that go into a decision like that.”
Keep this in mind too: Oilers forward Leon Draisaitl, one of his closest friends, signed an eight-year, $112 million contract ($14 million AAV) with Edmonton on Sept. 3. The 29-year-old forward is in the final season of an eight-year, $68 million contract ($8.5 million AAV) he signed with them Aug. 16, 2017, and could have become a free agent next summer.
He’s never come out and said it, but you have to think the two pals have discussed what it would be like to play together in Edmonton well into their 30s. It would be naive not to.
Which brings us to Saturday.
Whenever McDavid makes a so-called homecoming, which he considers any game at Scotiabank Arena to be, there is a paranoia on social media within certain members of the Oilers’ fanbase that his vocal affection for Toronto means he’ll leave Edmonton for the Maple Leafs when his contract expires.