During the 2021-22 season, Edmonton Oilers farmhand Vincent Desharnais started to gain some traction as a real NHL prospect. The giant defenceman (6-foot-7, 226 pounds) was the proud owner of a wingspan that opposition forwards could not overcome on their way to the net. The Bakersfield Condors benefited from Desharnais’ unique talent, and he posted a minor-league defensive season for the ages.

At five-on-five, Desharnais delivered an on-ice goal share of 66 percent (68-35 goals) on a team that managed to score only 52 percent of the goals when he was off the ice. That impressive season, along with coach Jay Woodcroft’s belief in him, allowed Desharnais to progress to an NHL career. He did not have a great draft pedigree, signed an AHL-only deal before he got an NHL contract (in March 2022, after most of his breakout season was in the books).

Desharnais was 25 in 2021-22 and was already mentoring some of the younger defenders (notably Dmitri Samorukov) on the roster.

The 2024-25 Condors did not have a Desharnais available on defence, but rookie Matt Savoie had a similar impact on even-strength outscoring for the team. He was 20 when he did it.

In many ways, it was a lost season in California for Oilers prospects. Injuries, wayward trades and recalls left the team at times threadbare in important spots. Savoie thrived despite the chaos and became the runaway top prospect in the system. He did so despite injuries to top-end AHL centres like Lane Pederson and an NHL recall for pivot Noah Philp. Pederson as his centre for a full season might have forced a recall by Christmas, so in a way, Bakersfield fans were fortunate to see Savoie for most of the season.

Savoie doesn’t represent a typical AHL prospect. He was chosen top 10 in the 2022 draft. Desharnais wasn’t a typical impact AHL player either, with little draft pedigree, turning pro much later than the average player, and climbing from an AHL-only contract to the NHL in a matter of months. No matter how the organization finds him, the Condors need another one. Now.

Chaulk on the hot seat?

Colin Chaulk took over the head coaching job with the Condors midway through the 2021-22 season. He coached several players who are now in the NHL, including Desharnais, Dylan Holloway, Philip Broberg and Mike Kesselring.

During the last four years, the team has also seen disappointing results from names like Xavier Bourgault, Raphael Lavoie and others. Most of the prospects whom Chaulk has coached in recent seasons were not high picks, but Bourgault was a first-round selection in 2021, and Lavoie was a second-round pick two years earlier.

This is an important year for Chaulk. Prospects the organization believes in must find traction.

Bowman to the rescue?

None of this is Oilers general manager Stan Bowman’s fault, but it is his problem. His offseason moves that will directly impact the Condors include adding a veteran AHL starting goaltender (Matt Tomkins, who finished No. 20 in save percentage among starters a year ago) to the roster. Tomkins will get plenty of work this winter, with youngsters like Samuel Jonsson, Connor Ungar and Nathan Day attempting to steal playing time behind him.

What Bowman and Chaulk need to avoid is the same kind of performance dive in goal witnessed after Dec. 1 a year ago. At the beginning of the season, Condors starter Olivier Rodrigue posted a .925 save percentage. After Dec. 1, the young goaltender’s percentage fell to .886 for the rest of the year. Rodrigue is without a contract at this time, and the final months of last season are most certainly the culprit.

The step into an elevator shaft wasn’t limited to stopping shots. The team slumped badly on the power play, but did deliver the strongest even-strength scoring season over the last three years. However, all of the scoring progress at even strength was given back at the other end.

Stat2022-232023-242024-25

Games

72

72

72

GF

212

223

224

GA

212

202

223

EV GF

160

165

187

EV GA

152

145

160

PP GF

45

51

36

PP GA

51

52

51

All numbers via the AHL.com

The numbers here show just how difficult the journey was for Bakersfield when Savoie’s line was off the ice. When the rookie was deployed at even strength, Bakersfield outscored opponents 55-30 in the metric (65 percent). When he was off the ice, the Condors won the even-strength share by an eyelash, 132-130 (50 percent).

In his way, Savoie had a similar impact to Desharnais, and did it as an AHL rookie at 20.

Condors projected 2025-26 lineup

There is no obvious Desharnais or Savoie in this group. Finding a play driver will be key for Chaulk and his coaching staff this fall.

PlayerRole

Matt Tomkins

Starting G, could play 40 games

Connor Ungar

He is 23, most pro experience among backups

Samuel Jonsson

21, coming off an impact season in Sweden

Nathan Day

20, OHL grad, ECHL likely

PlayerRole

Riley Stillman

Veteran LH D, big mins and may mentor Akey

Cam Dineen

Veteran who could play anywhere on depth chart

Atro Leppanen

Pure offence, chaos defence

Damien Carfagna

College man, plus speed, two-way acumen

Mats Lindgren

Recent AHL signing

Alex Regula

Top RH D, if healthy could make the Oilers

Beau Akey

Top rookie, he’ll get chances at feature minutes

Josh Brown

Rugged edge, tough as nails blue

PlayerRole

Noah Philp

Complete player at AHL level, could play in NHL

James Hamblin

Burner, lacks NHL scoring but quality in AHL

Jayden Grubbe

Checker, enforcer

Josh Samanski

Huge C from Germany

Rem Pitlick

AHL signing could play a lot

Roby Jarventie

Range of skills, impressive if healthy

Viljami Marjala

Skill W, expert passer and assist demon

Brady Stonehouse

Aggressive winger looks like a tweener

Connor Clattenburg

Rugged winger with some skill

Rhett Pitlck

Another AHL signing who could eat minutes

Ethan Keppen

AHL signing could play in ECHL

Max Jones

Physical winger, solid AHL scorer

Matvey Petrov

Skill W can’t score consistently

Quinn Hutson

College grad, has scoring potential

James Stefan

Junior scorer has yet to launch in pro

Matt Copponi

AHL signing, he has real skill. Sleeper

(Photo of Matt Savoie: Leila Devlin / Getty Images)