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Calls Mount For Oilers To Ship Out Former 1st-Round Pick

Trade chatter is once again circling the Edmonton Oilers, and this time, it’s centered on a former first-rounder who hasn’t quite found his footing since arriving just a few weeks ago. The Oilers are sitting around the .500 mark, still juggling line combinations, and the question now is whether this player truly fits or if his stint in Edmonton might already be nearing an end.

Could Jack Roslovic’s Time with the Oilers End Before It Really Begins?

Head coach Kris Knoblauch hinted that tweaks could be coming, saying the team plans to stick with the lines they finished their last game with. That includes a notable shift with Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl playing apart to spread out the offense.

knoblauch says the oilers will be going with the lines they finished the game with moving forward, meaning mcdavid and draisaitl on their own lines.

howard – mcdavid – mangiapane
savoie – draisaitl – podkolzin
henrique – nugent-hopkins – roslovic
tomasek – philp – frederic

— zach (@zjlaing) October 24, 2025

The Oilers have been no strangers to experimentation early in the season. Head coach Kris Knoblauch has shuffled combinations almost nightly in search of balance. Wingers have rotated through the top six at a steady pace. While the constant movement is meant to spark chemistry, it’s also created an unsettled rhythm regarding a former first round pick.

Ok yeah so maybe stop doing this? pic.twitter.com/fO9qFDsHLY

— Travis Dakin (@TravisDakin) October 24, 2025

The reworked forward groups featured Howard-McDavid-Mangiapane, Savoie-Draisaitl-Podkolzin, and a third unit of Henrique-Nugent-Hopkins-Roslovic.

That last combination set off a wave of online speculation. One fan wrote, “Starting to think Roslovic may be moved.”

Starting to think roslovic may be moved

— Josh Sawatzky (@SawatzkyJosh) October 24, 2025

While another joked, “Nov 1st can’t come soon enough 🤣 get Hyman back and trade Roslovic for something”

Nov 1st can’t come soon enough 🤣 get Hyman back and trade Roslovic for something

— Kyle Baker (@BakedOnOil) October 24, 2025

One fan shared, “I’m ready for Roslovic to do something.”

I’m ready for Roslovic to do something.

— Lyall C (@Chalmsey) October 24, 2025

Others were far less patient: “Roslovic is really the definition of girl go give us nothing,” one user posted, echoing a growing frustration over his quiet start.

roslovic is really the definition of girl go give us nothing

— 👽 (@oilygifs) October 24, 2025

Through six games, Roslovic has just one assist, a small return for someone trying to earn a regular top-nine role.

Consistency, however, remains the sticking point. In Carolina last season, Roslovic was scratched for nearly half the playoff run despite ranking among the Hurricanes’ top even-strength producers during the regular season. His shot generation dipped when the games tightened up, something that has followed him to each stop along the way.

Contract Clock Ticking in Edmonton

There’s more than performance at play here. Roslovic’s one-year, $1.5 million contract carries a rare clause that activates on November 1, allowing him to request a trade to one of four teams if he’s dissatisfied with his role.

Conveniently, that’s also when Zach Hyman, Mattias Janmark, and Jake Walman are all expected to return, leaving Edmonton over the roster limit.

Still, not everyone sees his situation as doomed. On his podcast, Jeff Marek suggested Edmonton might actually be the right place for Roslovic to reset.

“That’s why I love the signing, because when you play on a team with Connor McDavid, you don’t…They set a work rate for everybody, that if you don’t do it, the team takes care of it. And that temp and that pace is all set by Connor McDavid,” Marek said, hinting that the accountability around the Oilers could push Roslovic back to form.

The clock is ticking. The Oilers are trying to find the right mix, and Roslovic’s future may depend on whether he can turn flashes of chemistry into something more consistent before the front office decides it’s time to look elsewhere.

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