EDMONTON, Alberta — Connor McDavid was surrounded by greatness.
His hair still wet from practice, he sat in Studio 99, the restaurant in the Edmonton Oilers' home arena named for Wayne Gretzky and full of memorabilia commemorating the legendary career of the ''Great One." To his right was a jersey Gretzky wore during his first NHL season and on the wall to his left quotes from No. 99, who captained Edmonton to the Stanley Cup four times.
If McDavid keeps this up, the Oilers are going to have to make room for a Studio 97.
The heir apparent to Gretzky, Mario Lemieux and Sidney Crosby as the best hockey player in the world, McDavid has carried his team from the brink of elimination in the Stanley Cup Final against the Florida Panthers to a Game 6 on home ice Friday night. The only player in league history to record back-to-back four-point games in the final, the Oilers captain gets his next chance to add to his legacy and push the series to a deciding Game 7 back across the continent.
''You spend your life working to get into a position like this,'' McDavid said Thursday. ''You think that when you're here it's going to be some magic feeling, magic, I don't know. You don't know what to expect. To be honest, it's all been pretty normal. This has always been part of the plan for our group, to be in a position like this, playing big games at home in big moments. Just another one tomorrow night.''
Just another one in front of another sellout crowd of 18,000-plus, with many more in the city of nearly a million people packing downtown in hopes of witnessing something that has not been done in nearly eight decades. Detroit in 1945 was the last team to trail 3-0 in the final and get to a Game 7, and Toronto three years before that was the only one to come all the way back.
The only way Edmonton is able to dream of that possibility now is because of McDavid, who at 42 points this postseason is just five shy of Gretzky's record set in 1985. He has emerged as the front-runner to win the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP, even if the Oilers fall short and the Panthers win the Cup for the first time in franchise history.
''He's a reckless skilled player, which a very unique quality," Hall of Famer Ken Hitchcock, who coached McDavid in 2018-19, told The Associated Press by phone. ''He's not afraid to put his body in dangerous areas to score, and it's really hard to defend against. He's going to the net and taking a hit to make a play. There's no fear in his game — none.''