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Oilers' Kane may have reached a breaking point in the Stanley Cup final

Kris Knoblauch engaged Evander Kane in a conversation before the Edmonton Oilers started practice. The chat lasted roughly five minutes, and Kane left the ice just after hearing from his coach.

Kane has been playing through a sports hernia that has hampered his production, specifically one point in eight games. With the Oilers trailing the Florida Panthers 2-0 in the Stanley Cup final, the time may have come to scratch the 32-year-old winger the first time this postseason for Game 3 on Thursday night in Edmonton.

"Evander's very beneficial to have in our lineup with physicality and hits," Knoblauch said Wednesday. "And as a coaching staff, we're making those decisions and it's difficult to measure it."

Hockey history is full of tales of NHL players gutting through painful injuries in pursuit of the Stanley Cup. In 1964, Bobby Baun scored for Toronto in overtime in Game 6 of the final after breaking his ankle in the third period. More recently, Patrice Bergeron played Game 6 of the 2013 final with a punctured lung, longtime Boston teammate Zdeno Chara finished the 2019 final with a broken jaw and Florida's Matthew Tkachuk scored a tying goal last year with a broken sternum, then played another game before being sidelined.

Kane's situation, not being close to 100 per cent healthy this late in a long run, is reminiscent of Tkachuk's, which Panthers coach Paul Maurice explained was one that eventually he took over decision-making for.

Tkachuk broke his sternum in Game 3 of the final against Vegas, and Tkachuk felt the heart-and-soul winger "earned the right" to play in Game 4.

"He wasn't playing the next one," Maurice said. "To his credit, he had three really good chances to score when we're down a goal. He's net front and

Read more on cbc.ca