Connor McDavid finally breaks silence on Mike Babcock hiring amid brutal backlash
The Edmonton Oilers are coming off a painful first-round playoff exit, a regular season that saw them slip to just 93 points, and the growing pressure of Connor McDavid’s contract ticking toward its 2028 expiration. The franchise needed a jolt. But the most revealing part of this week’s coaching shakeup wasn’t the hire itself. It was what McDavid said about it.
In an exclusive interview with Sportsnet’s Mark Spector, McDavid laid out in unusually blunt terms why he and the team’s leadership group actively sought out Mike Babcock, a coach whose reputation for being demanding is rivaled only by the controversy surrounding his career.
“We brought Babs in to be hard on me. And Leon. The top guys, that’s who we want to point the finger at,” McDavid said. “As the leaders of the team, we are always taking the temperature of the room and assessing things. Of course we’re always watching.”
McDavid acknowledged that Babcock’s intensity might feel different in the middle of a grinding November than it does in the optimism of June. But he was emphatic that the Oilers’ core asked for this.
“The definition of insanity is trying the same thing over and over again, and expecting a different result,” McDavid said. “Babs is different. He gives us a different personality, a different approach to our group, and an approach that we’ve probably never had.”

When asked what it would feel like to be benched for a shift or two during a rough stretch, something no coach has done to him in Edmonton, McDavid didn’t flinch. “It’s time to have that happen in Edmonton. It’s time.”
The hire reportedly traces back to a meeting between Babcock and the Oilers’ three veteran leaders, McDavid, Leon Draisaitl, and Zach Hyman, after which the players told GM Stan Bowman they wanted to be pushed. McDavid spoke of spreading responsibility more evenly across the roster, reducing the minutes burden on himself and Draisaitl so the rest of the lineup can grow.
“Everybody in that room is going to have to sacrifice themselves,” he said. “As some of the best players in the world, we’ve always taken it upon ourselves to lead the charge on the ice. That doesn’t leave much for anybody else.”
The backlash surrounding Babcock’s hiring has been significant. His 78-day tenure with the Columbus Blue Jackets in 2023 ended amid serious concerns raised by players and the NHLPA, which called his conduct “very concerning.” He hasn’t won a playoff series since 2013 and hasn’t coached in the NHL in nearly seven years. At his introductory press conference, according to reports, Babcock offered little in the way of accountability for past incidents, projecting the same unyielding self-assurance that has long defined him.
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McDavid addressed the controversy directly but kept his focus forward. “All I can speak to is him being our head coach today,” he said, adding that the expectation is for Babcock to be demanding of the stars while lifting up everyone else.