"I thought we were very well-prepared for their power play," Oilers coach Todd McLellan said. "They have some tendencies that are very similar goal after goal. They're very good at it; I think they're one of the best power plays in the League, in my opinion. Having been around some of their players at the [2015 IIHF] World Championship, you begin to see tendencies and you know what they prefer to do, so you take away outlets and options. I thought our group did a tremendous job."
The Oilers blocked a season-high 28 shots. The best might have come with 9:33 left in the second period. Flyers center Sean Couturier had an open net after Talbot slid out of position to make a save against Sam Gagner, but Korpikoski dove toward the net and got a piece of the shot with his stick. It gave Talbot enough time to jump across the crease and stop Couturier's shot from trickling across the line.
"When they're willing to put their bodies in those shooting lanes and block the shots with not much padding, it says a lot about them, a lot about their willingness to win," said Talbot, who has two shutouts this season and 10 in his NHL career. "When we're doing the right things like that, there's not too many games we're not going to come out on top."
Adam Pardy and Andrej Sekera led Edmonton with five blocks. Pardy (6-foot-4, 227 pounds) is one of three recent additions who has brought size and grit to the Oilers.