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— and why it’s not about the players, the refs, or the curse. It’s about the money.

Unpopular opinion, dead-ahead. Keep those gloves on people, and at least read it all before you react. Let’s set emotions aside and look at the cold, business-driven structure of the NHL.

The Oilers are a massively loyal fanbase — diehards, generational, consistent. Year after year, no matter the heartbreak, the disappointment, or the so-close-you-could-taste-it finish, they come back. Jerseys sell. Seats fill. Subscriptions renew.

Now ask yourself this:
What does the NHL gain by letting Edmonton win?

From a marketing and expansion standpoint? Not much.
But giving a Cup run — or better yet, a win — to a smaller-market Canadian team with a weaker or disengaged fanbase? That creates ROI. It builds new superfans, new consumers, and new buyers.

Because here’s the ugly truth:

🏆 The NHL isn’t a sport. It’s a content machine.

And content is driven by revenue, reach, and storyline manipulation.

You don’t have to be a conspiracy theorist to see it.
You just have to stop watching like a fan and start watching like an analyst.

The big playoff decisions, the “miraculous” comebacks, the bad ref calls, the goalie pulled at the worst possible time — they’re not accidents. They’re programming decisions, made in boardrooms, not locker rooms. The players are paid entertainers, not just athletes — chosen for both their skill and their marketability.

Throwing games? It’s not a scandal — it’s part of the machine.
Keeping you just disappointed enough to keep coming back next year?
That’s not bad luck — that’s brilliant monetization strategy.

And before the diehards jump in to defend “the integrity of the game” — just pause. Really pause.

Look at the structure.
Follow the incentives.
Then ask yourself this:

If everything was fair and organic, wouldn’t Edmonton have won by now?
With that much talent? That much money? That much drive?

Of course they would have.
But the Oilers don’t serve the narrative. They serve the economy.

So go ahead — wear the jersey, love the team, cheer the plays. But just know: you’re not watching a sport. You’re participating in a product cycle.

And the house always wins.

And just in case anyone forgot about this incident…