- Oil Change (TV Series)
-
Oil Change Format Documentary
RealityStarring (Season 1) Edmonton Oilers 2010-2011
(Season 2) Edmonton Oilers 2011-2012Country of origin Canada No. of seasons 2 Production Running time 43 minutes Broadcast Original channel TSN Picture format 480i (SDTV),
720p (HDTV)Original run June 2010 – present External links Website Oil Change is a Canadian documentary television series, following the Edmonton Oilers. Produced by Alberta's Aquila Productions, Oil Change features exclusive access inside the Edmonton Oilers organization through the 2010-11 NHL season (season 1) and 2011-12 NHL season (season 2). Don Metz is the executive producer of the series and Gord Redel is the producer.
The first season aired on TSN. Season 2 premiered locally on CKEM-DT October 21, 2011. The national premiere was on Sportsnet October 23, 2011. The six-part series will air approximately once a month, until the end of the NHL regular season.[1]
Contents
Season 1
Episodes
The Team
Air Date - Tuesday, January 4
As the NHL season chugs towards Christmas, the Oilers continue to provide fans with an emotional roller-coaster ride. This is a team that wins unlikely games and loses others that should be an automatic two points. Through it all, head coach Renney and his assistants remain patient and stick to their game plan, sometimes reinforcing their lessons with a soft touch and other times with toughness. The players take a memorable road trip to Anaheim and Phoenix with their fathers, sharing a round of golf in the desert between games. Back in Edmonton and preparing for a tilt against the Sharks, they get a surprise dressing room visit and pep talk from Prime Minister Harper, in town for the 2010 Grey Cup. Heading east, they sweep the Sen, Habs and Leafs, only to come back to Edmonton and play inconsistent hockey during a lengthy, pre-Christmas home stand. With the New Year looming, injured captain Shawn Horcoff assesses the progress of Oil Change on the eve of another Battle of Alberta against the Flames.The Grind
Air Date - Sunday, February 13
January finds the Oilers’ playoff chances in growing jeopardy. Some fans advocate throwing in the towel right now, arguing that a freefall in the standings will secure them another valuable first or second overall draft pick in June. But the coaches and players are proud professionals and refuse to give up. As the team grinds their way through a long prairie winter, the true character of the squad reveals itself. The rookies gain valuable seasoning; the vets show their leadership qualities. Some players fulfill expectations, while others slip back on the depth chart as the team moves forward. Meanwhile, Oiler brass and scouts are busy looking at the progress of their AHL farm hands down in Oklahoma City, at possible draft picks in June, and at previous draft picks back playing in the juniors. This will be a very intense time for the new Oilers. If the team does well over the next month and a half and exceeds expectations, it could be back in playoff contention when the February 28th trade deadline approaches.Deadline
Air Date - Monday, March 21
By the time this episode airs, a little over two weeks after the NHL trade deadline, the Oilers will have declared their intentions for the rest of the season. They will either stand pat with the team they have, bolstered as needed by call-ups from the AHL, or they will have moved players , and possibly very important players, either in preparation for a serious push for the playoffs in the spring or to make roster space for the next stage of their ongoing rebuild.The Push
Air Date - Wednesday, April 20
One of two scenarios will play itself out in the final episode of Oil Change. The team will either be in the hunt, with everyone’s focus firmly fixed on the prize – making the playoffs – or the Oilers will know they are once again destined to finish the season on the outside looking in. In that case, management and coaches will be looking to make some tough calls over the final weeks on the futures of their players. For non-playoff teams, this is the time when players, and particularly those on the bubble, must take advantage of the remaining games on the schedule to make their case for a new contract. In both scenarios, the future remains to be written.Season 2
Entering his third season as the man in charge, Oilers General Manager Steve Tambellini knows there are increased expectations on the team this year, but he has no reservations about letting television audiences – and hockey fans – experience the highs and lows of a rebuilding franchise. With revealing insights from the players, coaches, management team and training staff woven throughout the series, each compelling episode chronicles the team’s quest for success on – and off – the ice.
International Airings
NHL Network re-airs the series in the United States.
References
- ^ "Citytv and Sportsnet Team Up for the Second Season of Oil Change: Overdrive". Sportsnet. October 4, 2011. http://www.sportsnet.ca/pressroom/2011/10/04/oil_change/. Retrieved November 7, 2011.
External links
NHL on TSN Related programs NHL on CTV • That's Hockey • That's Hockey 2Nite • That's Hockey 2Day • ESPN National Hockey Night • Oil ChangeRelated articles Commentators NHL Entry Draft • All-Star Game • Stanley Cup Eastern Conference Finals • Stanley Cup Western Conference FinalsKey figures Dennis Beyak • Chris Cuthbert • Darren Dreger • Darren Dutchyshen • James Duthie • Ray Ferraro • Gary Green • Randy Gregg • Glenn Healy • Jennifer Hedger • Dave Hodge • Jim Hughson • Mike Johnson • Keith Jones • Craig MacTavish • Pierre McGuire • Bob McKenzie • Howie Meeker • Gord Miller • Roger Neilson • Michael Peca • Dave Randorf • Vic Rauter • Paul Romanuk • Dan Shulman • Jim Van Horne • Ryan Walter • John WellsAll-Star Game National Hockey League on national television Contract history Ice hockey broadcasting • Sports television broadcast contracts (Canada) • Sports television broadcast contracts (United States) • History of the NHL on United States televisionAmerican network broadcasters Canadian network broadcasters American pay TV carriers Canadian pay TV carriers NHL owned and operated entities NHL Network (1975–79) • NHL Network (American) • NHL Network (Canadian) • NHL Center Ice (American) • NHL Centre Ice (Canadian)News television series Specialty programming Making the Cut: Last Man Standing • Oil Change • Top 10 • 24/7Broadcasters by event All-Star Game • Entry Draft • Stanley Cup playoffs (Original Six era) • Stanley Cup Eastern Conference Finals • Stanley Cup Western Conference Finals • Stanley Cup Finals • Winter ClassicLocal broadcasters Individual networksIndividual seriesFlyers Post Game Live • Hockey Night Live! • Pittsburgh Penguins ConfidentialRatings Hockey Baseball Canadian Football CFL on TSNCurling Other See also: Canada sports broadcasting lists Edmonton Oilers Oilers - Franchise
- NHL expansion draft
- History
- Players: NHL
- WHA
- Coaches
- General managers
- Seasons
- Records
- Draft picks
- NHL–WHA merger
Owners - Bill Hunter
- Nelson Skalbania
- Peter Pocklington
- Edmonton Investors Group
- Rexall Sports
Culture - Miracle on Manchester
- Heritage Classic
- Battle of Alberta
- Blue Mile
- Paul Lorieau
- Joey Moss
- Rod Phillips
- Oil Change
Arenas Affiliates The Edmonton portal Corporate directors Ronald Besse · Charles Birchall · H. Garfield Emerson · Peter Godsoe · Thomas Hull · Philip Lind · Nadir Mohamed · David Peterson · Ted Rogers · Edward Rogers III · Loretta Rogers · Melinda Rogers · William Schleyer · John A. Tory · J. Christopher Wansbrough · Colin WatsonTelecommunications Atria Networks · Chatr · Fido · Rogers Cable · Rogers Hi-Speed Internet · Rogers Telecom · Rogers WirelessMagazines Canadian Business · Chatelaine (English) · Châtelaine (French) · Flare · glow · L'actualité · LOU LOU · Maclean's · Marketing · MoneySense · Profit · Today's ParentCable television/specialty channels Sportsnet channelsSportsnet East · Sportsnet Ontario · Sportsnet West · Sportsnet Pacific · Sportsnet One · Sportsnet WorldOther propertiesThe Biography Channel · CityNews Channel · CPAC · FX Canada · G4 Canada · OLN · Rogers TV1 · TV Rogers (French)1 · TVtropolis · The Shopping Channel · Viewers ChoiceConventional television Citytv stationsOmni stationsRadio stations CFGP · CFLT · CFRV · CFSR · CFUN · CHAS · CHBN · CHST · CHDI · CHEZ · CHFI · CHFM · CHMN · CHNI · CHTT · CHUR · CHYM · CIKR · CIKZ · CIOC · CISQ · CISS · CISW · CITI · CJAQ · CJET · CJMX · CJNI · CJOK · CJQM · CJQQ · CJRQ · CJRX · CKBY · CKER · CKFX · CKGB · CKIS · CKIZ · CKLG · CKMH · CKNI · CKQC · CKSR · CKXC · CKY · CKYXOther assets and facilities Dome Productions · Jack FM (most Canadian stations) · Rogers Arena · Rogers Building · Rogers Centre · 545 Lake Shore Boulevard West · 33 Dundas Street East · Rogers Park · Rogers Media · Rogers Plus · Spring Fishing Show · Toronto Blue Jays · VuguruNotes 1Community channels owned by Rogers CableSome assets listed above are only partially owned by Rogers Communications. Refer to each individual article for detailed information. Sports television in Canada Broadcast networks Full sports divisionsOccasional or U.S. simulcasts onlyMainstream specialty EnglishFrenchNiche specialty (English) ArchivalSport specificATN Cricket Plus • ATN NEO Cricket • EuroWorld Sport • Fight Network • Fox Sports World Canada • GolTV • HPItv • NBA TV Canada • NHL Network • Sportsnet WorldLifestyle and recreationRegional (English) Occasional broadcasts Defunct Foreign Big Ten Network (USA) • CBS Sports Network (USA) • Golf Channel (USA) • NFL Network (USA) • Speed (USA)†These three stations are officially independent stations, but they jointly purchase Canadian broadcast rights to sports events and some other programming. Categories:- Rogers Communications
- Sports television networks in Canada
- Canadian documentary television series
- Canadian sports television series
- National Hockey League on television
- The Sports Network shows
- Edmonton Oilers
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.