Connor McDavid opens up on serious injury scare, admits quitting crossed his mind during darkest career moment | NHL News
There have always been pivotal moments for Connor McDavid, but this one went beyond goals and records. The captain of the Edmonton Oilers opened up about how a terrible knee injury once nearly killed him, putting not only his body to the test but also his passion for the game. The revelation occurred during a quiet moment of candor that revealed the most reliable superstar in hockey, rather than following a defeat or heartbreaking playoff loss.The admission matters because it reframes McDavid’s journey. At the peak of his powers, with expectations always towering, he faced a point where continuing felt uncertain. That struggle, rooted in pain and isolation, now stands in sharp contrast to the dominance he displays nightly.
Connor McDavid reveals the injury battle that nearly derailed his remarkable NHL journey
Connor McDavid traced his lowest point to April 6, 2019, when a violent crash into the net against the Calgary Flames left his knee wrecked. The diagnosis was grim. Multiple ligament tears, meniscus damage, and a cracked fibula followed. For a player built on speed and balance, the injury threatened his identity.ID@undefined Caption not available.ID@undefined Caption not available.“I’d say a moment that I wanted to quit is injuring my knee,” McDavid said. “It was a serious injury, significant, long, long rehab, and a lot of dark days in there.”With the Oilers already out of the playoff picture, McDavid made a defining choice. He skipped surgery and embraced a relentless rehabilitation plan. The summer was consumed by repetition, patience, and quiet resolve. That period reshaped how he viewed both hockey and himself.“It’s just a moment in time, and things heal, and things get better. You’ve got to enjoy the whole thing. It’s part of the whole journey,” he said.Today, at 29, the numbers tell only part of the story. McDavid leads the NHL with 94 points, including 34 goals and 60 assists in 55 games during the 2025–26 season. Edmonton sits second in the Pacific Division, driven by elite offense and the league’s most dangerous power play. Even after a 7-3 loss to Minnesota snapped a winning streak, McDavid added another assist, pushing his total to 95 points and 1,177 for his career.Through it all, his mindset remains clear. “I tell myself that I’m paid to be the difference,” McDavid said. “That’s just what I try to focus on and find a way to make a difference out there.”