The Oilers have promoted defenseman Phil Kemp from AHL Bakersfield, per a team release issued late last night. Edmonton sat with two open roster spots before the recall and had enough cap space to execute the transaction after assigning top center prospect Dylan Holloway to the minors last week, so no corresponding transaction was necessary.
Edmonton selected Kemp, 24, in the seventh round of the 2017 draft. After three seasons at Yale, he made his pro debut on loan to Väsby IK in the Swedish second-tier HockeyAllsvenskan in the 2020-21 campaign while AHL and NHL action was delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. At the end of Väsby’s season, the Oilers brought Kemp back to North America to make his AHL debut for Bakersfield, where he’s remained ever since. He’s far from being a major point-producing threat in the pros, with nine goals and 27 assists in 164 games with Bakersfield. Still, he’s steadily taken on more responsibility over his four seasons there and has proven himself an adept defensive player at that level. Playing in all 26 Condors games this season, Kemp has five assists, 13 PIMs and a +5 rating.
He’s best defined as a low-ceiling, low-certainty prospect, as expected for someone selected with ten picks remaining in his draft. Still, it’s a great story to see Kemp potentially get a shot at playing his first NHL game. Whether the 6-foot-3, 212-pound defender will draw in tonight against the Blackhawks or sit as a healthy scratch is unclear.
Technically, this is not Kemp’s first NHL recall, although it is his first during the regular season. After the Condors’ brief Calder Cup playoff appearance ended in a 2-0 first-round sweep at the hands of the Abbotsford Canucks last year, the Oilers recalled Kemp to serve as a Black Ace during their second-round loss to the Golden Knights. He became waiver-eligible for the first time this year and passed through unclaimed on his way to Bakersfield at the end of the 2023 preseason.
Kemp can remain on the Oilers’ roster for up to 10 games played or 30 days, whichever comes sooner before he requires waivers to return to Bakersfield. He is in the first season of a two-year, two-way extension signed last May that carries a $775K cap hit, making him an RFA with arbitration rights in the summer of 2025.