Contents
Las Vegas Sun
Introduction
Golden Knights Season Defined by Bond They Formed With Las Vegas
By Jesse Granger June 7, 2018
This isnt how this was supposed to end.
The Golden Knights storybook season turned its final page Thursday night at T-Mobile Arena, with the players standing in shock at their blue line, staring down the rink as the Washington Capitals dogpiled in celebration after winning the first Stanley Cup in their 44-year franchise history.
Its the worst feeling ever, Golden Knights defenseman Deryk Engelland said. You never want to lose any game, but at this point its awful.
But what will define this season is what happened next.
Each player tapped their stick on the ice and raised it high above their heads as a final salute to the fans. Thousands of steel gray and gold-clad faithful rose to their feet and cheered on their Knights the first major professional team many of them have ever had to call their own.
It was far and away the single greatest inaugural season by an expansion team in sports history, but its tough to decide which was more surprising the Golden Knights results on the ice or the way a city in the middle of the desert rallied around them.
In all its history, Las Vegas has been defined by a 4.2-mile stretch of road and all the gambling, partying and various trappings. Nearly 500 commercial planes fly into McCarran International Airport every day, and they almost always end their flight with a joke from the captain along the lines of Welcome to lost wages, or another corny joke about the Strip.
But a recent flight from Winnipeg during the Western Conference finals series ended with an announcement saying, Welcome to Las Vegas, home of our Golden Knights, and elicited a cabin full of cheers.
The key word is our.
Its not to discredit UNLV basketball and the amazing runs it made, but as a college there are factions of Las Vegans that dont identify with the Runnin Rebels. For the first time ever, native Las Vegans had something beyond the tourist attractions to represent them. Something to be proud of.
The Golden Knights may have better teams than this one. It was, after all, their first season. But this group of players and the bond they formed with the city will never be matched.
It started on Oct. 1, when a gunman opened fire on a crowd of concertgoers at the Route 91 Harvest music festival in what would be the deadliest mass shooting by an individual in modern U.S. history.
Only hours after the shooting, players who hadnt lived in Las Vegas for more than several weeks immediately asked what they could do. They visited first responders at the Metro Police station, stood in line with volunteers at food banks and met with victims.
(Im most proud of) the group in here, Engelland said. Coming together as quick as they could and getting into the community after a horrible tragedy, and going on a run. We came up a little short.
The players treated Las Vegas as their home, and the fans immediately latched on.
It was seriously an amazing experience, Jonathan Marchessault said. Ive never felt part of a family like this. The community was unbelievable and the fans were amazing. Ive never wanted to go to war more with a bunch of guys and its been fun.
During preseason training camp, the red bleachers at City National Arena were usually empty. That changed quickly, as fans started packing the facility so full that the team had to place restrictions on practice attendance for safety concerns.
Many doubted the Golden Knights as a hockey team, and they proved them wrong to the tune of 51 regular-season wins, a Pacific Division crown and a Western Conference championship.
Accompanied by Vegas Golden Knights mascot Chance, a knight poses for the camera during a parade preceding Game 3 of the Western Conference Finals. (Las Vegas Sun)
No one gave us a chance at all from the start, David Perron said. I dont think anyone believed it when we were doing interviews over the summer, getting picked by Vegas. Its going to be a fun experience but not much else, and it was one heck of a ride.
Las Vegas as a hockey market was similarly doubted, but the fans sold out T-Mobile Arena for every single home game, set new records for ticket prices in the playoffs, and wrapped lines around the building, waiting hours for a chance to see the team run a 20-minute morning skate.
The players brought the Stanley Cup Final to Las Vegas with their play, and the city showed it belonged. T-Mobile Arena arguably provided the best home-ice advantage in the NHL, especially in the playoffs. The 18,000-plus fans screaming at the top of their lungs and waving battle towels above their heads made Las Vegas a nightmare for opposing teams all season long, but eventually the Capitals solved the Golden Knights riddle.
Its difficult to come up short, a glassy-eyed Alex Tuch said, fighting back his emotions in the locker room after the game. I had the time of my life, but it wouldnt be the same without this group of guys.
Las Vegas Sun
The heartbreak Tuch and his teammates felt Thursday night as they watched Alex Ovechkin and the rest of the Washington Capitals lift the Stanley Cup is probably similar to the thousands of fans around the valley whose emotions swung on every pass, save and goal.
Thank you for all the support throughout the season, goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury said, as his message to the fans. From Day One theyve been incredible. Im sorry we couldnt bring it home.
Fleury has no need to be sorry. The Golden Knights didnt deliver a championship, but they gave Las Vegans something better.
For many heartbroken Golden Knights fans, this is the first time theyve ever had a home team to care this much for. The Golden Knights offered a distraction after the worst tragedy in Las Vegas history, they provided regular fixes of euphoria during their run to the Stanley Cup Final, and in the end, they provided the heartache that inevitably accompanies having a team to care about.
At the end of the day, we had a taste of it, Marchessault said. You dont want to finish on a note like that necessarily, and one thing I know is well be back.
Dawn in the Desert
Vegas Golden Knights Fans Make Presence Felt at NHL Awards
By Ray Brewer June 21, 2017
Los Angeles Kings fans were asked to stand and cheer. Instead, an emphatic chorus of boos exploded inside the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.
Next, the public address announcer asked how many San Jose Sharks fans were in attendance for tonights NHL Awards. There was absolute silence.
How about the Vegas Golden Knights? she then asked. The fans in the building, many sporting black and gold Golden Knights gear, went wild.