Waterloo Region Record

Vegas Golden Knights merchandis­e is flying off the shelves

Fleury jersey leads the way as ‘Golden Misfits’ make an unexpected run for the Stanley Cup

- GREGORY STRONG

The Vegas Golden Knights are proving to be as popular at the merchandis­e table as they are in Sin City.

The National Hockey League expansion team has been a hot ticket all season at T-Mobile Arena and that has continued during the Golden Knights’ deep playoff run. With goalie Marc-Andre Fleury’s jersey leading the way in sales, Golden Knights gear is also flying off the shelves.

Specific numbers weren’t immediatel­y available but Nirva Milord, the NHL’s senior director of corporate communicat­ions, said that the team’s overall North American sales have been very strong.

“The Vegas Golden Knights are in the top five in merch sales all season,” she said Tuesday in an email. “Marc-Andre Fleury is tops among players in playoffs merch sales.”

Fleury, a three-time Stanley Cup champion in Pittsburgh, was not protected by the Penguins in last year’s expansion draft.

He has helped anchor the Golden Knights and gave the firstyear squad some immediate star power.

The Vegas success story reads like a Hollywood script.

A random mix of journeymen, up-and-comers and castoffs quickly meshed as a team, delivered results on the ice, and provided one of the top storylines of the season.

Few hockey observers predicted that Vegas would roll through the campaign and topple the Los Angeles Kings and San Jose Sharks in the first two rounds of the playoffs.

The Golden Knights will host the Jets in Game 3 of the Western Conference final on Wednesday after splitting the first two games of the best-of-seven series in Winnipeg.

Along the way, cash registers have been ringing with sales of hats, hoodies, sweatshirt­s, T-shirts and jerseys adorned with the knight helmet symbol and the team’s steel grey, black, gold and red colours.

Marvin Ryder, a marketing professor at McMaster University, feels there are several reasons for the strong merchandis­e sales, including the lack of competitio­n from other top sport leagues in Las Vegas and the fact hockey fans and youngsters will flock to anything new when it comes to gear.

But where the franchise really delivered, Ryder said, was with the creation of a modern, powerful logo coupled with an attractive colour scheme.

“Whatever graphic identity team they hired, they knocked it right out of the park,” Ryder said from Hamilton.

It helps to have a winning hockey team, too.

“Ultimately it’s how the fans embrace it,” Ryder said.

“In this case, I’m going to say it’s more about (being) lucky. You had all the pieces but they got them right the very first day,” Ryder added.

“That’s the unusual part of the story. Normally it takes longer for the teams to find that combinatio­n of performanc­e and the right-looking logo that people are proud to wear,” he said.

“They got it right from Day 1,” Ryder said.

Last month, the NHL reported that Fleury was fourth in jersey sales behind Toronto’s Auston Matthews, Pittsburgh’s Sidney Crosby and Edmonton’s Connor McDavid.

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