Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

PROSPEROUS ADDITIONS

Knights come up golden as expansion success

- By Mark Anderson

THE OFFENSIVE SLUMP

that doomed the Golden Knights’ Stanley Cup playoff hopes left their fans with the feeling that this was a season unfulfille­d.

It’s a similar feeling to last year’s crushing seven-game loss to the San Jose Sharks in the first round. But the fact that fans had such high hopes is remarkable for a franchise that just completed its third season.

The playoff disappoint­ments should not take away from what has been accomplish­ed, namely that the Knights have put together arguably the strongest first three seasons in NHL history, appearing in the playoffs all three seasons, including in the Stanley Cup Final two years ago.

That Cinderella run re

mains as difficult to believe now as it was then.

Arguments can be made regarding where Las Vegas’ NHL team should be ranked on the list of top expansion franchises. But the major point is the Knights are deep in that conversati­on, something that wouldn’t have been expected when the 2017-18 season began.

The quick success they’ve had was not necessaril­y by design.

“We’re not an organizati­on that’s solely focused on winning next year,” Knights general manager Kelly McCrimmon said. “We’re trying to build a really strong organizati­on that’s got good depth throughout and … uses the strength of our pro scouting staff and our amateur scouting staff, which are really important parts of our organizati­on. That’s our objective. That’s how we build our team for today. That’s how we build our team for tomorrow.”

So how does their start stack up compared to other expansion teams?

NHL

The closest somewhat recent example are the St. Louis Blues, who were created in 1967 and made the Stanley Cup Final in each of their first three seasons. That sounds astounding, but is deceiving.

When the NHL doubled its size by adding six teams, the league created an entire second division. The winner was guaranteed a spot in the championsh­ip series.

The Blues, who won that division, were overmatche­d by the time they reached the final series. They were swept each year — twice by the Montreal Canadiens and once by the Boston Bruins.

Had the divisions been mixed between old and new teams, the Blues’ path to the Final would have been much more difficult.

The New York Rangers are a better comparison to the Knights. They were added in 1926 and appeared in the playoffs their first nine seasons and 15 of their first 16, winning the Cup in 1928, 1933 and 1940.

But …

There were only 10 teams in the league in 1926, and three, including the Rangers, were expansion franchises.

“They got good quick and stayed good,” hockey historian Eric Zweig said of the Rangers. “They’re the only

one that really is like the Golden Knights, but the circumstan­ces are so different.”

NFL

The NFL establishe­d more expansion-friendly rules when it invited the Carolina Panthers and Jacksonvil­le Jaguars to begin play in 1995. Both teams made their conference championsh­ip games in their second year, putting the NFL close to having an all-expansion Super Bowl.

Though such a championsh­ip game wouldn’t have necessaril­y been an ideal scenario for the NFL, the league also didn’t want new teams going 2-14 every season.

“You’re not just trying to build a successful on-the-ice or on-the-field or on-thecourt team,” Pro Football Hall of Fame archivist Jon Kendle said. “You’re trying to build a market. So the worst thing you can have is, ‘We’re going to announce this new market, and we’re going to give you a really

terrible team to root for.’”

Both teams had quality front offices and coaching staffs. Hall of Fame executive Bill Polian was the Panthers’ general manager, and Tom Coughlin — who later coached the New York Giants to two Super Bowl titles — was the Jaguars’coach and de facto GM.

Carolina’s early success, however, was short-lived; the Panthers didn’t post another winning record for seven years, when they reached the Super Bowl.

But the Jaguars built on their surprising second season by also making the playoffs each of the next three years. That included going 14-2 in 1999 and appearing in the AFC championsh­ip game.

So while most Knights fans might not prefer to identify with Florida’s third-most popular NFL team, the Jaguars are the closest comparison from that league.

MLB

When the Arizona Dia

mondbacks began their first Major League Baseball season in 1998, management had no intention of trying to win immediatel­y. The philosophy from owner Jerry Colangelo on down was to build slowly with the idea of establishi­ng a more firm base for long-term success.

Management saw how fans flocked to see the expansion Colorado Rockies at Mile High Stadium and then at Coors Field because just having a baseball team made up for the lack of victories. The Diamondbac­ks delivered the expected high number of losses in their inaugural season in 1998, going 65-97, but the patience executives expected from the fan base didn’t follow.

“Maybe it’s because we had spring training in Arizona for so long that people were used to seeing major league players, but our season ticket sales fell off precipitou­sly after that first year,” said Joe Garagiola Jr., then the Diamondbac­ks’ general manager and now a senior adviser. “The point came where Jerry said, ‘Look, it’s clear that we are not going to have this multiyear honeymoon period that the Rockies have enjoyed up in Colorado.’”

So management created a new plan, which meant orchestrat­ing trades and being aggressive in free agency, most notably signing ace and future Hall of Fame pitcher Randy Johnson. It worked.

The Diamondbac­ks won 100 games in 1999 and the World Series in 2001.

“The team we put on the field those years turned out to be a product of Plan B,” Garagiola said. “But as it worked out, that was OK.”

NBA

The Milwaukee Bucks also found quick success after going 27-55 in their first season in 1968-69. They won a coin flip with the Phoenix Suns for the top pick in that year’s draft, positionin­g them to take UCLA’s Lew Alcindor, who later changed his name to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.

Milwaukee made the playoffs immediatel­y and was crowned NBA champion in 1971. The Bucks also made the playoffs the following three seasons, including the NBA Finals in 1974.

Another NBA expansion team that made a quick impact was the Chicago Bulls, who joined the league in 1966 and made the playoffs their first two seasons and eight of their first nine years.

 ?? Benjamin Hager Las Vegas Review-Journal @benjaminhp­hoto ?? In their first season, the Golden Knights were Western Conference champions and made the Stanley Cup Final.
Benjamin Hager Las Vegas Review-Journal @benjaminhp­hoto In their first season, the Golden Knights were Western Conference champions and made the Stanley Cup Final.
 ?? The Associated Press ?? Matt York
Diamondbac­k Luis Gonzalez is embraced by coach Eddie Rodriguez after delivering the winning hit in Game 7 of the 2001 World Series. The franchise’s first season was 1998.
The Associated Press Matt York Diamondbac­k Luis Gonzalez is embraced by coach Eddie Rodriguez after delivering the winning hit in Game 7 of the 2001 World Series. The franchise’s first season was 1998.
 ?? The Associated Press ?? After drafting Lew Alcindor — to be known as Kareem Abdul Jabbar — first overall in 1969, the Milwaukee Bucks were NBA champions two seasons later.
The Associated Press After drafting Lew Alcindor — to be known as Kareem Abdul Jabbar — first overall in 1969, the Milwaukee Bucks were NBA champions two seasons later.
 ?? Chuck Burton The Associated Press ?? Carolina tight end Wesley Walls is elated after a playoff win over Dallas in 1997, when the Panthers reached the conference championsh­ip game in just their second season in the NFL.
Chuck Burton The Associated Press Carolina tight end Wesley Walls is elated after a playoff win over Dallas in 1997, when the Panthers reached the conference championsh­ip game in just their second season in the NFL.

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