Las Vegas Review-Journal

ROSTER REVIEW

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The two sides agreed to the parameters of an eightyear, $76 million contract before the homegrown Ottawa Senators star played a game for his new team. They just figured they were a match.

Stone wanted to compete for Stanley Cups. And the Knights were ecstatic to add a two-way terror who could set the tone for the organizati­on on and off the ice.

About a year later, neither side is doubting the decision.

Performanc­e

Stone’s game is like a great impression­ist painting, well-crafted novel or carefully constructe­d film. It can be enjoyed from a distance. But it’s so much more rewarding upon closer examinatio­n.

The nuances of Stone’s game don’t pop from 10,000 feet. He doesn’t have blazing speed. He isn’t the world’s finest stickhandl­er. He won’t blow away opponents with his shot.

What he does is affect the action on the ice. Anytime a puck gets remotely near him, it becomes his. His 78 takeaways are tied for second-most in the NHL, despite him missing six games. His 122 takeaways last season — the fourthmost in a season in league history — helped him finish second in the Selke Trophy voting.

Stone’s propensity to grab, poke, deflect or otherwise affect pucks make him a nightmare to play against. He shuts down opposing offenses before they get going. And he provides the Knights with plenty of scoring chances in transition.

“He dramatical­ly affects the game,” St. Louis Blues center Ryan O’reilly said at last year’s NHL Awards.

“At both ends of the ice, he makes an impact. … He’s an amazing player.”

Stone has showed that again this season by scoring 63 points in 65 games. He has accomplish­ed that because he still plays like he has something to prove.

The fierce Stone has never forgotten that he was a sixthround pick in 2010, so he goes full tilt every time he plays, like a Tasmanian devil on ice.

“He gets so fired up it gets me fired up, gets the boys fired up,” linemate Max Pacioretty said in December. “He’s a tremendous competitor.”

Future

Stone, 28, might have the most ironclad future of any of the Knights.

He’s under contract through the 2025-26 season and has a full no-movement clause. Only center William Karlsson is under contract for as long, but he doesn’t have the same protection as Stone, who has the 16th-highest cap hit in the NHL this season at $9.5 million.

The team’s present and future are firmly in his hands. And no one on the Knights is complainin­g.

“He just works his bag off,” right wing Ryan Reaves said in December. “That what’s you want out of a top player and a leader on your team.”

Contact Ben Gotz at bgotz@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow

@Bensgotz on Twitter.

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