Las Vegas Review-Journal

The top 10 moments of a wild Knights season

Top 10 Golden Knights moments of 2020

- By David Schoen •

IN the Golden Knights’ first game of the year, the unusual happened: A defenseman (Jon Merrill) played forward in an emergency and scored a goal, and the Knights successful­ly killed a 6-on-3 disadvanta­ge in the final 90 seconds. Following the 5-4 victory over Philadelph­ia on Jan. 2, then-coach Gerard Gallant was asked a question he didn’t like. That was followed by a question about the importance of getting a signature win that he really didn’t like.

Gallant stormed out of the room, with the door slamming shut behind him.

And then, 2020 got really weird.

“There’s some mornings you wake up, and I’m sure

I’m not alone here, it feels like 10 years,” Knights coach Pete Deboer said recently of 2020. “It’s been a crazy set of circumstan­ces, both in the hockey world, but more importantl­y, in the world.”

The coronaviru­s pandemic turned this into an unpreceden­ted year, providing the melancholy backdrop for every significan­t event. The NHL was not immune to the range of emotions, from the pessimism of the pause to the optimism of the restart.

Here are the 10 most memorable moments of 2020 for the Knights:

10. Back in the capital

Almost a year after he was acquired from the Senators in a blockbuste­r trade, right wing Mark Stone returned to Ottawa for the first time and led the Knights to a 4-2 victory that snapped a four-game losing skid.

He set up Paul Stastny’s goal 34 seconds after the opening faceoff and scored on a wraparound late in the first period after being honored with a video tribute.

Stone’s homecoming was overshadow­ed by Deboer’s debut as coach, but more on that in a bit.

9. Hey now, you’re an all-star

Despite producing five 30-goal seasons during his time in Montreal, Max Pacioretty was never selected to participat­e in the NHL All-star Game.

But when Anaheim’s Jakob Silfverber­g dropped out to be present for the birth of his child, Pacioretty was named as his replacemen­t in St. Louis.

Pacioretty had a goal and two assists in the two games as the Pacific Division won the 3-on-3 tournament. He also created several memories with his two oldest sons, who joined him on the ice during the skills competitio­n.

8. ‘Big man can move’

Goalie Robin Lehner arrived with a reputation for staying deep in his crease and relying on his technique rather than instincts to make saves. He showed there is more to his game midway through Game 7 of the Western Conference semifinals.

Lehner lunged to his left and made a glove stop on Vancouver’s Brock Boeser to keep the game scoreless. The Knights went on to win, and Lehner solidified his role as the Knights’ No. 1 goalie with his third shutout of the series.

Afterward, Lehner was asked about the save and deadpanned, “Big man can move when he wants to.”

7. Home means Henderson

For their first three years, the Knights’ American Hockey League affiliate was located in Chicago. That meant long plane rides every time a player was called up or sent down.

In February, the organizati­on announced it purchased the San Antonio AHL franchise and was relocating it to Henderson. The Silver Knights

were born.

The new minor league franchise is expected to begin play this season at Orleans Arena and practice at Lifeguard Arena in Henderson. The Silver Knights will move into a new arena for the 2022-23 season.

6. Paying Petro

It’s not often that a Norris Trophy-caliber defenseman hits the freeagent market. When Alex Pietrangel­o couldn’t agree to a contract with St. Louis, the Knights pounced with a seven-year, $61.6 million deal.

Pietrangel­o is a two-time all star and captained the Blues to the Stanley Cup in 2019. Along with Shea Theodore, he gives the Knights a formidable blue line.

The price to land Pietrangel­o was steep, however, as popular defenseman Nate Schmidt and center

Paul Stastny were traded in separate cost-cutting moves.

5. Vegas Strong

Deryk Engelland helped heal the city following the Route 91 Harvest festival mass shooting, and his speech before the first regular-season home game is forever immortaliz­ed in Las Vegas sports history.

The hard-nosed defenseman, who made his NHL debut at age 27, announced his retirement in December after 11 seasons. Engelland started his profession­al playing career with the Las Vegas Wranglers of the ECHL and didn’t want to wear another jersey after spending his final three seasons

with the Knights.

Engelland, 38, is a longtime Las Vegas resident and will remain with the club as a special assistant to the owner.

4. Trading places

The Knights made a flurry of moves around the February deadline, including the acquisitio­n of defenseman Alec Martinez from Los Angeles to provide playoff experience.

But it was the trade for Lehner that set off a series of events with aftershock­s that are still being felt.

Lehner won the goaltendin­g competitio­n with Marc-andre Fleury in the playoffs and signed a five-year, $25 million contract with the Knights this offseason. Most of all, his arrival was the impetus for …

3. The Tweet

At 1:54 p.m. Pacific time on Aug.

22, Fleury’s agent, Allan Walsh, sent a picture from his verified Twitter account of Fleury being stabbed through the back by a sword with “Deboer” written on the blade. It was deleted the next morning.

The tweet brought the Knights’ goaltendin­g controvers­y into the public, and Fleury was shopped around the league during the offseason. While he remains with the team, Fleury’s eventual departure appears inevitable.

Fleury was the face of the franchise after the expansion draft and a key figure in the Knights’ early success. But the tweet is a stain that can’t be removed from his time in Vegas.

2. Coaching change

The firing of Gallant on Jan. 15 was one of the franchise’s first “Where were you when …” moments.

Hiring Deboer, the coach Gallant called a “clown” during the 2019 Western Conference quarterfin­als, as his replacemen­t was an even bigger shock.

Deboer tweaked the systems and went 15-5-2, guiding the Knights to the division title and an appearance in the Western Conference Final. But he was brought in to win the Stanley Cup, and that’s how the move ultimately will be judged.

Meanwhile, Gallant remains out of a job.

1. The Pause

As cases of the coronaviru­s surged around the globe, the NHL season was suspended on March 12. Almost five months later, the Knights traveled to Edmonton, Alberta, for a one-of-akind postseason.

The Knights and other teams were isolated from the general public in a “bubble” and played games with no fans in attendance. News conference­s conducted on Zoom became the new routine.

The league could see limited attendance in arenas this season and hopes to return to normal for the 2021-22 season.

But watching a hockey game might never be the same.

 ??  ??
 ?? Review-journal and wire photos ?? From top left moving clockwise, Robin Lehner’s save against the Brock Boeser of the Vancouver Canucks in the playoffs, the Henderson Silver Knights, Pete Deboer, and Mark Stone’s return to Ottawa all make the list of top Golden Knights moments of 2020.
Review-journal and wire photos From top left moving clockwise, Robin Lehner’s save against the Brock Boeser of the Vancouver Canucks in the playoffs, the Henderson Silver Knights, Pete Deboer, and Mark Stone’s return to Ottawa all make the list of top Golden Knights moments of 2020.
 ?? The Associated Press file ?? The Knights signed defenseman Alex Pietrangel­o to a seven-year, $61.6 million contract. He was the captain on a Stanley Cup championsh­ip squad in St. Louis.
The Associated Press file The Knights signed defenseman Alex Pietrangel­o to a seven-year, $61.6 million contract. He was the captain on a Stanley Cup championsh­ip squad in St. Louis.

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