The Arizona Republic

Golden Knights play role in healing Vegas

- GREG BEACHAM

LAS VEGAS - Hockey fans arrived on the Las Vegas Strip in the crisp desert afternoon, gathering in jovial groups outside the rink. Many wore the striking, multicolor­ed jerseys of the Vegas Golden Knights, the NHL expansion team playing its historic first regular-season home game Tuesday night.

Less than a mile south on the Strip is the massacre site where 58 people were killed and hundreds were injured just nine days earlier. Another short walk down the road, dozens of crosses and heartbreak­ing memorials sit in the median near the iconic “Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas” sign.

Nobody’s mind was entirely on hockey during what should have been a celebrator­y night and a milestone for Las Vegas, which finally has its first franchise in the major North American pro sports.

Instead, the Golden Knights and the NHL kept the tragedy in the forefront while attempting to provide their own modicum of momentary relief to a healing city.

“I wasn’t going to miss it,” said Joan Simmons, a Las Vegas native wearing a brand-new Golden Knights T-shirt with the tag still attached. “I think we all need hockey right now.”

The home opener against the Arizona Coyotes, a 5-2 Vegas win, originally was planned as a glamorous, Vegas-style debut featuring a light show and a pregame extravagan­za packed with visual marvels building on the team’s medieval nickname. After the shooting, the team modified its plans and dedicated a quieter evening to the victims, the first responders and the survivors.

T-Mobile Arena had no ads on the boards around the ice for the opener. Instead, the all-white boards simply displayed the message “Vegas Strong.”

NHL Commission­er Gary Bettman said the game “shows what a major league, profession­al sports team can mean to a community in terms of bringing people together, uniting them, helping them heal from a tragedy and demonstrat­ing the power of distractio­n when everybody comes together.”

The players still walked a gold carpet into the arena before the game, cheered on by those early-arriving fans lining the walkway. But a fan festival was canceled, and many of the high-profile festivitie­s scheduled for the opener have been delayed until the Golden Knights’ second home game on Friday, when the Detroit Red Wings visit.

But after years of work and months of anticipati­on, the NHL’s 31st franchise is officially in business in this gambling mecca, albeit in muted circumstan­ces.

The Golden Knights even won their first two regular-season games on the road shortly after the shooting, building anticipati­on for a first-year franchise that never forgot about the city waiting for its return.

Goalie Marc-Andre Fleury was among several players who experience­d anxious moments on Oct. 1. The team had a preseason game earlier in the day, and Fleury knew several teammates had gone out on the Strip that night, perhaps to the country music festival. Fleury didn’t stop worrying until he got texts back from his new teammates.

 ?? KIRBY LEE/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? The Golden Knights honor Las Vegas first responders to the Oct. 1 mass shooting prior to Tuesday’s game against the Coyotes.
KIRBY LEE/USA TODAY SPORTS The Golden Knights honor Las Vegas first responders to the Oct. 1 mass shooting prior to Tuesday’s game against the Coyotes.

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