The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Vegas Knights go showbiz

Team’s elaborate pregames are like no other.

- Ben Shpigel © 2018 New York Times

LAS VEGAS — If Ayron Sequeira had her way, the archers in the Vegas Golden Knights’ pregame extravagan­za she helped conceive would be shooting real arrows, not virtual ones, from high above the hockey rink in T-Mobile Arena. And those arrows would be on fire, as in real flames, hot and everything.

Then again, if she also had her way, the Nashville Predators, instead of the Winnipeg Jets, would have advanced to face Vegas in the Western Conference finals. That way she could have reconnecte­d with this animal trainer about having a tiger — with capped teeth, preferably, to evoke the Predators’ saber-toothed mascot — joining the performanc­e.

“Oh, it was going to happen,” said Sequeira, Vegas’ senior director for entertainm­ent production.

No idea is too grand for the Golden Knights’ game presentati­on staff — not in this roller-coaster-on-a-casino kind of city, and certainly not for a group empowered with the creative freedom to envisage a spectacle representa­tive of Las Vegas without hewing to its basest stereotype­s.

Since the beginning of the NHL season, the game presentati­on staff has establishe­d a sense of place without belaboring it, selling hockey in a market unbound by tradition or history by seizing less on the Vegas and more on the Golden Knights.

Those two elements converged in the latest production, unveiled Wednesday night before Game 3 of the conference finals, Vegas’ first home game of the series. In a sword fight midway through the roughly 10-minute show, the golden knight overwhelme­d a villain who had been wielding a Winnipeg Jets flag.

This being Vegas, the vanquished rogue did not skate off the ice but flew, hoisted into the rafters by an elaborate rigging system.

The crowd gasped, surprised by the moment but not the theatrics. The medieval warrior motif entertaine­d during the season, but has amazed during the playoffs, much like the team itself. As the Golden Knights recalibrat­e expectatio­ns for every successive expansion franchise, adding two playoff series victories to a division title, their pregame ceremony has become a phenomenon central to their identity, featured on broadcasts and scrutinize­d on social media.

“We’re always going to be secondary to what’s going on in the game — that’s the

whole reason why we’re here,” said Lee Orchard, who plays the golden knight character. “But we enhance the experience.”

From series to series, Orchard wonders what Sequeira and Jonny Greco, who oversees the game production staff, have concocted. Last week, Greco sent him a text message that read, “I’m going to be asking a lot more of you.”

By that, Greco meant that Orchard, who bears an uncanny resemblanc­e to actor Jason Statham, would find himself sitting in a dimly lit room choked with fog Tuesday afternoon. Before him was a table crammed with swordfish steaks that Orchard, in full knight regalia, would stab with his swords and pretend to eat — signifying the (San Jose) sharks the Golden Knights feasted on in last round.

The Golden Knights’ evolution from expansion darling to full-fledged juggernaut is reflected in the beginning to the pregame presentati­on: a series of pejorative quotes shown on the video screen and the ice about Vegas’ viability as a hockey market and a franchise, spliced with bursts of highlights. After a medieval-themed video detailed how the “war for the West” had reached its final stage, an element new to this round — the archers — appeared at the castle situated on the top level, behind one of the goals.

For months the staff had been discussing adding archers. With interest in the team swelling, Greco figured, the archers could represent the expansion of the Golden Knights’ army.

So, to see how the masters incorporat­ed archery into their performanc­es, Tyler Cofer, an entertainm­ent

producer, attended a Sunday night showing of the Cirque du Soleil production “Ka.” By Tuesday morning, Cofer was at Bass Pro Shops for bow and arrow accessorie­s and Hobby Lobby for arts and crafts supplies.

“To make flames,” he said. Cofer joined the Golden Knights from Oklahoma City, where he worked for the Thunder, toting valuable understand­ing of cultivatin­g a fan base in a city that never had a profession­al team. In assembling the staff, Greco valued diversity — of experience, of expertise, of perspectiv­e.

Sequeira had worked in Western expansion markets like San Jose and for a venerable Original Six franchise in Detroit, where, charged with planning the ceremony honoring the Red Wings’ 2008 championsh­ip team for her first game, she hired an orchestra to perform “We Are the Champions.”

Even an optimist like Greco had long presumed his job this season would finish March 31, the Golden Knights’ home finale. But they clinched a playoff berth five days earlier.

In the minutes before the show began Wednesday, Greco sat in his usual spot, beside Sequeira at the producers’ table behind Section 14. He pondered the ratio of man-hours invested to the duration of the performanc­e — “about 100 for, what, 10 minutes?” he said — and bumped fists with Trent Bailey, an animator, telling him how proud he was of him.

For those next 10 or so minutes, Greco watched, detecting some timing issues that irked him, but mostly he listened. The crowd was standing, engaged, loud.

“All I care about,” he said.

 ?? PHOTOS BY ETHAN MILLER / GETTY IMAGES ?? Golden Knights crowd igniter Cameron Hughes (left) and members of Blue Man Group pump up Las Vegas fans Friday for a West finals game.
PHOTOS BY ETHAN MILLER / GETTY IMAGES Golden Knights crowd igniter Cameron Hughes (left) and members of Blue Man Group pump up Las Vegas fans Friday for a West finals game.
 ??  ?? The Golden Knight (right) does battle with a Winnipeg Jet rival during the pregame show before Game 4 of the conference finals Friday night. Vegas won 3-2.
The Golden Knight (right) does battle with a Winnipeg Jet rival during the pregame show before Game 4 of the conference finals Friday night. Vegas won 3-2.

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