Saskatoon StarPhoenix

NO GAMBLE ON THE GM

McPhee chosen to lead Vegas

- STEPHEN WHYNO The Associated Press

George McPhee has been tabbed as the first general manager of the NHL’s expansion Las Vegas franchise, and he hopes to build an entertaini­ng team that can compete sooner rather than later.

Owner Bill Foley picked McPhee out of seven candidates based on his extensive experience. It’s up to McPhee to build Las Vegas from scratch when it begins play in 201718, a task he knows won’t be easy.

“Our mission here is clear: We’re going to build an organizati­on and a team that people in Nevada and Las Vegas will be proud of, and we’re going to do it quickly and we’re aiming at the Stanley Cup,” McPhee said Wednesday. “It’s that simple.”

McPhee most recently served as special adviser to New York Islanders GM Garth Snow and before that spent 16 seasons as GM of the Washington Capitals. As the Capitals’ GM, McPhee oversaw a complete rebuild around star winger Alex Ovechkin that led to the team making six consecutiv­e playoff appearance­s before he was fired in 2014.

“He took Washington from being a team that was scrambling and sort of turned it around, so I think that experience will be a big plus,” said Doug MacLean, who was the Columbus Blue Jackets’ GM when they entered the league in 2000. “I think it’s a real good fit.”

McPhee has a strong history of drafting and developing players, and his extensive NHL experience earned him the position over younger candidates.

Foley said he wanted a GM who was focused, dedicated and had a “take-no-prisoner” attitude and feels he got that in McPhee. It also helps that they got along from the first conversati­on.

“We all want to win, and he’s going to win for us, but I like to have people that I really get along with and that I can communicat­e with,” Foley said. “We had great candidates, they were all good. I just felt there was a little something extra with George.”

Before taking over the Capitals, McPhee was vice-president and director of hockey operations for the Vancouver Canucks, who made the Stanley Cup final in 1994.

The 58-year-old from Guelph, Ont., helped construct back-toback gold-medal winners for Canada at the past two world hockey championsh­ips. Brad Treliving, his co-GM at the 2016 world championsh­ip and GM of the Calgary Flames, selfishly would have liked to see McPhee working outside the Pacific Division and the Western Conference.

“I was hoping maybe George could go back to the East, just take the team and move it to the East,” Treliving said by phone Wednesday.

“You’re really happy for him. Then you take a deep breath and go, ‘Oh great, another excellent manager that you’re competing against.’ But that’s the game, everybody’s good.”

McPhee expects to begin hiring staff next season and will spend the 2016-17 season watching plenty of games to find players at the amateur and pro levels.

The NHL’s board of governors unanimousl­y approved the expansion team for a fee of $500 million during its meeting in Las Vegas in late June. The team can begin making transactio­ns in June 2017, and it will also take part in an expansion draft that month.

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 ?? ETHAN MILLER/GETTY IMAGES ?? George McPhee, who was introduced as the general manager of the Las Vegas NHL franchise on Tuesday, can begin making transactio­ns in June 2017.
ETHAN MILLER/GETTY IMAGES George McPhee, who was introduced as the general manager of the Las Vegas NHL franchise on Tuesday, can begin making transactio­ns in June 2017.

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