The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Ready to light up Vegas

Golden Knights are the first NHL expansion franchise since 2000

- BY JOHN MARSHALL

The Vegas Golden Knights have been the hit of Sin City, exciting a fan base that finally has a profession­al sports team to root for.

After months of buildup, it’s finally time to show what they can do on the ice.

The Golden Knights are new, they’re young, but they’re not heading into their inaugural season just to be walkovers.

“They put a great group together,” Vegas forward Reid Duke said. “You never really know what to expect, but they made some big splashes. Got a lot of good players, a lot of good picks. It’s nice to see that they are not only building for right now, but the future, too.”

Las Vegas has longed for a major profession­al sports team for years, but was always rebuffed due to the gambling aspect of the town.

The NHL became the first major sport to break the Vegas ice, voting to make the Golden Knights the first expansion team since the Minnesota Wild and Columbus Blue Jackets in 2000.

The Golden Knights hired former Columbus and Florida coach Gerard (Turk) Gallant of Summerside, and general manager George McPhee stocked the roster with a mix of veterans and young players.

The veterans include goalie Marc-Andre Fleury, who won three Stanley Cup titles with Pittsburgh and an Olympic gold medal with Canada, top-line winger James Neal and hardworkin­g winger Reilly Smith. They also added a 30-goal scorer in Jonathan Marchessau­lt from Florida.

The Golden Knights also are loaded with defencemen through the expansion draft and a multitude of trades, though it could take some time for everyone to jell, as it typically does with an expansion team.

“We’re a new group, it’s not like you’re coming back to a team like when I was in Florida and 19 of your players are returning,” Gallant said. “This year it’s all new players.”

A few more things to look for from the Golden Knights in 2017-18:

FLEURY’S RIDE

Fleury was the winningest goalie in Pittsburgh’s history and played brilliantl­y at times in the early part of the Penguins’ run to a second straight Stanley Cup last season. But he was pulled after allowing four goals in the Eastern Conference Finals and lost his starting job to rookie Matt Murray. The Pens considered Murray their goalie of the future and left Fleury exposed in the expansion draft, allowing the Golden Knights to have a steady presence between the pipes for their opening season.

NEAL’S PRODUCTION

Neal played on a balanced team in Nashville, but still managed to score 23 goals or more (31 in 2015-16) during his three seasons there. He’s eclipsed 20 goals in all nine of his NHL seasons, with a high of 40 during an 81-point season with Pittsburgh in 2011-12. Neal likely will get a lot of playing time on the power play and should be Vegas’ go-to shooter.

SCHEDULING

The Golden Knights open their inaugural season on the road against Dallas on Oct. 6. They play at Arizona the next night then have their home opener against the Coyotes on Oct. 10.

 ?? AP PHOTO/ JOHN LOCHER ?? Vegas Golden Knights’ Cody Eakin, left, skates with the puck around Colorado Avalanche’s Nikita Zadorov during the first period of an NHL preseason game in Las Vegas on Thursday.
AP PHOTO/ JOHN LOCHER Vegas Golden Knights’ Cody Eakin, left, skates with the puck around Colorado Avalanche’s Nikita Zadorov during the first period of an NHL preseason game in Las Vegas on Thursday.

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