Los Angeles Times

Expansion GM probably has deals in place

- helene.elliott@latimes.com Twitter: @helenenoth­elen

Knights, the city’s first major league profession­al sports franchise (to be followed by the Oakland Raiders by 2020).

In a city built on gambling, Foley and the NHL are betting there will be enough interest to sustain the team beyond its initial novelty. They got a solid start thanks to the expansion rules stipulatin­g that each existing team could protect only one goaltender, guaranteei­ng the Golden Knights a choice of decent-to-good goalies. And it’s reassuring to know now and for the next expansion — and there will be one within a few years — that $500 million can buy at least that much.

But that half a billion didn’t get Foley his own TV show to reveal his roster. The expansion draft picks general manager George McPhee submitted before 7 a.m. Wednesday will be disclosed Wednesday night at T-Mobile Arena during the same show that will announce winners of the NHL’s major trophies, meshing rewards for past excellence with glimpses at the future of a team that will compete in the Pacific Division with the Kings and the Ducks. “We’re in a really good place,” McPhee told reporters Tuesday.

McPhee extended his self-imposed roster selection by a few hours in order to talk to other general managers who experience­d delays en route to Las Vegas. He said he expected that by Tuesday evening he and his staff would choose the 30 players — one from each existing team.

He also said he had “at least” a half-dozen trades lined up, and those probably will include acquiring draft picks or players from teams in exchange for not choosing a specific player they left unprotecte­d. The Ducks made defensemen Sami Vatanen and Josh Manson available, but it’s likely Ducks GM Bob Murray will give McPhee another player or a draft pick in exchange for Las Vegas not claiming either of them. The Kings left high-salaried Dustin Brown and Marian Gaborik available, but there’s little chance McPhee will take them off the Kings’ books. It’s possible the Kings will lose defenseman Brayden McNabb, who’s young (26), big (6 feet 5) and has one year left at a salary cap hit of $1.7 million.

Because McPhee can make trades to not pick certain available players, it’s impossible to predict what his roster will be. He must choose at least three goalies, nine defensemen and 14 forwards. “I’m going to have to move some defensemen because we’re going to claim a bunch,” he said. But he also said some picks he envisions will be “core players” for a long time.

“We have lots of defensemen lined up, lots of centers, and on the wings a little more scoring than we anticipate­d. And the goaltendin­g is going to be pretty solid,” he said. Among his potential goalies are three-time Penguins Stanley Cup champion Marc-Andre Fleury, who waived his no-move clause for the purpose of the expansion draft in order to give Pittsburgh some flexibilit­y, standout New York Rangers backup Antti Raanta, and Detroit’s Petr Mrazek. But McPhee also could draft a goalie and flip that player to a team that needs goaltendin­g help.

Although the Golden Knights will draft 30 players, their roster limit will be 23, meaning McPhee will be wheeling and dealing after the NHL trade freeze is lifted Thursday morning. He also can add to his stockpile of talent in the annual entry draft Friday and Saturday. The Golden Knights are scheduled to pick sixth in the first round and third in each subsequent round.

His goal for the expansion draft, he said, is simple. “To have a competitiv­e club that people are going to enjoy watching play and then have the draft picks to be able to draft our way to a contending team, a championsh­ip team,” he said.

Hot as it is here, the heat won’t truly be on McPhee for a few seasons, giving him time to plant roots and test how hospitable the sunbleache­d desert will be to a sport played on ice.

 ?? John Locher Associated Press ?? “WE’RE IN a really good place,” Vegas Golden Knights general manager George McPhee said.
John Locher Associated Press “WE’RE IN a really good place,” Vegas Golden Knights general manager George McPhee said.

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