USA TODAY US Edition

Harper is a fan boy

Vegas native loves him some Golden Knights

- Bob Nightengal­e

It’s a series with significan­t stakes, with a buildup leaving Nationals star Bryce Harper sleepless at night, swept by an adrenaline rush that sometimes keeps him up until 3 in the morning, his body exhausted, his mind racing.

The series is determinin­g the right to supremacy, standing last after a grueling season, and a championsh­ip parade to unite the city.

Oh, you were thinking the YankeesNat­ionals two-game series, the one being billed as a World Series preview? Uh, sorry.

Harper has something a little bigger on his mind.

To Harper, the biggest game of the season is 2,086 miles away from Nationals Park, starting at 9 ET Wednesday night.

It’s the one where he’ll be wearing a gold, black and steel gray uniform, perhaps a helmet perched on his head, as he settles in front of his vast TV.

This is where he’ll be watching his beloved Vegas Golden Knights play Game 3 of their NHL Stanley Cup Western Conference finals at T-Mobile Arena against the Winnipeg Jets, the best-ofseven series tied at 1-1, with Harper wondering how much more his heart can take.

“I get more nervous watching them than anything I’ve ever done in my life,” Harper tells USA TODAY, “even playing ball. I don’t get nervous watching my team or when I play at all. I really don’t.

“But when I’m watching them, I get so nervous. I’ll sit on the couch with my wife, going nuts. It’s unreal.”

The Golden Knights, vying to become the first expansion team in a major sport to win a championsh­ip in its inaugural season and already the first NHL team to reach the playoffs in its first year in nearly 40 years, are three victories shy of going where nobody in their right mind believed they would reach. Yes, the Stanley Cup Final. Forget the 1980 U.S. Olympic team; maybe the Golden Knights are the unlikelies­t miracle on ice.

No one gave them a prayer this season — an NHL-worst 500-1 long shot to win the Stanley Cup — except for this certain 25-year-old who happens to be one of the greatest baseball players in the world and will soon become rich enough to buy his own casino.

“I’m really not surprised,” Harper says. “They’re a great team. There’s a lot of guys on that team that have chips on their shoulders because they got let go on other teams they were playing on.

“Look at us. We’ve got one of the best goalies of all time in our net in (MarcAndre) Fleury. He was the leader of that team that won three Stanley Cups in Pittsburgh. If we didn’t have a goalie on our team like that, it would definitely be tough. (Wild Bill) Karlsson is having one of the best years of his career. He has six goals in Columbus last year and now has 43 for us.

“We get (Jonathan) Marchessau­lt from the Panthers, and look at the way he’s been playing. Reilly Smith. That whole front line has been unbelievab­le. Deryk Engelland and Schmidty (Nate Schmidt) coming from the Caps. James Neal, who was with Pittsburgh and Nashville.

“They’re all just such a great group of guys. Just a bunch of really cool dudes who are fast and quick and put the puck into the net. I could go on and on.”

The Golden Knights have taken Las Vegas by storm, and, oh, can you tell who has caught hockey fever?

Harper and his wife, Kayla, don’t have kids yet, but Harper already has chosen the sport he wants them to play.

“I’ve fallen in love with hockey,” Harper says. “When we have kids, I want them to play hockey. How awesome would that be? I can’t imagine being on the ice and playing such a cool sport.”

Harper has become Barry Melrose without the colorful high-fashion outfits, soaking up as much hockey knowledge as he can these days. Do you know any other profession­al athlete who attended virtually every Golden Knights home game during the winter, wearing their jerseys at every opportunit­y, and occasional­ly wearing a helmet watching them on his living room couch?

Do you know any other ballplayer who drops in on their practices, sends dozens of autographe­d bats with the Golden Knights logo to their locker room, drops the puck against the Washington Capitals wearing an Alex Tuch jersey and is already tentativel­y planning to see them if they’re playing in the Stanley Cup Final on a May 24 off day?

“It’s the first team I really had a passion rooting for,” says Harper, born and raised in Las Vegas and, yes, blessed with the ability to ice skate. “Growing up, I didn’t really root for many teams. I always liked the Lakers. Liked Dallas in football.

“But those are all the winning teams. Even baseball, I’d get home and watch the Braves on Turner or the Cubs on WGN, right after Full House and Family Matters.

“But now I can’t get enough of them. I watch them religiousl­y. I love hockey.”

Who’d ever have imagined that Las Vegas would become a hockey town, with every game sold out? Really, it’s the gateway to the gambling capital of the USA turning into a sports mecca.

It already hosts about four conference basketball tournament­s every March and within two years will welcome the NFL’s Oakland Raiders and a $2 billion retractabl­e-roof stadium that will surely host Super Bowls, Final Fours and College Football Playoff games.

Major League Baseball Commission­er Rob Manfred has not discourage­d Vegas as an expansion possibilit­y, while NBA Commission­er Adam Silver has largely driven the bus on pro leagues heavily regulating, and ultimately profiting from, legalized sports gambling long before the Supreme Court’s monumental ruling on Monday that enabled states to go forth with sports betting.

As the nation gets ready to tackle the gambling issue, it is Harper’s hometown that might enjoy the greatest makeover.

“I remember everybody kept saying, ‘Hockey in the desert, how’s that going to work?” Harper said. “Well, it was 95 outside, 35 inside and one of the greatest atmosphere­s I’ve ever been to in my life.

“Just the perfect storm of them coming in, having a great team, a great front office and an ownership that really em- braced the city of Vegas. And we really did a great job showing up and supporting our team, keeping other fans from filling our arena.”

Is there reason to believe the Raiders won’t generate the same passion?

“I don’t know,” Harper said. “Will they be the fans of the sport or fans of fantasy football?

“What really made this work was that it was an expansion team. It was our team. It wasn’t like someone just bought a team, and said, ‘OK, here’s your team, go support it.’ You want something that’s Vegas-born and the locals can grow with it.”

Who knows, perhaps one day before Harper retires, long after he becomes the first player to receive a $400 million or even $500 million contract, he’ll be able to play for his hometown team.

Manfred is not shy about his desire to expand to 32 teams one day, and in the decade it would likely take for that to become reality, Vegas might well be a fully mature market.

“For it to work, I think it has to be an expansion team,” Harper said. “Still, it would be tough in Las Vegas because we have a lot of Dodgers fans. A lot of Diamondbac­ks fans. Yankees fans. Chicago Cubs fans.

“I think having an expansion draft, and having a team grow up in Vegas, would definitely work. We’ll see, but for now, I just want all of the spotlight on the Knights.”

The future of baseball in Vegas can wait, Harper says. There’s five more months before the start of the World Series.

For now, Harper says, there’s a Stanley Cup to win.

“I can’t wait,” he says. “Let’s do it.”

 ?? JAYNE KAMIN-ONCEA/GETTY IMAGES ?? Nationals star Bryce Harper is a big fan of the NHL’s Golden Knights, an expansion team in his hometown Las Vegas, and proudly wears a team T-shirt during batting practice.
JAYNE KAMIN-ONCEA/GETTY IMAGES Nationals star Bryce Harper is a big fan of the NHL’s Golden Knights, an expansion team in his hometown Las Vegas, and proudly wears a team T-shirt during batting practice.
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