Column: The Vegas Golden Knights Give No F’s and It’s Awesome

There are NHL franchises that ask for permission.

Then there are the Vegas Golden Knights.

No team in professional hockey has embraced the role of the league’s supervillain quite like Vegas, and frankly, it’s made the NHL far more entertaining.

The Golden Knights don’t care if a move is unpopular. They don’t care if rival fan bases call them ruthless. They don’t care if the hockey establishment thinks they’re playing the game differently.

They are.

And it’s working.

Friday night’s blockbuster trade that sent sniper Pavel Dorofeyev to the New York Rangers was simply the latest chapter in a franchise that has made “all-in” its permanent operating philosophy. While other organizations hesitate, Vegas acts. Every year. Every deadline. Every offseason.

Need another example?

Look no further than last season.

The Golden Knights stunned the hockey world by bringing in John Tortorella with only a handful of games remaining in the regular season, betting that his demanding style could sharpen the club before the playoffs. Vegas proceeded to make a deep postseason run, finishing just two wins shy of another Stanley Cup.

When the season ended, sentiment took a back seat.

The organization moved on.

That’s Vegas.

No lengthy goodbyes. No emotional press conferences. No “let’s run it back.” Just the next decision.

The same philosophy has defined the franchise since Day 1. Trade fan favorites? Sure. Chase another superstar? Why not. Push every edge of the salary cap? If the rules allow it, Vegas isn’t apologizing.

Some fans hate it.

Others secretly wish their team had the same nerve.

The Golden Knights have spent less than a decade in the NHL and have already rewritten what an expansion franchise can look like. They’ve reached Stanley Cup Finals, won a championship and remained perennial contenders by refusing to become comfortable.

The rest of the league often treats roster building like a chess match.

Vegas treats it like poker.

Push the chips to the middle. Read the room. If the hand doesn’t work, shuffle and deal again.

Is it ruthless? Absolutely.

Is it unconventional? Without question.

Is it good for hockey?

You’d better believe it.

Every league needs a villain. Every sport needs a franchise willing to make the move everyone else is afraid to make.

Even as a fan of the Carolina Hurricanes, I must admire their approach.

The Golden Knights wear the black hat proudly, and that’s exactly why the rest of the NHL can’t stop talking about them.

Hockey Geniuses out in Sin City.

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Jackson Fryburger