VGK 32 in 32 main Marner

NHL.com is providing in-depth roster, prospect and fantasy analysis for each of its 32 teams from Aug. 1-Sept. 1. Today, the Vegas Golden Knights.

The Vegas Golden Knights are going for it again.

They have been one of the most aggressive and successful organizations since entering the NHL as an expansion team in 2017-18, and now they have added another star in Mitch Marner.

"With every signing that we make, with every decision that we make, it's about building a team that can win the Stanley Cup," general manager Kelly McCrimmon said.

Marner is a top two-way forward. He was fifth in the League with an NHL career-high 102 points (27 goals, 75 assists) in 81 games for the Toronto Maple Leafs last season.

The 28-year-old signed an eight-year, $96 million contract as part of a sign-and-trade deal July 1. He left his hometown of Toronto and a hockey-mad market after the Maple Leafs won two series in nine Stanley Cup Playoff appearances in nine seasons.

The Golden Knights have won 10 series in seven playoff appearances through their eight seasons in the League. They won the Cup in 2023 and are trying to climb back on top after being eliminated in the Western Conference First Round in 2024 and the second round last season.

"We have lots of pressure here," McCrimmon said. "We internally have pressure on our team. We want to win. Our guys put pressure on themselves as much as players on any other team."

Vegas is where Marner wants to be.

"You want to be in a place where you want to win," Marner said. "That's the whole goal of why we do this. You want to hoist that Stanley Cup. This team has shown that they can do it. I'm lucky enough to now hopefully bring another piece in to help bring it back here.

"I think we put the most pressure on ourselves as hockey players. That's how we play the game. We want to win every single night. You want to win every battle. You want to win anything you can all the time."

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Jack Eichel did not appear in the playoffs in six seasons with the Buffalo Sabres from 2015-21. After the Golden Knights made a bold move to acquire him in a trade Nov. 4, 2021, he won the Cup in 2023.

Now the center might have Marner on his wing on the first line.

"It's a great addition for our team, of course," Eichel said. "I mean, he's a world-class player, right? He's one of the best in the world, and for us to be able to add him, yeah, it's awesome.

"The last two years we've fallen short. We've felt like we had a better team than obviously we did because we didn't get the job done, so credit to the management and the organization for going out and getting somebody like Mitch Marner and getting him to join the team. He's obviously going to help us immensely. I think they made a few other tweaks to the roster that will help us as well, so really excited."

Vegas has lost defenseman Alex Pietrangelo -- a marquee free agent signing Oct. 12, 2020, who helped them win the Cup in 2023 -- because of a lower-body injury that likely will end his NHL career. It also has parted with defenseman Nicolas Hague, center Nicolas Roy and goalie Ilya Samsonov.

But the Golden Knights have added defenseman Jeremy Lauzon and center Colton Sissons. Lauzon is one of the most physical defensemen in the NHL and played for coach Bruce Cassidy with the Boston Bruins from 2018-21. Sissons is one of the best face-off men in the League and an elite penalty killer.

McCrimmon said Vegas was looking to change the identity of its fourth line and establish more of a forecheck, with the top three lines playing a possession style.

"We put a lot of stock in playoffs," McCrimmon said. "I think that there's some things we want to change maybe somewhat subtly, maybe not even that noticeable to a fan. But we're not going to go away from a lot of the things that worked really well for us last year. We had 50 wins. We had [110 points, third in the NHL, two ahead of the Maple Leafs]."

Marner will not be a subtle change. He will be the latest show on The Strip.

"We always say about our culture: 'Don't let it slip. Don't let it slip,'" McCrimmon said. "It takes a long time to build a great culture; you can lose it in a hurry. So I think that our guys really perpetuate that. I think he's going to fit into that and flourish. I really believe he will."

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