The Golden Knights have held Minnesota Wild rookie sensation Kirill Kaprizov to five shots and no points in the first two games of their NHL playoff series.
Ed Graney
Ed Graney came to the Review-Journal in May of 2006 as its lead sports columnist. He has covered all major sporting events, including Super Bowls to NBA championships to every Final Four since 1995. Graney also covered the Olympic Games in Beijing (2008) and London (2012). A graduate of San Diego State University, he is a five-time Nevada Sportswriter of the Year and past winner of Associated Press Sports Editors Top 10 for columns. He and wife Bonnie have two children, a son (Tristan) and daughter (Bridget).
The Golden Knights were able even their best-of-seven divisional series against Minnesota with a 3-1 win at T-Mobile Arena.
It’s not as if a 1-0 overtime loss to open a best-of-seven series is the first time we have seen the Golden Knights struggle to score in the playoffs.
Golden Knights coach Pete DeBoer said it was an easy decision to start Marc-Andre Fleury, who stopped 29 of 30 shots but watched helplessly as his teammates missed shot after shot.
Pete DeBoer has been head coach of the Golden Knights since January of last year — he said it only feels twice as long.
The Golden Knights were one of the NHL’s best teams with Marc-Andre Fleury and Robin Lehner sharing the net. They should stick with the strategy in the playoffs.
Another major professional sports team — this time the Oakland Athletics — might have its eyes on relocating to Southern Nevada.
Limited to 15 skaters in a loss to the Colorado Avalanche on Monday, the Golden Knights are still led by management intent on doing whatever is needed to win.
You say the Rocky Steps in Philadelphia. I say a Draft Experience near Caesars Forum and the Linq. You say Lower Broadway in Nashville. I say the Las Vegas Strip.
While lots goes into determining NFL draft value, it still matters most how players ultimately perform.
Aaron Rodgers managed to upstage all that was the NFL draft’s opening round when it was reported the league’s reigning Most Valuable Player wants out of Green Bay.
The only correct result would be the Golden Knights and Colorado Avalanche meeting in a second-round NHL playoff series to decide the West Division champion.
The Raiders have far too many other needs than to worry about dealing for one of the NFL draft’s elite quarterback prospects.
Seven years later, Jackie Robinson West acknowledged using ineligible players when defeating Mountain Ridge in the U.S. championship game of the Little League World Series.
The Browns and Raiders, franchises that host the next two NFL drafts, have been an afterthought for most of the last two decades.
