The Golden Knights made a hard call when Jonathan Marchessault wanted a five-year deal, and the numbers since then have only made that decision look sharper.
Marchessault, the Conn Smythe winner and one of the Original Misfits, wanted term. Kelly McCrimmon wasn’t going there.
A contract that would have paid roughly $5.5 million a year into the back end was too much risk for Vegas, especially with no-trade protection attached. So Marchessault moved on and landed in Nashville.
At the time, the question was whether the Golden Knights had let a beloved scorer walk away too soon. Now, with the benefit of hindsight, the picture looks different.
Marchessault’s last two seasons have produced 33 goals combined, a far cry from the 42 he piled up in 2023-24. That kind of drop-off makes a five-year commitment look a lot less appealing, especially when the final season of the deal would have come with Marchessault at 38.
Still, it’s fair to wonder what Vegas would have gotten had McCrimmon said yes. The answer probably would have been useful production at first, then a slow slide.
Marchessault likely would have had a strong first year, somewhere in the 25-to-30-goal range, even if he didn’t quite match his 42-goal peak from 2023-24. Jack Eichel was on his line that season, and with Bruce Cassidy constantly mixing things up, the setup still created plenty of chances for Marchessault to finish.
But the later years are where the deal would have started to sting.
Last season in Nashville, Marchessault played 62 games and scored 12 goals with 19 assists. That followed the 42-goal season and made the decline impossible to ignore. The trend line is clear enough on its own: the finish isn’t what it was, and Father Time has already started to show up.
Reilly Smith offers a similar reminder for Vegas fans. The Golden Knights brought him back for the 2024-25 Stanley Cup playoff run, and he finished that stretch with three goals and eight assists in 21 games.
For the season, he had 13 goals and 27 assists. That came after a 2022-23 season in which he scored 26 goals.
Smith was still useful in a limited role with Vegas last season, putting up 16 goals and 10 assists in 69 games, but the team still didn’t bring him back this offseason. That’s the kind of aging curve the Golden Knights were trying to avoid with Marchessault.
A five-year commitment would have meant betting on a player through the decline, not just the peak. The goals would have dropped, the defensive issues would have grown louder, and McCrimmon would have been left carrying the contract.
It may have stung some fans in the moment. But for Vegas, the front of the jersey mattered more than the name on the back.
In Other News...
Golden Knights Schedule Features One Massive Date Fans Will Circle Fast
The Golden Knights now know the shape of their 2026-27 grind, and it opens and closes in familiar fashion with home dates bookending the regular season. The schedule has the usual NHL wear and tear built in too, with eight back-to-backs, a pair of five-game homestands and five separate four-game road trips that will test depth and travel legs over the long haul.
There are also a few dates that stand out well before the puck drops, including return games for Keegan Kolesar on February 15 and Pavel Dorofeyev on March 13. Those kind of circle-the-calendar spots tend to give a schedule some early personality, especially for a team that will already have plenty on its plate by then. [Read more 🡒]
Kings Prospects Just Got A Meaningful Boost Behind The Bench
The coaching shuffle around the Pacific Divisions AHL and ECHL ranks has picked up again, and it has a familiar veteran at the center of it. Mike Haviland is joining the Ontario Reign as an assistant coach, bringing more than two decades of experience to the Los Angeles Kings affiliate after recent stops with the Columbus Blue Jackets and Cleveland Monsters.
For the Golden Knights side of the developmental map, the changes matter too. Henderson added Alex Loh as an assistant on Joel Wards first-year staff, while Coachella Valley brought in Scott Ford, giving the divisions prospect pipeline another round of fresh voices behind the bench as teams continue to reshuffle their coaching groups. [Read more 🡒]
