The Vegas Golden Knights have moved Alex Pietrangelo back onto long-term injured reserve for the 2026-27 season, and general manager Kelly McCrimmon says that status is not expected to change.
McCrimmon told reporters including Golden Knights reporter Taylor Rocha that Pietrangelo’s playing status is unchanged. The veteran defenseman remains sidelined by lower-body injuries, even though he still comes around the team’s facilities and has started coaching local baseball.
That LTIR move means Pietrangelo will spend the final year of his seven-year, $61.6MM contract signed with Vegas in 2020 away from the lineup. The designation also keeps him from returning during either the 2026-27 regular season or the 2027 Stanley Cup Playoffs, just as it did through the 2025-26 season. Vegas had briefly placed him back on the main roster list on July 1 after the end of the 2025-26 season cleared the Golden Knights’ long-term injured reserve.
In practical terms, this locks in what was likely Pietrangelo’s last season in an NHL game: 2024-25. He was still productive in his age-35 campaign, posting 33 points and a plus-11 in 71 games.
That matched his scoring line from 2023-24, when he put up four goals and 29 assists. Before that, he reached a career-high 54 points in 2022-23.
Pietrangelo’s value in Vegas went well beyond the scoresheet. He spent much of his five seasons with the Golden Knights alongside Shea Theodore on the top pair, and the two handled the heavy lifting on special teams.
Theodore logged the most power-play minutes, while Pietrangelo anchored the penalty kill. Their ability to work together or apart gave Vegas a steady, versatile blue line and helped the team win the 2023 Stanley Cup.
It was Pietrangelo’s second championship, following the title run he captained in St. Louis in 2019.
His NHL resume closes at 17 seasons and 1,087 games. Pietrangelo finished with 637 points, a plus-123 rating, 761 hits and 2,095 shot blocks, averaging 48 points, 57 hits and 158 blocks per 82 games.
He drew Norris Trophy votes in eight seasons and finished in the top five three times. Add in two Stanley Cups, four seasons as Blues captain and gold medals at the 2009 World Juniors, 2014 Winter Olympics and 2017 World Cup, and there’s at least a long-shot Hall of Fame case waiting for him.
With Pietrangelo on LTIR, Vegas has just under $1MM in cap space, per PuckPedia. The Golden Knights still have three roster players on the open market: veteran wingers and Brandon Saad, as well as defenseman Ben Hutton.
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Brandon Saad and Ben Hutton are also set to hit the open market, leaving Vegas with a few more decisions to sort through as the roster takes another turn. For a team that has leaned on experience and continuity in its rise, losing a handful of known pieces at once changes the feel around the group, even before the rest of the offseason picture comes into focus. [Read more 🡒]
Golden Knights Just Took A Firm Stand On Their Biggest Concern
The Golden Knights spent the offseason making a clear change in net by moving Akira Schmid out and narrowing their focus to the tandem they want to ride going forward. General manager Kelly McCrimmon has made it plain the team views Adin Hill and Carter as the backbone of the position, with the organization sticking to its belief that Hill can steady himself after a rough year.
For Vegas, the broader message matters as much as the personnel move. Goaltending has been the obvious area to watch, and McCrimmons stance suggests the club is not looking for another shake-up there anytime soon, even with Hill carrying a no-trade list and a contract that makes any potential maneuver more complicated than most. [Read more 🡒]
