Golden Knights May Have Finally Unearthed A Forward They Can Trust

Deck: As the Vegas Golden Knights lean on new talent and resilience, their evolving forward group hints at a promising shift for future seasons.

For years, the Vegas Golden Knights have been the league’s boldest shoppers, never shy about swinging big for a proven name. Mark Stone.

Jack Eichel. Tomas Hertl.

That approach has fueled plenty of success, but it has also fed the familiar criticism that Vegas leans too hard on the trade market and not enough on its own young talent.

The 2025-26 season offered a different kind of proof. Even with injuries, lineup shuffling, coaching changes and another deep playoff run, the Golden Knights showed that their forward group is deeper and more adaptable than they’re often given credit for.

Brett Howden was right in the middle of that development. He kept pushing himself into bigger responsibility and kept answering the call.

In 58 regular season games, he posted 12 goals and 10 assists. In the playoffs, he added 14 goals and four assists over 22 games.

More than the numbers, though, it was the range of his usage that stood out. He worked down the middle, shifted to the wing and contributed on special teams, earning the confidence of both head coach Bruce Cassidy and John Tortorella.

That kind of production matters for a team built to win now. Howden proved he can give Vegas real middle-six value, which is exactly the sort of support contenders need when they’re trying to spread offense without leaning too heavily on the top line. He’s become much more than a depth piece.

The rest of the forward group also helped the Golden Knights absorb the bumps that came with the season. Injuries forced changes at different points, but Vegas never really lost its footing. The offense kept moving, the structure held, and the team found ways to keep its identity intact even when the lineup changed around it.

Colton Sissons, Nic Dowd and Keegan Kolesar all provided useful minutes when called upon, while veterans were willing to adjust their roles based on what the team needed. That flexibility turned into one of the season’s clearest strengths.

It also points to something bigger for the organization. Vegas has built its reputation on aggressive moves and established stars, and that formula has already delivered Stanley Cup Final appearances and a championship in just eight seasons. But the cap eventually forces every contender to rely on younger, cheaper players who can take on more.

This season suggested the Golden Knights may be moving into that phase. Howden’s rise is the clearest example, but the broader takeaway is just as important: the next wave of forwards is starting to come through.

The veteran core is still there, still strong enough to keep Vegas in the Western Conference mix. But the season also showed that the group behind those stars is growing into something real.

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