Report: NHL expansion rules would resemble Vegas process

Reuters|
Mar 02, 2018, 01.15 AM IST
0Comments

While some NHL owners may resent the historic expansion success of the first-place Vegas Golden Knights, Gary Bettman seems undeterred.

With the first-year Golden Knights tied for the most points in the Western Conference, the NHL commissioner intends to keep the same roster-building process for future expansion franchises, TSN reported Tuesday.

According to the report, Bettman specifically cited expansion hopeful Seattle, which reportedly expects to know by June if the city will be granted an NHL franchise.

If Seattle were to gain a team, it would become the 32nd in the league, matching the National Football League. The Columbus Blue Jackets and Minnesota Wild were the previous expansion teams to join the NHL in 2000 until Vegas this season.

Vegas has enjoyed unprecedented success in its first season, with its 87 points leading the Pacific Division by 10 points over the second-place San Jose Sharks. No NHL expansion team has ever finished with a winning record in its debut season, not including the original six franchises (Montreal, Toronto, Boston, Chicago, Detroit, New York Rangers).

In order to construct the Vegas roster last summer, the other existing teams were allowed to protect all players in their first or second seasons. From the remaining rosters, each team could protect either seven forwards, three defensemen and a goalie or eight skaters (includes forwards and defenders) and a goalie.

--Field Level Media

(This story has not been edited by economictimes.com and is auto–generated from a syndicated feed we subscribe to.)
0Comments
Comments
Add Your Comments

From Around The Web

Send Money to India for $0 + Great Exchange Rates

Vianex

Desi TV Anywhere, Anytime and Affordable

SLING INTERNATIONAL

Amazing Deals On Products You Love.

Tophatter

The 10 Most Comfortable Cars Under $30,000

Kelley Blue Book

More from The Economic Times

Cops question Boney Kapoor, hotel staff and family

Bitcoin 'inventor' faces $5b crypto swindle charge

India is bouncing back, but still not high enough

Why 'chowkidar' is silent: Rahul Gandhi on PNB fraud