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A coach built for the moment: John Tortorella and the Golden Knights’ playoff rise originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
No matter how the Vegas Golden Knights fare in these Stanley Cup Playoffs, John Tortorella is likely to be back behind the bench next season—and, truthfully, that arrangement probably works for everyone involved.
It’s not difficult to understand why. Tortorella has never really been a “rebuild” coach. That’s not his world, and it’s never really been his approach. His strength has always come from taking a team that already has a foundation and squeezing more out of it—tightening the edges, raising the standard, and making everything just a little more uncomfortable in the best possible way. The Philadelphia Flyers experienced that firsthand, for better and for worse.
None of that is meant as criticism. Tortorella remains one of the most recognizable and forceful coaching voices in the sport. But coaching, at its core, is never one-size-fits-all. Some coaches are builders—patient, developmental, willing to endure the slow burn of shaping a roster from scratch. Others are accelerators—figures who walk into an established room and immediately raise the temperature, demanding structure, urgency, and accountability from day one.
Tortorella has always lived in the second category.
Intensity Meets Context
That distinction always brings me back to something more personal. My father was a Marine Corps officer—twenty-five years of service, deeply disciplined, and the kind of man who could dissect almost anything technical with precision, especially when it came to firearms and mechanics. He started trying to coach me the moment I turned five. And to be fair, “developmental pacing” was not always his strong suit.
There were moments when people would step in and gently say, “Hey… your son is five… maybe take it down just a notch?”
Looking back, it wasn’t that anything was wrong—it was simply intensity meeting the wrong context. The same message, delivered with the same urgency, doesn’t always land the same way depending on who’s receiving it. That’s really the underlying thread here: coaching, leadership, even parenting at times, is as much about reading the room as it is about knowing the message.
MORE: Golden Knights record since hiring John Tortorella: How new Vegas coach has turned team around to set up playoffs run
Tortorella understands that better than most in the NHL. He’s not trying to manufacture identity from nothing. He’s trying to refine what already exists—sharpening habits, tightening structure, and pulling teams closer to a standard they may already know but don’t always consistently reach.
In many ways, that’s exactly why he fits this moment in Vegas.
A Calculated Shift In Vegas
The Golden Knights made a bold and widely debated decision late in the season, moving on from Bruce Cassidy with just eight games remaining. Cassidy, after all, had already delivered a Stanley Cup in 2023. But internally, something had clearly stalled. The urgency wasn’t as sharp, the edge wasn’t as consistent, and the team looked like it was running on familiar patterns rather than fresh conviction.
Since then, Kelly McCrimmon’s decision has started to feel less like a gamble and more like timing—imperfect, but intentional. Under Tortorella, Vegas closed the regular season with a 7–0–1 surge, snapping back into rhythm almost immediately and carrying that momentum straight into the post-season. That momentum hasn’t faded. The Golden Knights have already advanced to the second round after eliminating the Utah Mammoth in six games, punctuated by a composed 5–1 finish in Game 6.
What once looked like a team searching for answers now feels like one that has rediscovered its voice.
Stars Recalibrated, Not Reinvented
A big part of that shift has been the way the core has started to function more like a single unit rather than a collection of talent.
Jack Eichel finished the regular season with 27 goals and 63 assists for 90 points, while Mitch Marner added 24 goals and 56 assists for 80 points in his first season in Vegas following a sign-and-trade from Toronto. On paper, the production was strong. But at different points in the year, it didn’t always feel fully connected—like the gears were turning, but not quite locked in.
That changed quickly once Tortorella arrived.
MORE: Golden Knights vs. Mammoth schedule: Dates, times, TV channels, scores for NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs first-round series
Over the final eight regular-season games, Eichel produced 12 points (two goals and 10 assists), while Marner added nine points (four goals and five assists). The numbers matter, but what stood out more was how they arrived—quicker decisions, cleaner transitions, less hesitation. The game looked simpler, but faster.
That’s the version of Vegas that has carried into the playoffs: not rebuilt, not reimagined—just sharpened.
Trust, Goaltending, And A Turning Point
It hasn’t been limited to the skaters, either. Earlier in the season, goaltending was a legitimate question mark. Carter Hart, Akira Schmid, and Adin Hill all had stretches where consistency evaporated at the worst possible times, and it showed in the results.
Since Hart returned from a lower-body injury, however, the picture has started to stabilize in a way Vegas desperately needed.
Tortorella has seen Hart navigate pressure before—not just behind the bench in Vegas, but also in his broader career around the game, including his time as a commentator on ESPN. So when the Golden Knights found themselves trailing 2–1 in the series against the Mammoth, Tortorella was asked whether there was any consideration of pulling him.
“If there’s one player I have an advantage with here — I’m still trying to figure out the guys — but if there’s one player I do know very well, it’s him,” Tortorella said of Hart.
MORE: Carter Hart's Early Post-Season Success With The Golden Knights Is A Product Of Familiarity With John Tortorella
After watching his starter allow the first four goals of a 4–2 Game 3 loss in Salt Lake City, Tortorella said he never once considered making a change to Adin Hill, the same goaltender who helped Vegas win the Stanley Cup in 2023.
“I know Carter well enough; he wants to work through it,” Tortorella said. “I have faith in him. There was no thought of taking him out.”
That trust didn’t announce itself loudly. It didn’t need to. It simply settled into the room. And from there, the response came quickly: three straight wins, a series clinched, and a team that looked far more composed than it did just days earlier.
A System Built For Moments Like This
One of the first questions Tortorella faced upon taking over was what he planned to change. His answer, in essence, was nothing drastic. Let them play. Let them compete. Tighten the details, but don’t reinvent the group.
That restraint matters. Because this isn’t a roster in need of reinvention—it’s a roster in need of alignment.
The Golden Knights don’t require a new identity. They require consistency within the one they already have. That is precisely the kind of environment where Tortorella has historically thrived.
Vegas already has elite scoring, capable goaltending, and a blend of physicality and skill that plays well in post-season hockey. It’s not a team searching for itself—it’s a team trying to stay locked in as the stakes rise.
A Familiar Kind Of Opportunity
This is also the kind of roster that aligns naturally with Tortorella’s track record. His 2004 Stanley Cup run with the Tampa Bay Lightning came with a similar blend—high-end scoring, dependable goaltending, and a supporting cast willing to embrace structure and physicality when it mattered most.
The Golden Knights weren’t widely projected to reach this point, especially given how their regular season closed. But now, like so many playoff teams before them, they’ve quietly shifted from uncertainty to something more dangerous: belief paired with execution.
There’s a long way to go, and nothing about the post-season is linear. But Vegas has already crossed the threshold from surviving to contending.
If this run continues, it won’t just be a story about timing or talent. It will be about fit—about a coach who thrives when the foundation is already there, and a team that finally feels like it’s playing with clarity instead of hesitation.
Whatever happens next, one thing already feels clear: John Tortorella hasn’t just landed in Vegas for a moment. He’s landed in the kind of situation he’s spent his entire career preparing for.
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