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Vegas and John Tortorella face another harsh NHL ruling

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Skyler Walker
May 19, 2026  (2:47 PM)
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May 1, 2026; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; Vegas Golden Knights head coach John Tortorella addresses the media after game six of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs against the Utah Mammoth at Delta Center.
Photo credit: Rob Gray-Imagn Images

John Tortorella and the Vegas Golden Knights got no relief Tuesday, as the NHL left every part of the punishment in place.

That makes this more than a playoff sideshow.

It's now a league office message, and Vegas just learned the message isn't changing.

The Golden Knights went to New York on Tuesday morning hoping to trim the damage.

Instead, the appeal was denied and the penalties stayed exactly where they were.

Tortorella remains on the hook for a $100,000 fine. Vegas also still loses its 2026 second-round draft pick after what the NHL called flagrant violations of playoff media rules.

The original issue came after Vegas closed out Anaheim 5-1 in Game 6 of the second round.

The dressing room did not open to reporters, and Tortorella also skipped his postgame availability.

What pushed this over the top was the pattern. Reports indicated the league had already issued repeated warnings before it dropped a punishment this heavy.

The NHL just told Vegas the rules still apply

That's the real story here.

Not the fine by itself, and not even Tortorella's latest stare-down with the media. It's the draft pick, because that reaches past one night and hits roster building.

As things stand now, Vegas will not pick until the third round in Buffalo on June 26.

"The Vegas Golden Knights appealed the NHL's punishment in person this morning.

It was determined that the penalties - a $100,000 fine for John Tortorella and loss of a second round draft pick - will remain as assessed."

- Emily Kaplan

The club already moved its first-rounder in the Noah Hanifin deal, which makes this hit even sharper.

That's a steep price for a contender about to open the Western Conference Final against the Colorado Avalanche on Wednesday.

It's also a bad look for a team making its fifth conference final in nine years.

Tortorella was hired on March 30 after Vegas fired Bruce Cassidy with the club still in playoff position.

Since then, he's brought edge and noise, and now some of that noise is landing on the organization itself.

The NHL didn't leave much gray area Tuesday. Vegas showed up, argued its case, and got turned back.

There may still be talk later about future compliance, but right now the league smacked down the Golden Knights again.

And this time, Vegas knows the bill is already due.