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Something completely unexpected just happened to the Vegas Golden Knights

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Jonathan Ouimet
June 6, 2026  (11:56 PM)
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Jun 6, 2026; Las Vegas, Nevada, USA; A Carolina Hurricanes fan looks on during the third period against the Vegas Golden Knights in game three of the 2026 Stanley Cup Final at T-Mobile Arena.
Photo credit: Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images

Brayden McNabb got introduced before Game 3 Saturday night, and the Vegas crowd made his name disappear.

You couldn't even hear it announced. That's how loud the building got when the 35-year-old defenseman skated out for the Stanley Cup Final's return to Vegas.

The backstory makes the noise make sense. McNabb took a shot off the face in Game 2 and missed part of that night in Carolina.

Two days later, he's back in the lineup wearing a full shield. No extra rest, no caution, no chance he was watching this one from the press box.

Playoff hockey produces these moments a few times a decade. A building full of people thanking one player, all at once, before puck drop.

The clip is worth your time, McNabb gliding out for the introduction while the roar swallows the announcer whole, his name completely lost in the sound.

A puck to the face couldn't keep McNabb out of the Final

Here's why that ovation wasn't just sentiment. McNabb has quietly been one of Vegas's most important players all spring.

He's a plus-10 through 16 playoff games, tops among the kind of stay-home defensemen who never show up on highlight reels. He even chipped in a shorthanded goal along the way.

At $3.65 million, he's the best kind of contract too, a veteran eating hard minutes for mid-tier money while the stars soak up the cap.

And the timing of his return matters beyond the emotion. Vegas came home tied 1-1, still chewing on the disallowed Barbashev goal and the failed challenge that flipped Game 2.

A team marinating in grievance needed something to rally around. The hockey gods handed John Tortorella a 35-year-old in a full shield. Coaches dream about speeches that write themselves like that.

Carolina, meanwhile, spent two days hearing about officiating and now walks into a building running on pure adrenaline.

Can a pregame moment actually swing a Final? Usually no. But series this tight turn on emotional inches, and Vegas just found one in its own warmup.

The shield comes off eventually. The sound of that introduction stays with McNabb forever.