James Neal, LW/RW --He's scored at least 20 goals in each of his nine NHL seasons and offers great category coverage. Although the 41 points with the Nashville Predators last season was down from the 58 he had in 2015-16, Neal contributes on the power play (13 points) and has taken at least 200 SOG in each of the past seven full NHL seasons (202 last season). He has 506 PIM in 632 games and has been a plus player in five of the past six seasons. The plus-minus may take a hit playing for an expansion team, but the rest of the totals should remain similar.
Vadim Shipachyov, C/LW -- Although he hasn't played in the NHL, spending the past nine seasons in the Kontinental Hockey League, Shipachyov could begin the season as the No. 1 center on a line with Neal and Jonathan Marchessault. His 76 points ranked third in the KHL last season, and the 30-year-old is a proven playmaker. If Shipachyov can adjust to the North American game, he could be the top offensive threat for the Golden Knights.
Jonathan Marchessault, C/LW --It was a career year for Marchessault, who led the Florida Panthers with 30 goals and finished third with 51 points -- each NHL career highs. Selected by Vegas in the NHL Expansion Draft, he likely will play on the first line and top power-play unit, and should see an increase in the 16:54 of ice time from last season. Although 30 goals would be a bit of a reach, he could end up with 55-60 points.
David Perron, LW/RW -- He figures to fit in on the second line after finishing with 46 points (18 goals, 28 assists) with the St. Louis Blues last season. His power-play time and production could decrease, as could his SOG (151 last season). Perron offers more value if his PIMs increase (54 last season after at least 62 in each of previous three seasons) but he could be an impact player for the Golden Knights.
Reilly Smith, RW -- His offensive numbers took a hit last season with the Panthers (15 goals, 37 points after 25 goals, 50 points in 2015-16) and he went from plus-19 to minus-13, taking fewer PIM (17 last season, 31 in 2015-16). Even if Smith plays with Marchessault, he likely will put up totals similar to last season as opposed to 2015-16. He's has at least 11 PPP in each of the past four seasons but isn't likely to be on the top power-play unit, and shouldn't be drafted in the top 200.