The Kraken showed a four-minute video culminating in the banner unveiling. It was written by Kevin Ticen, author of a book on the Metropolitans called "When It Mattered Most: The Forgotten Story of America's First Stanley Cup Champions, and the War to End All Wars," and it was narrated by Cory Daniels, grandson of Frank Foyston.
Daniels spoke as if the late great player was speaking himself.
"Use it as inspiration," Daniels said as he announced the banner. "Two eras a century apart but forever intertwined."
Then Daniels and Barbara Foyston Daniels, daughter of Frank Foyston, stood on a perch overlooking the fans, flanked by Ron Francis, a Hockey Hall of Famer and the Kraken general manager, and Jerry Bruckheimer, a Hollywood producer and a member of the Kraken ownership group.
"Tonight, we raise their banner to fly in our arena forever, to preserve the Metropolitan legacy," Bruckheimer said, turning to Barbara Foyston Daniels.
"Go Kraken!" she said.
With that, Seattle's hockey history, from the Metropolitans, to minor league teams like the Eskimos, Seahawks, Olympics, Ironmen, Bombers and Totems, to the Thunderbirds of the junior WHL, to the Kraken, had been connected.
"I think it's important for our fans to know you guys can be amazing hockey fans because you have been," said Jonny Greco, senior vice president of game presentation and live entertainment. "That lineage is in this market already. It's in the fiber of the society here. It's been here for a while. This isn't new. This is just …
"It's returned home."