It has been a massive success, with the Golden Knights becoming instant Stanley Cup contenders and T-Mobile Arena becoming one of the most raucous rinks in the NHL, especially in the Stanley Cup Playoffs. Turns out, it has the best of both worlds -- locals and tourists, community and Strip.
"The first year, we didn't know if we were going to win 10 games, we didn't know if we were going to have a sold-out barn and all that stuff, and look where we are now," said forward Jonathan Marchessault, who has been with the Golden Knights since the 2017 NHL Expansion Draft.
"We have the All-Star Game here, so I think the city, the organization, came a long way. We did a lot of good things. It's great for the city that it came here, and I think people are happy."
The locals clearly were a large part of the sellout crowd of 17,419. They yelled a loud "Knight!" at the usual spot in the U.S. national anthem. They cheered the Vegas representatives for the Pacific Division: DeBoer, Pietrangelo, Marchessault and forward Mark Stone. They chanted "Go Knights go!" during the final even though the Golden Knights players were gone.
The Metropolitan defeated the Pacific 6-4 in the first semifinal; the Central defeated the Atlantic Division 8-5 in the second.
But because Las Vegas is home to so many transplants and a destination for so many tourists, there was perhaps a greater variety of jerseys in the stands than ever before at an All-Star Game. The place looked like a rainbow. It wouldn't be a surprise if each of the NHL's 32 teams was represented.
Where else would you see that?
"People obviously visit Vegas quite often," Pietrangelo said. "But maybe it's someone's first time, and they get to see the environment -- one, what Vegas brings, but two, what we can bring as an organization.
"I think people who haven't been to a game here can kind of see the environment just in this small sample size, and hopefully that brings them back to maybe spend some time here in the city and get to see a regular-season game or playoff game, because that's when this city really shines."