NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman often says the NHL looks at four criteria when it considers putting a franchise somewhere: the market, the building, the ownership and perhaps the biggest question. Does it make the NHL stronger?
The Kraken check all those boxes.
"We're in a great city and a great sports town, and we think the League is stronger by our presence here," Commissioner Bettman said.
Like Montreal, with its history and French flair, or Nashville, with its live country music and honkytonk vibe, or Vegas, with its spectacle on the Strip, Seattle has a strong sense of place.
You can take the monorail and disembark at the foot of the Space Needle in Seattle Center, a 74-acre campus of cultural attractions, many built for the 1962 World's Fair.
You can listen to street musicians and grab a bite at food stands as you stroll through the park to the arena.
This is no cookie-cutter arena, either. It has the same low-profile, pyramid-like roof from the Seattle Center Coliseum that opened in 1962 and became KeyArena in 1994, but it's brand-new. To preserve the roof, a historic landmark, workers suspended all 44 million pounds of it on pillars, demolished everything underneath it, excavated 680,000 cubic yards of earth, built a 740,000-square-foot new arena and reattached it. The roof collects Seattle rainwater to make the ice.
The arena bowl is subterranean, so you enter near the top. But it seems submarine when you take the escalator down to the main concourse, with LED screens on the walls and even the ceiling displaying an undersea scene. It's as if you are descending into the deep, the Kraken's natural habitat.
You can sit among fans who brought their passion for other Seattle teams to the newest one. The Kraken became the 32nd team in the NHL after 32,000 people made season-ticket deposits in about a day via an online portal March 1, 2018.
Kraken CEO Tod Leiweke began the inaugural home opener by retiring No. 32 in their honor.
"Seattle, we did it!" Leiweke told the crowd.