LAS VEGAS (KTNV) — Ryan Craig will be the next head coach of the Vegas Golden Knights, the organization announced on Wednesday.
Craig spent the past three seasons as the head coach of the Henderson Silver Knights. Before that, he was an assistant coach on the Golden Knights' staff from 2017 to 2023, starting his tenure during their inaugural season and hoisting the cup in his final season as assistant coach.
The Silver Knights recorded their best season yet in 2025-26, finishing with a record of 39-21-12 and 90 points and advancing to the second round of the Calder Cup Playoffs.
Vegas Golden Knights
Silver Knights' 2025-26 season was the most successful in franchise history
Craig, 44, will be the fifth head coach in Vegas' team history. He replaces John Tortorella, the late-season hire who led Vegas to the Stanley Cup Final but made some controversial moves along the way, including costing the team a second-round draft pick for violating the NHL's media policy.
Vegas Golden Knights
McCrimmon holding press conference after Tortorella ousted from coaching staff
Before his coaching career, Craig played eight years in the NHL with the Tampa Bay Lightning, Pittsburgh Penguins and Columbus Blue Jackets.
Golden Knights general manager Kelly McCrimmon is expected to formally announce Craig's hiring at a press conference scheduled for 9:30 a.m. Thursday at City National Arena.
-
Fans celebrate as Vegas Golden Knights sweep Western Conference Finals, head for the Stanley Cup
As the Golden Knights wait to find out who they'll play next, fans are already celebrating. Cheers rang out through Toshiba Plaza. Sports Reporter Alex Eschelman shows us why they believe this is the Knights's year to bring the cup back to Vegas.
Golden Knights sweep Avalanche to advance to 3rd Stanley Cup Final in 9 seasons
The Golden Knights will get a break while they watch to see whether Carolina or Montreal emerges from the Eastern Conference Final.
Hertl’s late winner caps VGK's wild 5-3 rally, 3-0 series lead on Avalanche
Tomas Hertl weaved his way toward the slot and broke a tie at 8:21 of the third period as the Golden Knights overcame a three-goal deficit Sunday night to beat Colorado 5-3.
A 2-0 road start, then a hard lesson: The Golden Knights’ warning before Game 3
The Golden Knights will try to avoid repeating history when they won their first two games two years ago at Dallas before losing the first-round series in seven games.