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Fans split after Knights fire Cassidy, hire Tortorella
Rob Gray-Imagn Images

The Golden Knights made their biggest move of the season Sunday, firing Bruce Cassidy with eight games left after a 5-12-0 slide since the Olympic break and handing the bench to John Tortorella.

The reaction came just as fast, and it did not fall into one clean lane.

Some fans called it overdue. Some called it desperation. A lot of them called it the wrong target.

Wrong guy, wrong time

That was the clearest through line in the early reaction.

Golden Knights fans were split on whether something had to change, but the strongest current was frustration that Cassidy paid for problems many believe run deeper than the bench.

On Facebook, Christine Speciale Fenton wrote, “That’s not an upgrade.”

That feeling showed up again and again. This was not quiet disagreement. It was loud pushback against both the timing and the direction.

Vegas did not make this move in a vacuum. The Knights entered Monday night at 32-26-16, sitting third in the Pacific after a hard late-season drop. Still, many fans saw the firing as a reach for urgency, not a fix for the root issue.

The heat moved upstairs

For a large group of fans, the conversation never stayed on Cassidy.

It moved quickly to roster construction, front-office decisions and a team that has felt uneven well beyond the last week.

Nick DeCorse put it bluntly on Facebook: “Cassidy was not the problem, it’s McCrimmon and his horrendous trades and contract extensions.”

That sentiment came up in different forms across multiple threads. Fans pointed to roster churn, chemistry issues and a lineup that never fully settled despite its talent.

The message was clear. This was not viewed as a coaching issue first. It was viewed as an organizational one.

The crease kept coming up

If there was one hockey reason fans returned to over and over, it was goaltending.

James Nicholls wrote, “Can’t win with sh!t goaltending. Doesn’t matter who’s behind the bench.”

That was the most common hockey explanation for the anger. Fans kept circling back to the same idea: no coach fixes inconsistent play in net with eight games left.

For many, that made the move feel misaligned with the actual problem. The frustration was less about whether change was needed and more about whether Vegas changed the right thing.

Lost the room, or lost the season?

There was another side, and it was not small.

Some fans believed the message had gone stale. Not that Cassidy forgot how to coach, but that the team had stopped responding.

Laurence Schiff wrote, “It was obvious Cassidy lost the team.”

That is the strongest argument in favor of the move. Not that Tortorella is automatically better over the long haul, but that the season had reached a point where doing nothing was no longer an option.

Vegas clearly agreed.

Tortorella as a jolt

That is how many fans seem to view the hire.

Not as a reset. Not as a rebuild. As a shock to a team that looked stuck.

Even fans unsure about the move could see the logic. Tortorella brings urgency, edge and instant credibility, especially with so little season left. Vegas also clearly valued familiarity. He has recent ties to Jack Eichel and Noah Hanifin through Team USA, and he has coached Carter Hart, William Karlsson and Brandon Saad before.

With eight games left, that matters.

A jolt, not a honeymoon

Very few fans framed Tortorella as a long-term answer.

The common read was that he is here to light a fire, not start a new era. That view fits the timing. Vegas did not make this move for symbolism. It made it because the standings, the scoring droughts and the late-season slide left it feeling like there was no softer lever left to pull.

Now the first test comes immediately.

The Golden Knights host the Canucks on Monday night at T-Mobile Arena in Tortorella’s debut behind the bench. Vancouver comes in at 21-43-8. Vegas comes in at 32-26-16 and on a three-game losing streak.

On paper, this is the right opponent for a reset. In reality, the Golden Knights have not earned the benefit of easy assumptions lately.

Not a reset, a gamble

That is where the reaction lands.

Fans are not responding like this solved everything. They are responding like the Golden Knights just pulled the loudest lever they had left.

Some believe Cassidy was scapegoated. Some believe he lost the room. Many believe the bigger problems are still in the crease, in the front office or in a roster that never fully clicked.

What almost nobody is saying is that this fixed everything.

It feels like a bet. A short runway, a louder voice and a hope that something snaps back into place before it is too late.

And if it does not, fans already know where the conversation is headed next.

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This article first appeared on Dice City Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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