This is the one every Utah Mammoth fan has been waiting for. The first home playoff game in franchise history rolls into Delta Center on Friday night with the series knotted 1-1 after the Mammoth stole Game 2 at T-Mobile Arena. The relocation from the Arizona era and rebrand to the Mammoth identity made this franchise's first playoff run a story well before the series started, and now Salt Lake gets to host its first playoff hockey. The market reflects how close these teams are, with Vegas at -112 and Utah at -108, which is essentially a pick'em with the juice leaning toward the Golden Knights by the thinnest of margins. The total sits at 5.5 and has been a coin flip through two games.
Vegas has been built for this moment. Jack Eichel is producing at a point-per-game playoff rate, Mark Stone has returned to form after his midseason injury, and Mitch Marner, acquired from Toronto in July 2025, has added a dimension to the Golden Knights' top six that the rest of the Western Conference did not see coming. Marner's two-assist night in Game 1 sparked the Vegas power play, and his chemistry with Eichel has been immediate. Adin Hill has been his usual playoff self, posting a .926 series save percentage through two games. The Golden Knights' depth down the middle with Eichel, William Karlsson, and Nicolas Roy gives them matchup flexibility that few teams can replicate.
The Mammoth's counter is young, fast, and scoring. Clayton Keller has been the engine, with a goal and three assists through two games and an ice-time average north of 22 minutes per night. Logan Cooley has grown into a legitimate top-line center, with his Game 2 overtime winner standing as one of the signature moments of the playoffs so far. Dylan Guenther's 34-goal regular season has translated to the postseason, and his one-timer on the power play is a weapon Vegas has not solved yet. Karel Vejmelka, whose .918 regular-season save percentage was a quietly elite number on a defense-first team, split the first two games with a .912 line and a standout performance in Game 2 that kept Utah in the series through a long third-period push from Vegas.
The Delta Center crowd is the wild card. Salt Lake has waited a long time for this, and the acoustics in the converted NBA building have been described by players all season as the loudest home atmosphere in the NHL outside of Winnipeg. The Mammoth's 5-on-5 numbers at home are elite, and their penalty kill has held up against better offenses than Vegas all year. If Vejmelka matches Hill save for save and the Utah top line wins its minutes against Eichel, the Mammoth send the Golden Knights back to Vegas facing a 2-1 deficit. If Eichel, Marner, and Stone convert their volume into multi-goal production and Hill shuts down the bottom six, Vegas steals back home ice and heads to Game 4 looking to put the series on ice. Either way, Salt Lake City hosts its first playoff hockey game in franchise history, and the building is going to be something to watch.