Dowd didn't last long in L.A. After he had one assist in 16 games in 2017-18, the Kings traded him to the Vancouver Canucks on Dec. 7, 2017.
He spent the reason of that season in Vancouver, scored three goals in 40 games and signed with the Capitals as a free agent July 1, 2018 -- right after the Capitals defeated the Golden Knights in the Stanley Cup Final.
It was in Washington where Dowd established himself as a role player. He had 166 points (79 goals, 87 assists) in 506 games for the Capitals in the regular season, plus six points (four goals, two assists) in 40 games in the playoffs.
"I finally got my way to Washington and was able to kind of build my career there," Dowd said. "But every step of the way was a learning experience, and without those steps, you can't for sure say that I would have ended up back here anyways as the player that I was."
When the Golden Knights won the Cup in 2023, they had a fourth line with a strong identity. Afterward, they needed to build a new one. McCrimmon said they talked about trading for Colton Sissons and Cole Smith last season.
They ended up acquiring Sissons on June 30 and Smith on March 3 in trades with the Nashville Predators.
And then came Dowd.
He had some of the same core attributes he had when they considered selecting him in the expansion draft, only now he was 35, more mature, a veteran.
"When you're looking at a young guy, for me, it's, 'How does he compete? Does he play hard? Does he not back down? Does he have attributes that you can't teach?'" Dowd said. "Because I think, as you build your career in the NHL, you do learn a lot. You learn what's valuable. You learn what's going to keep you in the League, what makes you a valuable player, what gives you more ice time. I think there's just some things that are built into people that aren't built into others."
Dowd now centers an outstanding fourth line with Smith on the left wing and Sissons on the right. Like each of his linemates, he has two goals in the playoffs. He also has won 54.7 percent of his face-offs and been a key part of a penalty-killing unit that has gone 19-for-20, leading Vegas forwards in shorthanded ice time (13:36).
"It's just the little details that you know you're going to get from him," McNabb said. "That's what playoffs is, what it comes down to, the little details."
Late in Game 1 against Anaheim on Monday, Vegas was protecting a 2-1 lead until center Mitch Marner made it 3-1 with six seconds to go. McNabb was on the ice from 17:24 to 19:54 of the third period. Dowd was on the ice from 17:36 to 19:32.
"We've known Nic Dowd for quite a while," McCrimmon said. "He plays hard, and he has tremendous pride in his defensive responsibilities."
You could say the Golden Knights got the right guy twice.