Following the season, New York real estate mogul Ralph Brent bought the team and renamed it the
New York Golden Blades. While they managed to acquire
Andre Lacroix from the
Philadelphia Blazers, he was essentially all the franchise had going for it. The team replaced their original orange and blue uniforms with purple and gold uniforms, and to coincide with the new identity, the team started the season wearing white skates with gold-colored blades. The situation improved very little from the previous season; at times, the Golden Blades played before crowds of only 500 people (in an 18,000-seat arena). Sinking in debt, Brent returned the team to the league in late November, just twenty games into the season, with a 6–12–2 record. Veteran player
Harry Howell, who had been recently picked up by the Golden Blades after being released from the
Los Angeles Kings, was elevated to
player-coach, and ordered the team's white skates painted black. After financial losses were incurred playing home games at Madison Square Garden, the WHA moved the team to
Cherry Hill, New Jersey, and renamed it the
Jersey Knights. The move marked a return of sorts to the
Delaware Valley for the WHA, which had seen the Blazers move to
Vancouver after only one season. WHA trustee Howard Baldwin was quoted as saying "Hopefully, we will be back in New York next season with a strong owner to compete in that market." Despite this, the WHA would never return to New York, getting no closer than the
New England Whalers in 1975, when that team moved from Boston to
Hartford, Connecticut. Having been locked out of Madison Square Garden just prior to their move, the players were unable to take their Blades jerseys with them. The team reverted to the previous Raiders uniforms, with the original crest replaced with the new Knights logo. The newly minted Knights soon discovered their new home,
Cherry Hill Arena, had a slope in the ice surface, which forced visiting teams to skate uphill two out of three periods. One drawback was that pucks would sometimes shoot upwards unexpectedly; one Knight was knocked cold when a would-be pass jumped up and nailed him between the eyes. Years later
Ab McDonald said, "[The ice] was so high in the middle, the short guys almost couldn’t see the other end of the ice." The arena in Cherry Hill was available because the previous pro hockey tenant, the
Jersey Devils, had folded when the
Eastern Hockey League went out of business at the end of the previous season. The arena was also closely cramped, with players not having adequate changing and dressing facilities; visiting teams had to dress at their hotel. In addition, there was no plexiglass around the playing surface. The boards in the area from face-off circle to face-off circle at each end of the ice was bordered with chicken-wire as protection. The rest of the arena had no protection above the boards. Rod Philips, the radio voice of the
Edmonton Oilers for 37 years, ending in 2011, is quoted as saying of the arena, "The press box in Cherry Hill, N.J. (across the bridge from Philadelphia) was so small that you couldn't stand up. The roof was only four feet high and you were all hunched over. When somebody shut the door, they cut off one whole end of the rink." Despite the questionable facilities, the Knights played over-.500 hockey and were in playoff contention before losing their last six games to finish 32–42–4, last in the Eastern Division. Within five weeks of the move, though, reports had already begun to state that the franchise would not stay in New Jersey beyond the end of the season, as it was clear Cherry Hill Arena was inadequate even for temporary use. Moreover, what little local interest existed in the WHA team disappeared with the nearby
Philadelphia Flyers en route to their first of two consecutive
Stanley Cup championships. Baltimore businessman Joe Schwartz purchased the team in January, fueling speculation the team might move to there, or perhaps be re-incarnated as an expansion franchise in
Cincinnati or
Indianapolis. Instead, at the end of the 1974 season, Schwartz moved the Knights to
San Diego, California, and renamed them the
San Diego Mariners. The last active player from the Raiders/Golden Blades/Knights was
Bobby Sheehan who last played in
1981–82 NHL season and played his final professional season in the
American Hockey League in 1983. ==Season-by-season record==