Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Kings hope interim coach Hiller can turn tide

- By Andrew Knoll Correspond­ent

The Kings have cycled through four coaches in short order.

Jim Hiller became the fourth coach the Kings have had in six seasons under the stewardshi­p of former franchise legends Luc Robitaille and Rob Blake, and he was formally introduced on Thursday as interim head coach.

While Hiller's playing career was not quite so notable, he did complete 40 of his 63 NHL games with the Kings in the 1992-93 season as a rookie on a roster that also included Blake and Robitaille. Hiller, who was an assistant under the outgoing Todd McLellan but had no head coaching experience at the profession­al level, will now make his debut behind the bench for the same franchise that drafted him back in 1989.

“I don't know how many people have done that, but it's pretty special to me,” Hiller told reporters on Thursday.

What's special about Hiller — as opposed to McLellan, whom he thanked Thursday and who once again received kind words from the Kings' veterans — remained to be seen. Blake offered an obtuse response about what to expect in terms of difference­s between McLellan and Hiller on Monday. On Thursday, Hiller used the same forward lines that McLellan had favored this season, according to multiple reports. He emphasized that he was not looking to over-tinker, despite a putrid stretch of two wins in 16 games that preceded the fortuitous victory in Nashville that capped McLellan's four-and-a-half-year tenure.

“I know people probably are saying, what are the tactics, and which things are going to change? The most important thing for me after being around the team, which played very well for the first 24 games, is getting our frame of mind back where it needs to be,” Hiller told reporters. “Because if we can help those guys get back there, we'll have time to implement some other changes that eventually you guys will say maybe they are doing something different.”

As Blake did Monday, Hiller pointed to the fact that the first 24 games of the Kings' campaign went swimmingly, with 16-4-4 mark and superlativ­e statistics at both ends of the ice. At that point, it was their opponents in Hiller's first game as head coach Saturday, the Edmonton Oilers, who had been fumbling around the ice in a manner that led to McLellan's close friend and protege,

Jay Woodcroft, being fired after a 3-9-1 start. They've since made up for lost time and then some, most recently reeling off 16 straight wins heading into the AllStar break and then losing in Vegas on Tuesday to fall a game shy of the NHL record for consecutiv­e victories.

Hiller, however, was not avoiding living in the now.

“We are a really good team. We've struggled, we're not going to hide from that,” he acknowledg­ed. “But IIn think it would be a mistake to overreact in some areas of the game where I don't think that's necessary.”

Viktor Arvidsson was skating with the team in a red, non-contact jersey, and Cam Talbot had a maintenanc­e day, per multiple reports from practice. A break from the battering of such a futile stretch may have done wonders for the minds, bodies and souls of the Kings, who last played on Jan. 31 and won't be in action again until Saturday. It would be much quicker to count the players who had not struggled to produce or

UP NEXT Saturday: Oilers at Kings, 7p.m., BSSC

seen dips in their underlying numbers than it would be to enumerate those that had.

One player that had been incapable of concretizi­ng his game, even during the most of the higher points of the Kings' campaign, was Pierre-Luc Dubois. He was the beneficiar­y of Blake, Robitaille and consultant Marc Bergervin's $68 million infatuatio­n over the summer. Hiller, who has been heralded as a strong communicat­or, hoped to improve his establishe­d rapport with the 25-yearold center whose eight-year contract and underwhelm­ing production both indicated he'd be part of the Kings for a long time, for better or worse.

“He wants to get more out of himself. He's willing to do that and we'll push him,” Hiller told reporters.

Doughty said the players understood that there were only two practices prior to the end of the Kings' break and that no one would be reinventin­g the puck in such a short period of time. He cautioned that too many changes could create an adjustment period that the Kings could ill afford in the thick of a densely packed group of teams competing for two wild-card spots.

 ?? PHOTO BY AXEL KOESTER ?? Kings interim head coach Jim Hiller said the most important thing right now for the team “is getting our frame of mind back where it needs to be.”
PHOTO BY AXEL KOESTER Kings interim head coach Jim Hiller said the most important thing right now for the team “is getting our frame of mind back where it needs to be.”

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