Las Vegas Review-Journal

Doughty gets one-game ban

Standout L.A. defenseman suspended for check on Carrier

- By David Schoen Las Vegas Review-journal

Every good playoff rivalry needs an antagonist. A heel. A villain.

Los Angeles’ Drew Doughty is auditionin­g forthepart.

The Kings defenseman received a one-game suspension Thursday from the NHL’S Department of Player Safety, and Doughty’s check to the head of Golden Knights forward William Carrier during Game 1 is the first major flash point in this Western Conference quarterfin­al series.

Doughty and Kings coach John Stevens are expected to comment on the suspension Friday.

“I think when things like that happen you’ve just got to continue moving forward,” Knights center Cody Eakin said. “I think you get worked up about them or start thinking about them too much, you stray away from your

KNIGHTS

ant message: The team whose central strength lies within its speed has no intention of backing down when things get testy.

In fact, the Knights made it a point to hit first.

Then the third period arrived, and one King made it a point to hit dirty.

The Knights beat the Kings 1-0 and will host Game 2 on Friday night at T-mobile Arena, where Los Angeles will be without its best defenseman because he got all riled up and took a cheap shot.

That the league’s Department of Player Safety did its job and suspended Drew Doughty for one game after his hit on William Carrier of the Knights is an equitable response and one that supports a clear mandate against hits to the head.

Doughty sitting for Game 2 is the right call. A simple fine wouldn’t have been enough.

How much it will influence the way both sides play Friday is anyone’s guess — retaliatio­n is a dangerous theory in a series where goaltendin­g suggests each game will be low scoring and close — but things are sure to get chippy again.

The side that won Wednesday thought it was a fairly physical 60 minutes.

“We were in playoff mode, and we’re going to be hard on guys when we have the opportunit­y without being stupid and taking penalties,” Knights defenseman Brayden Mcnabb said. “I don’t think it was a statement by us. We’re not really known as a physical team, but we have guys who can hit and finish checks, and that showed.”

Said defenseman Deryk Engelland: “We can definitely play that (tough) style. I think it was exactly what we expected going into the game.”

The side that lost sort of saw the Picasso of a weeping woman, um, game, differentl­y.

“I don’t want to sound disrespect­ful when I say this, but sometimes I don’t even know where they’re situated when they are marking those stats,” Kings coach John Stevens said. “I’m not sure where (127 hits) comes from, but I don’t think anybody would be playing (Friday) if those numbers were accurate.”

Said Kings winger Dustin Brown:

“The (hit stats) were (bleep).”

Maybe. Probably. But more than how a sheet of paper suggests things went, the Knights set a tone for the series that flew in the face of a theory that says the only way they can eliminate a bigger, heavier Los Angeles side is to outskate it.

Neal’s amazing shift

Vegas did all the little things — physically and skillfully — needed to win a game in which the goalies (Marc-andre Fleury and Jonathan Quick) were beyond impressive.

Take just one shift from forward James Neal.

It occurred with about two minutes remaining and the Kings trying mightily to create chances and potentiall­y tie the score. It helped that Neal is by far the smartest of the Knights’ players, and yet his ability to disrupt flow and force his man to the side and clog passing lanes and keep an active stick was impressive even for a veteran with 81 career playoff games.

It was a small but incredibly vivid example of why the Knights took the opener.

Those 127 hits?

Well, even Vegas coach Gerard Gallant raised his eyes at that.

“When I see 68-59 (in hits), I sort of … I don’t buy it,” he said. “I mean, if they’re counting every bump, then fine. Jonathan Marchessau­lt — when he gets eight hits — I mean, he finished some checks …”

Yeah, nobody is confusing the Knights’ Marchessau­lt with Matt Martin.

And yet nobody can deny this: The Knights, win or lose the series, survive and advance or make vacation plans, sent a message in Game 1 that they won’t be backing down from a physical standpoint, no matter what the other guys thought.

“Some buildings,” Brown said, “you can kill a guy and not get credit for a hit.” I suppose it’s like that Picasso.

All depends on how you look at things.

Contact columnist Ed Graney at egraney@reviewjour­nal.com or 702383-4618. He can be heard on “The Press Box,” ESPN Radio 100.9 FM and 1100 AM, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through Friday. Follow @edgraney on Twitter.

 ?? Jacobson ?? The Associated Press South Carolina’s A’ja Wilson, right, and league president Lisa Borders after the Aces selected Wilson with the first overall pick in the WNBA draft on Thursday in New York.
Jacobson The Associated Press South Carolina’s A’ja Wilson, right, and league president Lisa Borders after the Aces selected Wilson with the first overall pick in the WNBA draft on Thursday in New York.
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