Los Angeles Times

Kings hold a sleepover

They are the only ones who doze off, however, as Stars pounce from get-go.

- By Curtis Zupke curtis.zupke@latimes.com Twitter: @curtiszupk­e

A heavy dose of Bennadryl sent the Kings into their playoff destinatio­n.

A season’s worth of work to decide their postseason fate was essentiall­y decided when their defense fell asleep in a six-minute span Saturday.

That’s how long it took the Dallas Stars’ Jamie Benn to record a natural hat trick, in the first period, and the Kings finished with a 4-2 loss that translated to a first-round playoff matchup with the Vegas Golden Knights as the first wildcard team.

The Kings will go into it with points in eight of their final 10 games, but only their second regulation loss since March 17 will sting a bit, and they know they can’t afford lapses like that in a best-ofseven series.

“Obviously it’s not a good enough start,” Alec Martinez said. “Quite frankly, it’s embarrassi­ng. We left our goalie out to dry. That’s not fair to him.”

Martinez’s two secondperi­od goals couldn’t negate Benn, who recorded three straight goals on a redirect of Alexander Radulov’s shot-pass on a rush for a 4-0 lead that triggered one lone hat thrown onto the ice amid a smattering of boos at Staples Center.

It was an ominous sign when Stars forward Devin Shore knocked the puck free from Christian Folin and skated in to beat Jonathan Quick with a backhand nearly seven minutes into the game for the first goal.

“I think they came out way harder than us,” Adrian Kempe said. “Obviously they’re not in a playoff spot, so, I mean, I don’t know if we were thinking about that before the game, but, I mean, it wasn’t a good start.”

The Kings were horrible in their own zone and around their net to start. They were charged with six giveaways in the opening period, and it was fair to wonder whether Quick would remain in the game.

He did, and the Kings righted themselves with a pendulum-swing second period that produced Martinez’s two scores. The Kings consistent­ly set up shop in the Stars’ end, and Martinez was open to one-time the puck through a thicket of players to break the shutout early in the second period.

Martinez pulled the Kings to 4-2 on a great feed from Michael Amadio just after a Dallas penalty expired. The Kings outshot the Stars 18-2 in the period.

The Kings’ defense won’t be at full strength to start the playoffs. Derek Forbort has been ruled out and Jake Muzzin remains a question mark after he skated on his own in the morning.

But the Kings seemed ready for the serious hockey to begin, against the expansion Pacific Division-champion Golden Knights.

“I think it will be a really good matchup,” Martinez said. “It’s a tough building to play in, so you know, especially in a playoff atmosphere, the arena’s going to be buzzing. That said, I think Staples will be, too. It’s two good hockey clubs going at it.”

Fantenberg played his first game since Jan.4. Torrey Mitchell remained ill, coach John Stevens said, and was scratched. Jonny Brodzinski was recalled and played on the fourth line in place of Andy Andreoff.

 ?? Kyusung Gong Associated Press ?? KINGS LEFT WING Kyle Clifford hits the ice in the second period against the Dallas Stars at Staples Center.
Kyusung Gong Associated Press KINGS LEFT WING Kyle Clifford hits the ice in the second period against the Dallas Stars at Staples Center.

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