Los Angeles Times

Kings’ trip ends with a downer

Rookie scores twice against Capitals, hours after his mentor is traded to Montreal.

- By Curtis Zupke

A two-goal night by rookie Austin Wagner is wasted in a 6-4 loss to the defending champions in D.C.

WASHINGTON — Austin Wagner was told to be ready to play when the Kings gathered for their morning skate.

It wasn’t a motivation­al figure of speech.

The rookie knew something was brewing, and it turned out to be his first taste of the cold realities of the NHL trade deadline. Wagner went back into the lineup Monday night hours after the Kings traded veteran Nate Thompson, his linemate and mentor, to the Montreal Canadiens.

That Venn diagram came into sharper focus when Wagner scored twice in a 6-4 loss to Washington. The Kings summoned some of their rediscover­ed resiliency but gave in to a two-goal, four-point performanc­e by Evgeny Kuznetsov that delighted the Capital One Arena crowd.

It was a downer ending to a 3-2-1 trip, a regulation loss made rougher with the departure of Thompson, a high-character, well-liked player in the Kings’ room.

“Thommer helped me a lot,” Wagner said. “Being a young guy jumping into the league as a rookie, I pretty much played with Thommer the whole time.

“He taught me a lot of things and I’m very grateful for what I’ve learned from him. He’s an unbelievab­le guy but he was a great teammate in this room, and very liked. It’s tough to lose him.”

Trevor Lewis took Thompson’s place at fourthline center in his first game since Nov. 13, with Wagner and Kyle Clifford on his wings. It was one of the Kings’ better lines, and it will have to be without Thompson, a defensive faceoff specialist who was sent to Montreal with a fifth-round draft pick for a fourth-round selection. Both draft picks are this year.

The move was expected. Thompson is on an expiring contract and is seen as a valuable rental role player to another team.

That didn’t make it easy to trade him.

“[It’s] always difficult moving good people,” general manager Rob Blake said via email. “Nate was a good pro and teammate.”

It again positions the Kings better in June’s draft. They acquired a first-round pick last month in the trade of defenseman Jake Muzzin to the Toronto Maple Leafs.

It also leaves more opportunit­y to evaluate prospects such as Wagner.

He beat defenders to the net on both of his goals when he tapped in a between-thelegs pass from Derek Forbort in the first period and put in Lewis’ feed to reduce the Kings’ deficit to 5-4 with 9:35 remaining. It was his second two-goal game.

“When you have speed, it makes such a difference nowadays, just in the way the league is set up,” coach Willie Desjardins said of Wagner.

“That’s the way the league is set up. Both those goals, he just got to the net. It’s more and more the way the game’s going.”

Kuznetsov was the star of the game, which said a ton considerin­g Alex Ovechkin notched his 38th goal on a power play in the first period for the Capitals. Kuznetsov banged in a puck kept alive by Tom Wilson in the second period; in the third period, he waited out Jonathan Quick and scored Washington’s sixth goal.

On the other side, Ilya Kovalchuk took two shots and was a minus-one in his first matchup with countrymen Ovechkin and Kuznetsov since he returned to the NHL.

“Today, yeah, we play against each other,” Kovalchuk said. “But they [Ovechkin and Kuznetsov] were much better than me, that’s for sure. I have one more game [against Washington] in L.A. now.”

The Kings need to learn how to protect a lead better in that time. Oscar Fantenberg’s second goal in as many games came on a slap shot for a 3-2 lead in the third period.

Tyler Toffoli earlier capped a four-goal opening period by the teams when he hammered in Anze Kopitar’s pass on the power play.

Throughout, it was a mixed bag of good plays and mistakes by Kings veterans and youth.

Kopitar made a stick-lift steal that led to Fantenberg’s goal. He also took two minor penalties.

Paul LaDue lost a puck battle in the corner and that led to a goal by Jakub Vrana.

“Obviously we didn’t get it done tonight,” Wagner said.

“First time playing this team, so we learned a lot. We’ll be ready to go when we play them in [seven] days.”

 ?? Al Drago Associated Press ?? ALEX OVECHKIN of Washington celebrates after assisting on a second-period goal that gave the Capitals a 4-3 lead Monday. Ovechkin notched his 38th goal of the season on a power play in the first.
Al Drago Associated Press ALEX OVECHKIN of Washington celebrates after assisting on a second-period goal that gave the Capitals a 4-3 lead Monday. Ovechkin notched his 38th goal of the season on a power play in the first.

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