Los Angeles Times

Kings finally put it all together in win

Quick turns in his best performanc­e of the season with 23 saves as L.A. dominates.

- By Jack Harris

Anze Kopitar sat stonefaced at his locker Thursday night, dazed by the Kings’ latest disappoint­ing result. In the wake of his team’s loss to the Buffalo Sabres, Kopitar didn’t want to talk about the Kings’ incrementa­l improvemen­ts, subtle earlyseaso­n growth, or occasional moments of promising play.

None of that mattered. Not with the Kings — despite having a new coach, approach and mentality — still struggling to find wins.

“We might be playing a little bit better, yeah, sure,” the Kings’ captain said. “Make no mistake. Nobody likes losing in here.”

Two nights later, the Kings ended a three-game losing streak with a dominant 4-1 win over the Calgary Flames on Saturday at Staples Center. This time, they were rewarded for a complete effort.

Tyler Toffoli scored in the opening two minutes. Jeff Carter tallied his first goal. Kopitar netted a short-handed breakaway. The Kings’ power-play converted for the first time in six games. Goalie Jonathan Quick stopped 23 shots.

After a week of squandered chances and frustratin­g setbacks, the Kings finally put together all the pieces in the finale of their five-game homestand. It was arguably their most complete game all season.

Yet, at 3-5-0, the Kings remain in last place in the Pacific Division. They’ve made small strides, but seem somewhat stuck in place. Like a group grinding on a treadmill, tangible gains have come slowly.

Entering Saturday, the Kings led the NHL in shot differenti­al and Corsi-For percentage, which measures the number of shot attempts a team creates during 5-on-5 play relative to its opponent. They largely passed the eye test too, showing progress from last season’s flat 71point campaign. But much was missing too, magnifying the foundation­al cracks that coach Todd McLellan and his team still have to fix.

“The whole group has been good,” McLellan said. “Analytical­ly — and I’m not a true, true believer in analytics — there’s a lot of positive things with our team. But the page you look at first is always the standings, and we’re not where we’d like to be.”

Special teams have been the most obvious impediment. On the power play, the Kings had been mired in an 0-for-19 slump before Ilya Kovalchuk buried a one-timer in the second period Saturday. The penalty-kill has been equally inconsiste­nt, making the Kings the only team that ranked in the bottom five in the NHL in both special-teams situations entering Saturday.

Against the Flames, both units took a step forward. “We did a great job taking away their main threats on the power play,” Quick said.

During even-strength play, the Kings had started to grasp the basics of McLellan’s high-pressure system before Saturday, yet were still prone to lapses. They were allowing too many “long opportunit­ies,” as McLellan describes them, where opponents broke out of their own end with little resistance and generated dangerous full-ice rushes.

Of the 21 five-on-five goals the Kings had surrendere­d in their first seven games, eight came on such plays. Against the Flames, however, the only goal the Kings allowed was a penalty shot late in the third. Other than that, they clamped down on Calgary’s lineup.

Most of all, the Kings hadn’t been capitalizi­ng on chances or overcoming breakdowns. Despite their volume of shots, their 7.5% shooting percentage entering Saturday was more than two percentage points below league average. Their goalies’ .845 save percentage was a distant last. In the most critical areas, they were coming up short.

“You eventually get a little bit concerned about the guys giving what they have and not getting rewarded,” McLellan said. “Will they begin to cheat? Will they take shortcuts? Will they wander from the program to try and score? They didn’t do that, so that’s a real good sign for our team.”

Instead, by blowing past the Flames, the Kings produced a glimpse of the type of future McLellan is slowly hoping to create.

“There is a clear plan,” McLellan said. “The team has to be restructur­ed. It’s trying to catch up with the modern game right now, if you will … the youthfulne­ss and creativity and the pace of the game, we’re trying to catch up in that area. Usually, when you’re doing that, you’re paying the price for championsh­ips. And that’s what’s happening here right now.”

 ?? Alex Gallardo Associated Press ?? THE FLAMES’ Sean Monahan, left, controls the puck against the Kings’ Blake Lizotte in the first period. The Kings played their most complete game of the season to beat Calgary and improve to 3-5-0.
Alex Gallardo Associated Press THE FLAMES’ Sean Monahan, left, controls the puck against the Kings’ Blake Lizotte in the first period. The Kings played their most complete game of the season to beat Calgary and improve to 3-5-0.

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