LA Kings
fromLos Angeles Times
9 hours agoKings keep it close but fall to potent Avalanche to open playoffs
The Kings lost 2-1 to the Avalanche in their playoff opener, despite a late power-play goal.
On paper, this is a team that should be taking a clear step into a new era: Anže Kopitar is nearing retirement after a successful career, Brandt Clarke and Quinton Byfield are emerging, and the front office has invested heavily in a core that's supposed to push them forward.
Entering Monday's NHL action, the Los Angeles Kings were fourth in the NHL in goals against per game (2.74), tied for eighth in save percentage (.904), ninth in shots against (1,356), and third in goals against (137). While the Kings are struggling to score goals (Los Angeles is 28th in goals for per game), they are getting good performances from their goaltending and their defence.
"I don't know that I have an answer to that to be honest, because if I did, I don't think we would keep being in the same situation every game," Warren Foegele said when asked what's missing right now. "At the end of the day, we didn't get the job done, we didn't get the two points, and it's just not good enough."
It is really frustrating when you come out on the bottom of all these games where I feel like we're playing well and we're playing good enough to win,
I don't think anybody's pretty happy about a narrative being spread like that. I think it's okay for people to critique our on-ice performance, but when it gets into family, it's pretty f****** b***s***.
Just over half of the 2025-26 season has been completed, and the Los Angeles Kings are sporting an 18-14-10 record with 46 points, good enough for the second wild card spot in the Western Conference. Looking at that from an outside lens, most would come to the conclusion that sitting in a wild card spot at the halfway mark of the season is a positive sign and one that would equate to a successful season if the trend continued.