'We're right there.' Frustrated Kings on the brink of another first-round playoff exit.
Published in Hockey
LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles Kings coach D.J. Smith gave his team the day off Friday, but he sent his players home with a message: if they don't show up for work Sunday, they'll have the rest of the spring and summer off, too.
Players don't like to call any game a "must-win" because of the pressure it brings, but there's no other way to look at Sunday's game for the Kings. After losing the first three games of their best-of-seven playoff series with the Colorado Avalanche, the Kings are one loss away from being eliminating in the first round for a fifth consecutive season.
"Must-win game," agreed defenseman Drew Doughty, who hasn't played on a winning team in a playoff series since the Kings last won the Stanley Cup in 2014. "Everyone's going to give everything and we've got to win that one. And then hopefully go back to Denver."
The most recent loss came Thursday when the Avalanche scored two fluky goals on pucks that bounced in off the skates of Kings players and put another one into an empty net in a 4-2 victory that pushed the Kings to the brink of elimination.
"You don't like the result," Smith said. "And it's tough to swallow."
For Colorado, the best team in the NHL during the regular season, it hasn't been the most stylish of postseasons. But after a pair of hard-fought 2-1 wins at home, the Avalanche have a chance to sweep a playoff series for the first time since 2022, when they won their last Stanley Cup.
"All the games have been tight. We're right there," forward Quinton Byfield said. "Each guy, including myself, we just have to give a little bit more.
"We're doing the right things, we just have to dig in a little bit more."
It's hard to say how. The Kings' power play has been good, scoring a goal in each of the three games, and their penalty kill even better, shutting out the top-scoring team in the NHL on nine tries with a man advantage.
The Kings have been physical and fast and goaltender Anton Forsberg has been brilliant in his first career playoff series, making 83 saves in the three games. Yet none of that has paid off with a win.
"Sometimes you play real well for stretches and you don't get the results. And then you'll win a game you don't deserve to win," Smith said. "Maybe we didn't stay with it long enough."
"Those games are over with," a frustrated Byfield added. "You can't look back at those games. It's just on to the next one, that's our focus."
Doughty said the Kings need to wear down the Avalanche, something they clearly couldn't do in the two games played in Denver's mile-high altitude. They might have a better chance Sunday at sea level.
"I don't think we're creating enough Grade-A chances," he said. "They're statistically one of the best teams in the neutral zone. So for us to beat them, we've got to wear them down in the D zone, make them tired and score goals that way. We haven't done that enough."
Every team has its kryptonite and for the Kings that appears to be the first round of the playoffs. Over the past dozen seasons, the team has gone 9-24 in the postseason, taking a series to a seventh game just once in six tries. Along the way they've changed general mangers twice, changed head coaches five times and even changed their opponents, facing the Avalanche this year after losing four straight series to the Edmonton Oilers.
None of that has changed the results.
Smith, in fact, is an interim coach, having taken over for Jim Hiller with 23 games left in the regular season. He figures to be coaching for his future Sunday since a playoff sweep won't look good on his resume.
"There's no quit in there," Smith said of the Kings' locker room. "We'll get reset with practice [Saturday] and I think you're going to see our best effort.
"Now we've got to make a few changes and see if we can spark something."
If that works, the Kings will be heading back to Denver. If it doesn't, they'll be heading home for another long summer.
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