Los Angeles Kings coach Darryl Sutter tweaked his lineup Saturday in order to shake up his team's latest 5-on-5 scoring issues. Newly acquired left wing Matt Frattin and his zero goals were scratched in favor of newly acquired tough guy Daniel Carcillo. It turned out all Sutter needed was his team's veteran core to show why they're the veteran core. Justin Williams scored twice in a span of 3:01 in the first period and assisted on Drew Doughty's game-winning goal in the third to lead the Kings to a 5-2 win against the Dallas Stars at Staples Center to open a long homestand. Since the Stanley Cup season, the Kings have increasingly talked about their confidence winning tight games, and Saturday was no different with a 2-2 score going into the third.
"What we need to do is create an identity
again on ice," Williams said. "You need to do it
every year. Whether it's a tie game going into the third [or] you're
down a goal, you need to feel like you're going to win, and tonight I
felt in this dressing room at the end of the second period that we
were confident we were going to win."
Doughty's first goal since opening night finished
off a strong game by Williams, who found a pinching Doughty on the
right side. Doughty's initial shot slipped through Dallas goalie Dan
Ellis' legs at 4:42 to break the 2-2 tie. Kyle
Clifford later scored on a wrist shot for his first goal this
season, and Matt
Greene scored an empty-netter. The three even-strength goals were
welcome for L.A., which scored six non-shootout goals during a
four-game road trip yet went 3-1-0. The Kings still have no goals
from their centers, notably Anze
Kopitar and Mike
Richards, but Kopitar had three assists.
"If you asked me that in August, I'd say
that would have been unusual," Sutter said. "Not
much I can do about it now. Mike and Kopi have been really good for
us every game. And [Colin
Fraser] goes back in as a centerman and does a (heck) of a job. I
know everything's about, from your side, it's about goals. But it's
not. It's about winning hockey games."
Similarly offensive-challenged Dallas dropped the
opening game of its back-to-back Southern California swing. The
Stars' power play largely struggled against the Kings' No.2-ranked
penalty unit and went 0-for-5. But Dallas was in this game late.
Jamie Benn's
terrific work down low led to a 2-2 tie in the second. Benn beat Jeff
Carter on a faceoff to the right of goalie Jonathan
Quick, then beat Carter to the puck behind the net for a
wraparound attempt that Rich
Peverley tapped home. Dallas was mostly frustrated watching a
potential road win slip away in the third. The Stars committed six
giveaways in the final period. The Kings had five giveaways.
"It's getting pretty sickening to all of
us," Stars forward Tyler
Seguin said. "We're just kind of giving teams wins, and
the last 20 minutes there has got to be a lot better than it was
tonight. But credit to them. They're a good, physical team and they
competed well tonight."
L.A. could have put the game away early in the
second, but Richards and Carter were stopped on breakaways by Ellis.
Richards' active stick led to both chances, he made a takeaway of
Jordie Benn
and another steal in the Stars' end to spring Carter. Williams'
second goal of the night ended the Kings' four-game power-play slump
(0-for-13). It came on a backhand past a sprawled Ellis at 19:32 with
Stephane
Robidas in the penalty box for interference. Williams tied it at
1-1 by going to the net for Jake
Muzzin's shot to bank in off his skate at 16:31. Dustin
Brown triggered the sequence when he kept in Robidas' clearing
attempt.
"I think tonight you could almost find
every defenseman that coughed one up in different situations,"
Dallas coach Lindy Ruff said. "And we had some forwards that
coughed it up. There are times when you can use the middle of the
ice, and there are times when you've got to keep it up the walls."
The Kings didn't make it a point to get Williams
the puck with the empty net. Williams has only one career hat trick,
and he admitted it crept into his mind.
"It's funny when you get one early, things
seem to slow a little bit down for you and you start making a few
more plays," Williams said. "Of course, I certainly
wanted to get that third one. I wanted to see the ice littered with
hats."
Los Angeles hardly looked like a weary team 48
hours removed from a four-game road trip, but Dallas withstood its
opening energy and scored first on Seguin's team-leading fourth goal.
Seguin brought the puck across the Kings' blue line, gave it to Jamie
Benn and went to the net to redirect Benn's shot. Dallas put 29
shots on goal but the Stars didn't think they made Quick work hard
enough.
"There's times that I think we could have
been better," Peverley said. "But we did have some
traffic. He likes to challenge the shots, so we've got to keep it in
the paint and I don't think we did it enough tonight. If he sees it,
he saves it."
Jack
Campbell served as Dallas' backup goalie for the fourth straight
game. Kari
Lehtonen has been out with a lower-body injury since Oct.11.
Doughty's 13th game-winning goal tied Steve Duchesne for second
all-time among Kings defensemen.
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