Just think of how much better the Los Angeles Kings will be once Anze Kopitar and Mike Richards really get going. L.A. somehow managed to get 10 games into the season without a goal from any of its centers, notably stars Kopitar and Richards, yet went 6-4-0. Kopitar and Richards emerged from their slumps Thursday night to save the Kings from a meltdown in a 7-4 win against the Phoenix Coyotes. Kopitar got his first goal in 27 games and made a pretty no-look assist to highlight a four-goal first period that chased goalie Mike Smith. Richards scored the game-winner shorthanded and Dwight King capped his first career hat trick with an empty-net goal as the Kings snapped the Coyotes' 5-0-2 unbeaten streak in regulation. The lack of scoring down the middle was a big storyline that Kopitar jokingly defused afterward.
"Well, [Jeff] Carter was playing center,
so we had four [goals] off the bat tonight," Kopitar said.
Phoenix erased a 4-0 deficit with two goals in a
3:55 span of the second period and two more in 59 seconds early in
the third before Richards took the puck from Radim
Vrbata and slid a backhander past Thomas
Greiss at 4:19 for his 28th career shorthanded goal, tied with
Martin St. Louis of the Tampa Bay Lightning for most among active
players. Coach Darryl Sutter has been OK with the zeroes next to
Kopitar's and Richards' goal totals because of their solid end-to-end
games, but he acknowledged it was good to see both score.
"You don't want to have to come from
behind, and you don't want to have to score the winning goal after a
four-goal lead," Sutter said. "But it was really
good to see Kopi get his first and Mike get his first and [Matt]
Frattin get rewarded and see [King] get rewarded. There's a lot of
nights where those guys both do a lot of stuff where it doesn't
matter about goals."
Sutter mixed up his lines, breaking up Kopitar and
captain Dustin
Brown. That his team scored seven goals in the first game since
he juggled the lines allowed Sutter to crack wise.
"Good thing they didn't kick a field goal
on the last play of the game," Sutter said.
Phoenix mounted a comeback on goals by Jeff
Halpern, his first as a Coyote, and Martin
Hanzal, who banked the puck in off goalie Jonathan
Quick from below the goal line in the second period and tipped in
Keith Yandle's
shot at 1:51 of the third. Coyotes captain Shane
Doan, a game-time decision because of a lower-body injury, tied
it at 2:50 when he threw the puck on net and watched it skid through
traffic and into the net to stun the Staples Center crowd. The
Coyotes' seven-game points streak effectively ended when Frattin got
his first goal with the Kings at 12:11 of the third to make it 6-4.
King hit the empty net with 22 seconds left. The roller-coaster game
didn't sit well with Doan.
"It looks like our season, where we can be
so good at times and then we can be so bad at times," Doan
said. "As leaders, we've got to talk and we've got to stick
to what's fundamentally working for us because that's really what our
games is: Keeping it simple and doing things right, the way that we
know to, instead of trying to get off our own page."
Phoenix defenseman Rostislav
Klesla left the game with a lower-body injury in the first
period. Coyotes coach Dave Tippett did not have an update on Klesla.
As far as Richards' goal, Tippett was less than pleased.
"Poor execution," he said. "You
get a couple of breaks to get yourself back in the game, and then
give one away like that. It's not the way we want to be."
The Kings' forecheck and breakouts in the first
period were reminiscent of L.A.'s 2012 Western Conference Finals win
against Phoenix. They outshot the Coyotes 15-5 and scored four goals
against a Phoenix team that had allowed a total of nine first-period
goals through 10 games. Kopitar grabbed a loose puck and wristed it
past Smith 42 seconds into the game after Antoine
Vermette took an offensive-zone holding penalty.
"It's nice," Kopitar said. "It's
been too close too many times now that it's definitely nice to get
the first one."
Kopitar also deftly slipped a pass to King off the
right boards that King shot through an unsuspecting Smith for a 2-0
lead. Jordan
Nolan made it 3-0 at 10:14 before King executed a perfect
redirect of Robyn
Regehr's point shot at 17:56 to give L.A. four goals on 14 shots.
It was the first time the Kings scored four goals in one period since
March 5, 2013, against the St. Louis Blues.
"Our team put up seven goals," King
said. "That's the first time since I've been here that we put
up that big of a number. It went up and down tonight, obviously, with
the big lead, giving it up. I think from 15 minutes left in the
third, we got back to how we play."
Phoenix went more than 12 minutes in the first and
second periods without a shot on goal, and its defense didn't give
Smith much help with eight giveaways in the opening period.
"We went out and we took a penalty in the
first shift in the offensive zone," Tippett said. "They
scored. They got momentum and they ran with it. Put us behind the
eight ball. We crawled back into it, and then we gave it away again."
Lauri
Korpikoski was scratched with an upper-body injury and is
day-to-day.
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