The
Los Angeles Kings are a professional ice
hockey team based in Los Angeles
, California
. They are members of the
Pacific Division of the
Western Conference of the
National Hockey League (NHL).
Founded on
February 9, 1966, when Jack Kent
Cooke was awarded an NHL expansion franchise for Los Angeles,
the Kings called the The Forum
in Inglewood, California
(a suburb of Los Angeles) their home for thirty-two
years until they moved to Staples Center
in Downtown Los Angeles
to start the 1999–2000 season.
The Kings have not had a great deal of success in their history,
winning their division just once in
1990–91, and failing to get out
of the first round of the playoffs twelve times in the twenty-four
seasons they qualified for post-season play, advancing past the
second round just once. Indeed, the high point in Kings franchise
history was when they won their conference championship for the
only time, advancing to the Stanley Cup Finals in the
1992–93 season only to lose the
series to the
Montreal Canadiens
in five games.
Franchise history
The "Forum Blue and Gold" years (1967–68 to 1987–88)
Prior to the Kings' arrival in the Los Angeles area, both the
Pacific Coast Hockey
League (PCHL) and the
Western Hockey League
(WHL) had several teams in California, including the PCHL's Los
Angeles Monarchs of the 1930s and the WHL's
Los Angeles Blades of the 1960s. When the
NHL decided to
expand for the 1967–68
season amid rumblings that the WHL was proposing to turn itself
into a major league and compete for the
Stanley Cup, Canadian entrepreneur
Jack Kent Cooke paid the NHL $2 million to
place one of the six expansion teams in Los Angeles. Los Angeles
has a large number of expatriates from both the Northeastern United
States and Canada, which Cooke saw as a natural fan base.

LA Kings primary logo from
1967–82.
Cooke was thus awarded one of the six new NHL expansion franchises,
which also included the
California Seals,
Minnesota North Stars,
Philadelphia Flyers,
Pittsburgh Penguins and
St. Louis Blues. He named his team
the Kings, and picked the original team colors of purple (or "Forum
Blue," as it was later officially called) and gold because they
were colors traditionally associated with royalty. The same color
scheme was worn by the
Los Angeles
Lakers of the
National Basketball
Association (NBA), which Cooke also owned.
Cooke
wanted his new NHL team to play in the Los Angeles
Memorial Sports Arena
, home of the Lakers. But the Los Angeles
Coliseum Commission, which manages the Sports Arena and the
Los Angeles
Memorial Coliseum
to the present day, had already entered into an
agreement with the Blades (whose owners had also tried to land the
NHL expansion franchise in Los Angeles) to play their games at the
Sports Arena. Frustrated by his dealings with the Coliseum
Commission, Cooke said,"I am going to build my own arena...I've had
enough of this balderdash."
Construction on Cooke's new arena, the Forum,
was not yet complete when the 1967–68 season began, so the
Kings opened their first season at the Long Beach Arena
in the neighboring city of Long
Beach
on October 14, 1967, defeating the Philadelphia Flyers 4–2. For the
next two months, the Kings played their home games both at Long
Beach and at the Sports Arena. The "Fabulous Forum" finally opened
its doors on December 30, 1967, with the Kings being shut out by
the Flyers, 2–0.
LA Kings primary logo from 1982–88.
The Kings made the Forum their home for the next 32 seasons.
Players like
Bill "Cowboy" Flett,
Eddie "The Jet" Joyal,
Eddie "The Entertainer" Shack, and
Real "Frenchy" Lemieux helped introduce
the Los Angeles area to the NHL in the team's first few seasons.
Such player nicknames were the brainchild of none other than Cooke
himself.
In their first season, the Kings finished in second place in the
Western Division, just one point behind the Flyers. The Kings were
the only expansion team that had a winning record at home, but were
eliminated in the first round of the playoffs by the
Minnesota North Stars, losing the
seventh game at The Forum on April 18, 1968, 9–4. In their second
season behind head coach
Red Kelly, the
Kings finished fourth in the West Division—the final playoff berth.
But after eliminating the Oakland Seals in the first round of the
playoffs in seven games, the Kings were swept out of post-season
play in the second round by the
St. Louis Blues.
After two fairly successful seasons, the Kings hit upon hard times,
mostly due to poor management. Kings general managers established a
history of trading away first-round draft picks, usually for
veteran players (many of them NHL stars on the downside of their
careers), a problem that would hinder the franchise for years to
come. The Kings' attendance also suffered during this time, leading
Cooke to muse that the reason so many Northeasterners and Canadians
moved to Southern California was that "they hated hockey."
In 1972, the Kings moved to bring some credibility back to the
franchise when they hired former
Toronto Maple Leafs winger Bob
Pulford as their head coach. It took him just two seasons to
lead the Kings back to the playoffs and in 1974, they faced the
Chicago Blackhawks, only to be
eliminated in five games. Pulford eventually led the team to three
of the most successful seasons in franchise history, including a
105-point season in
1974–75 that is still a franchise
record.

LA Kings crown logo, used on their
jerseys from 1967–88.
In 1973, the Kings hired
Bob Miller as the their
play-by-play announcer, and he has held that post continuously
since that time. Miller, considered to be one of the best hockey
play-by-play announcers in the NHL, is often referred to as the
"Voice of the Kings."
He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of
Fame
on November 13, 2000, and his first book, Bob
Miller's Tales of the Los Angeles Kings, was published in
2006.
After being eliminated in the first round of the playoffs in both
1973–74 and 1974–75, the
Kings moved to significantly upgrade their offensive firepower when
they acquired center
Marcel Dionne on
June 23, 1975, in a trade with the
Detroit Red Wings. Dionne was already a
superstar in the NHL and he made an immediate impact in the
1975–76 season, scoring
40 goals and adding 54 assists for 94 points in 80 regular season
games. He led the Kings to a 38–33–9 record (85 points), earning
them a second place finish in the
Norris
Division.
Behind Dionne's offensive prowess, the strong goaltending of
Rogie Vachon, and the speed and
scoring touch of forward
Butch Goring,
the Kings swept the
Atlanta Flames
out of the first round of the playoffs, but were eliminated in the
second round by the
Boston Bruins in
seven games. The Kings would defeat the Flames and lose to the
Bruins in the following year's playoffs as well.
On January 13, 1979, Dionne found himself on a new line with two
young, mostly unknown players: second-year right winger
Dave Taylor and left winger
Charlie Simmer, who had been a career
minor-leaguer. This line combination, known as the "Triple Crown
Line," would go on to become one of the highest-scoring line
combinations in NHL history.
After the Triple Crown Line's first season together, Dr.
Jerry Buss purchased the Kings, the Lakers, and
the Forum for $67.5 million, but the Simmer-Dionne-Taylor
combination remained intact. The next season, the Triple Crown Line
dominated the NHL, scoring 146 goals and 182 assists, good for 328
points. The entire line, along with goalie
Mario Lessard, was selected to play in the
NHL All-Star
Game that season, which was played at the Forum. In that
1979–80 season, Dionne
won the
Art Ross Memorial
Trophy for winning an NHL scoring title that season with 137
points on 53 goals and 84 assists. But even with the Triple Crown
Line's ability to dominate, the Kings still could not get out of
the first round of the playoffs until
1982.
That year, the Kings opened the playoffs against the
Edmonton Oilers, who were led by a young but
fast-rising star by the name of
Wayne
Gretzky. Gretzky was only in his third year in the league, but
he dominated the NHL like no other had before from the moment he
stepped onto NHL ice in his rookie season. By the
1981–82 season, he was already
the most dominant player in the league, and had made the Oilers one
of the elite teams in the NHL, on their way to winning four
Stanley Cup championships in the 1980s.
The Oilers finished with 111 points, the second-best record in the
league, while the Kings barely made the playoffs with only 63
points. The Kings won Game 1 in Edmonton on April 7, 1982, 10–8, in
the highest scoring Stanley Cup Playoff game ever. The Oilers
recovered to win in overtime in Game 2, and the teams headed to Los
Angeles for Games 3 and 4.
Game 3 would be one of the most amazing in hockey history and was
later dubbed the "
Miracle on
Manchester" (the Kings arena, the Forum, was on Manchester
Boulevard). In that game, played on April 10, 1982, Gretzky led the
Oilers to a commanding 5-0 lead after two periods and it seemed
like the Kings were headed for a blowout loss. But the Kings began
an unbelievable comeback in the third period, tying the game on a
goal by left winger
Steve Bozek at 19:55
of the third period and sending the game into
overtime.
Bozek's goal set the stage for what was to come. At 2:35 of the
overtime period, Kings left winger
Daryl
Evans fired a slap shot off a face-off in the right circle of
the Edmonton zone, beating Oilers goaltender
Grant Fuhr over his right shoulder to give the
Kings an incredible come-from-behind, overtime victory, 6-5. The
Miracle on Manchester, the greatest comeback in NHL playoff
history, is also the greatest moment in Kings franchise history as
of 2007. Not only did the Kings complete a miraculous comeback
against the vaunted Oilers, but they also went on to eliminate them
from the playoffs in five games.
Despite Dionne's leadership, the Kings missed the playoffs in the
next two seasons, and were quickly swept out of the playoffs by the
Oilers in
1985, when the
Oilers won their second straight Stanley Cup championship. Dionne's
time with the Kings ended on March 10, 1987, when he was traded to
the
New York Rangers. But by this
time, the Kings had new skaters to help lead them into the next
decade, including star forwards
Bernie
Nicholls,
Jimmy Carson,
Luc Robitaille, and defenseman
Steve Duchesne.
Even before the Dionne trade the Kings were sent reeling when coach
Pat Quinn signed a contract
to become coach and general manager of the
Vancouver Canucks with just months left on
his Kings contract.
NHL President
John Ziegler
suspended Quinn for the rest of the season and barred him from
taking over Vancouver's hockey operations until June. Ziegler also
barred him from coaching anywhere in the NHL until the
1990–91 season. In Ziegler's
view, Quinn's actions created a serious conflict of interest that
could only be resolved by having him removed as coach.
Despite these shocks, the Kings made the playoffs in the next two
seasons, but they were unable to get out of the first round. Part
of the problem was that the way the playoffs were structured (teams
were bracketed and seeded by division) made it very likely that
they would have to get past either the powerful Oilers or
Calgary Flames (or both) to reach the
Conference Finals. In fact, the Kings faced either the Oilers or
the Flames in the playoffs four times during the 1980s.
However, the
1988–89
season would be a big turning point for the franchise.
Silver and Black Era (1988–89 to 1997–98)
In 1987, coin collector
Bruce McNall
purchased the Kings from Buss, and he turned the team into a
Stanley Cup contender almost overnight on August 9, 1988, when he
acquired the league's best player, Gretzky himself, in a
blockbuster trade with the Oilers that rocked the hockey world,
especially north of the border, where Canadians mourned the loss of
a player they considered a national treasure.
McNall also changed
the team colors to silver and black (which was a take on the era's
sports logo sales and the NFL's Los Angeles Raiders, who played up the road
at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum
).
In Gretzky's first season with the Kings, he led the team in
scoring with 168 points on 54 goals and 114 assists, and won his
ninth
Hart Memorial Trophy as
the league's
Most Valuable
Player. He led the Kings to a second-place finish in the
Smythe Division with a 42-31-7
record (91 points), and they ranked fourth in the NHL
overall.
The Kings faced Gretzky's old team, the Oilers, in the first round
of the 1989 playoffs. They fell behind 3 games to 1, but rallied to
take the series in seven games, helped in no small part by nine
goals from
Chris Kontos, a little-known
player who had just recently been called up from the minor leagues.
However, the Kings were quickly swept out of the playoffs in the
second round by the eventual Stanley Cup champion Flames.
The
next season saw
Gretzky become the league's all-time leading scorer. On October 15,
1989, in Edmonton, he assisted on a
Bernie Nicholls goal to tie
Gordie Howe's career record of 1,850 points,
then broke it late in the contest on a game-tying goal against
Bill Ranford. The goal forced overtime,
where Gretzky capped a spectacular night by scoring again to win
the game for Los Angeles. At season's end, the Kings finished
fourth and faced the defending champion Flames in the first round.
This time, they defeated Calgary in six games, two of which had
dramatic overtimes — Game 3 was won with a shorthanded goal by
Tony Granato, and Game 6 ended with a
strange goal by
Mike Krushelnyski
while he was flat on his back. However, the Kings were swept in the
second round by the eventual champion Oilers, who were seeking
revenge for the loss of the previous year.
Gretzky spearheaded the Kings to their first (and at present, only)
regular-season division title in franchise history in the
1990–91 season with a 46-24-10
record (102 points, the second best point total in franchise
history).
Notably, it was the first time in 10 years
that a team from Alberta
had not
finished first in the Smythe. However, the heavily favored
Kings struggled in the playoffs, winning the first round against
the
Vancouver Canucks in six games
but losing a close series against Edmonton in the second round that
saw four games go into overtime. The
1991–92 season, the Kings' 25th
as a franchise, witnessed eight Kings players score over 20 goals;
Gretzky himself had a then-career low in scoring yet still finished
third in the league behind
Pittsburgh Penguins teammates
Mario Lemieux and
Kevin Stevens. Despite this, Los Angeles again
failed to thwart their Edmonton rivals in the post-season, losing
to the Oilers in the first round. This marked the third straight
year that the Gretzky-led Kings were eliminated from the playoffs
by Gretzky's former teammates.
The Kings would reach new heights in the
1992–93 season, but the campaign
started badly when it was learned that Gretzky had suffered a
career-threatening herniated thoracic disk before the season began.
The concern was not mainly whether Gretzky would be able to play
that season, but if he would ever be able to play again. But even
without their captain and leading scorer, the Kings got off to a
blistering 20-8-3 start, with left-winger
Luc Robitaille, who won the
Calder Memorial Trophy as the
1986–87's NHL
Rookie of the Year, filling in as captain for the
ailing Gretzky. Robitaille led the team until Gretzky returned
after missing the first 39 games. Robitaille would go on to retire
at the end of the 2005–06 season as the highest-scoring left winger
in
National Hockey League
history.
Robitaille and Gretzky, along with former Oilers' winger
Jari Kurri, forwards
Tony
Granato and
Tomas
Sandstrom, defensemen
Rob Blake,
Marty McSorley, and
Alexei Zhitnik, and goalie
Kelly Hrudey, guided the Kings through a rough
middle portion of the season until they found their game once again
in the last three months of the campaign to qualify for post-season
action. Although Gretzky came back to score 16 goals and 49 assists
(65 points) in just 45 games, it was Robitaille who was the Kings'
impact player that season, leading the team in scoring with 63
goals and 62 assists (125 points) in 84 regular season games,
setting new NHL all-time records for goals and points scored by a
left winger in a single season. The Kings finished with a 39-35-10
record (88 points), clinching third place in the Smythe
Division.
First-year head coach
Barry Melrose
had his team's offense running on all cylinders when the 1993
playoffs began, and they scored an amazing 33 goals in their
first-round series against the
Calgary
Flames.
In the second round, the Kings faced the
heavily-favored Vancouver Canucks,
a team that had beaten the Kings rather handily five times in seven
games during the regular season, and had not lost to the Kings in
their four meetings in Vancouver
. But the Kings would go on to eliminate the
Canucks in six games, with the pivotal victory coming in Game 5 at
Vancouver, which was tied 3-3 at the end of regulation play. The
teams were still tied after the first overtime period, but winger
Gary Shuchuk scored at 6:31 of the
second overtime period, giving the Kings a 3-2 series lead, and
dealing the Canucks an emotional and, as it turned out, fatal
blow.
In the Campbell Conference Finals, the Kings were even more of an
underdog against the
Doug Gilmour-led
Toronto Maple Leafs. But with
Gretzky at the helm, the Kings eliminated the Leafs in a
hard-fought seven-game series that included two overtime games and
a Game 6 win for the Kings, who were facing elimination after
losing Game 5 in overtime—they trailed the Leafs in the series,
3-2. In Game 6, Toronto scored two third period goals and tied the
game at 4-4 at the end of regulation play. But in overtime, Luc
Robitaille fed Gretzky a perfect pass and Gretzky scored to give
his team a dramatic 5-4 victory and send the teams back to Toronto
for a Game 7. In the final contest, Gretzky scored a
hat trick (three goals) and had an assist to lead
the Kings to a 5-4 win and a berth in the Stanley Cup Finals for
the first time in franchise history.
In the Stanley Cup Finals, the Kings faced the
Montreal Canadiens, who had breezed
through the playoffs and were well-rested. The Kings defeated the
Canadiens in Game 1, 4-1. Game 2, however, proved to be the turning
point in the series. Late in the contest, with the Kings leading by
a score of 2-1, Canadiens coach
Jacques
Demers requested a measurement of Kings defenseman Marty
McSorley's stick blade. His suspicions proved to be correct, as the
curve of blade was too great, and McSorley was penalized. The
Canadiens pulled their goalie,
Patrick
Roy, giving them a two-man advantage, and
Eric Desjardins scored on the resulting
power play to tie the game. Montreal went on to win the game in
overtime on another goal by Desjardins, and the Kings never
recovered. They dropped the next two games in overtime, and were
shelled 4-1 in Game 5 as the Canadiens won their 24th Stanley Cup
in franchise history.
Despite the stinging defeat at the hands of the Canadiens in the
finals, Gretzky and the Kings had generated excitement about hockey
and the NHL that had never been seen before in Southern California.
As soon as Gretzky donned a Kings jersey, the Forum was sold out
for every game — virtually overnight, a Kings game became the
hottest ticket in town.
The popularity of Gretzky and the Kings also
led to the NHL awarding an expansion team to Anaheim,
California
; in 1993
the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim (who became the Anaheim Ducks on June 22, 2006) would become
the Kings nearest rival, just 35 miles to the south.
Gretzky's
popularity in Southern California also led to the NHL expanding or
moving into other Sun
Belt
cities such as Phoenix, Dallas,
Tampa, Miami, and Nashville.
McNall's profile also rose during this time. In 1992, he was
elected chairman of the NHL's Board of Governors, the second-most
powerful post in the league. His support of
Gary Bettman tipped the scales in favor of
Bettman's election as the league's first
Commissioner.
However, only two
years later, McNall was forced to sell the team to IDB
Communications founder Jeffrey Sudikoff and former Madison
Square Garden
president Joseph Cohen in the wake of a federal
investigation into his financial practices. He ultimately
pled guilty to five counts of conspiracy and fraud, and admitted to
obtaining $236 million in fraudulent loans from six banks over 10
years.
It later emerged that McNall had grossly mismanaged the Kings'
business affairs. At one point, Cohen and Sudikoff were even unable
to meet player payroll, and were ultimately forced into bankruptcy
in 1995. They were forced to trade many of their stronger players,
resulting in a roster composed of Gretzky, Blake, and little else.
The Kings missed the playoffs for four seasons, from
1993–94 to
1996–97.
Staples Center era (1998–present)
Phillip Anschutz and Edward Roski
bought the Kings out of bankruptcy court in October 1995 and began
a rebuilding phase. Meanwhile, Gretzky, who was by this time on the
downside of his career, stated publicly that he wanted the team to
acquire a forward capable of scoring fifty goals per season and an
offensive defenseman. If they failed to do that, he wanted to be
traded to a team that was a legitimate Stanley Cup contender.
After all he had done for the game by that time, Gretzky wanted
another chance to win an elusive fifth Stanley Cup before
retirement. But his public statements forced the Kings' hand, since
no team would now give them equal value in a trade because of his
demands — the Kings would be at a huge disadvantage in any trade,
and this would badly hurt their rebuilding program.
On February 27, 1996, Gretzky was traded, this time to the
St. Louis Blues, for forwards
Craig Johnson,
Patrice Tardif,
Roman
Vopat, a first-round pick in the
1997 draft (
Matt
Zultek) and a fifth-round choice in the
1996 draft (Peter Hogan). None became
stars for the Kings, although Gretzky himself was an unrestricted
free agent by season's end, and only played 18 regular season games
for the Blues. Like
Marcel Dionne
before him, Gretzky ended up with the
New York Rangers.
Shortly after Gretzky was traded, the often-maligned general
manager Sam McMaster was fired and was replaced by former Kings
winger
Dave Taylor. But the
rebuilding phase for Taylor was a tough one, as the Kings continued
to flounder—they failed to make the playoffs until the
1997–98 season. After another
disappointing season in
1998–99, then-head coach
Larry Robinson, who also played three seasons
for the Kings from 1989–92 and had been an assistant coach on the
New Jersey Devils'
1995 Cup team, was fired.
Taylor turned to
Andy
Murray, who became the Kings' 19th head coach on June 14, 1999.
Taylor's hiring of Murray was immediately criticized by media
across North America because of Murray's perceived lack of
experience — up to that point, his only head coaching experience
had been at the international level with the Canadian National Team
and at the US high school level. Indeed, Taylor took a gamble on
Murray, hoping it would pay off.
But Taylor was not finished dealing that summer. Shortly after
hiring Murray, Taylor acquired star right-wing
Zigmund Palffy and veteran
center Bryan
Smolinski on June 20, 1999, in exchange for center prospect
Olli Jokinen, winger prospect
Josh Green, defenseman prospect
Mathieu Biron and the Kings' first-round pick
in the
1999 NHL Entry
Draft.
The Kings
also made an even bigger move in 1999, as they left the Great
Western Forum
and moved to Staples Center
in downtown Los Angeles
, which was built by Anschutz and Roski.
Staples Center was a state-of-the-art arena, complete with luxury
suites and all the modern amenities that fans and athletes would
want in a brand-new facility.
With a new home, a new coach, a potential 50-goal scorer in the
fold and players such as
Rob Blake,
Luc Robitaille,
Glen Murray,
Jozef Stumpel,
Donald Audette,
Ian Laperriere, and
Mattias Norstrom, the Kings improved
dramatically, finishing the season the 1999–2000 season with a
39-31-12-4 record (94 points), good for second place in the
Pacific Division. But in the
2000 playoffs, the Kings were once again eliminated in the first
round, this time by the
Detroit Red
Wings in a four-game sweep.
The
2000–01 season was a
controversial one, as fans began to question AEG's commitment to
the success of the Kings because they failed to significantly
improve the team during the off-season. Adding fuel to the fire was
the February 21, 2001, trade of star defenseman
Rob Blake, who had won the
James Norris Memorial Trophy as
the NHL's best defenseman in
1998.
In that deal, the Kings sent Blake and center
Steven Reinprecht, to the
Colorado Avalanche in exchange for right
wing
Adam Deadmarsh, defenseman
Aaron Miller, center prospect
Jared Aulin and a first-round pick in the
2001 NHL Entry Draft (
Dave Steckel). Deadmarsh and Miller became
impact players for the Kings, who finished the 2000–01 season with
a 38-28-13-3 record (92 points), good for a third place finish in
the Pacific Division and another first-round playoff date with the
Detroit Red Wings.
The
heavily-favored Red Wings — many predicted another four-game sweep
— made easy work of the Kings in Games 1 and 2 at the Joe Louis
Arena
, but the Kings got back in the series with a 2-1
win in Game 3 at Staples Center.
In Game 4, the Red Wings took a commanding 3-0 lead after two
periods, seemingly restoring order to a series they were supposed
to win easily. And in the third period, it looked like nothing
would change. But all that set the stage for yet another
unbelievable playoff comeback for the Kings, highly reminiscent of
the "Miracle on Manchester," back in 1982. Seldom-used forward
Scott Thomas, a career
minor-leaguer, scored a power play goal at 13:53, to give the Kings
a bit of life. The Red Wings were called for a penalty with just
under three minutes to play and Kings' coach Andy Murray gambled
and pulled his goalie to give his team a two-man advantage. The
gamble paid off as
Jozef Stumpel would
follow with another power play goal at 17:33. Finally,
Bryan Smolinski tied the game at the 19:07
mark. In the overtime, Deadmarsh stole the puck from Red Wings'
star defenseman
Chris Chelios in the
right corner behind the Detroit net, and threw a centering pass to
center
Eric Belanger, who
scored the game-winning goal at 2:36 to lift the Kings to a
miraculous come-from-behind win, now known as the "Frenzy on
Figueroa," or the "Stunner at Staples." That amazing win took all
the wind out of the Red Wings' sails, and the Kings eliminated them
in Game 6 in Los Angeles, having won four straight games after
going down 2-0 in the series. It was the Kings' first playoff
series win since 1993.
In the second round, the Kings went up against another elite team,
the
Colorado Avalanche, led by
superstars like
Joe Sakic,
Peter Forsberg,
Patrick Roy,
Ray
Bourque, and of course,
Rob Blake. The
Kings took the eventual champions to seven games but lost the
series, 4-3.. The most memorable game of that series was game 6.
After the Kings fell behind 3 games to 1, they defeated the
Avalanche in Colorado in game 5 to stave off elimination. Back in
L.A. for game 6, goalies Patrick Roy of Colorado and Felix Potvin
of the Kings were brilliant as the teams battled to a 0-0 tie.
Through one overtime they played but still nobody could score.
Finally the Kings got one past hall of famer Roy in the second
overtime for a 1-0 win.
The
2001–02 started off
with tragedy as team scouts
Garnet "Ace"
Bailey and Mark Bavis were both casualties of the
September 11th attack. The team
honored the two by wearing "AM" patches on their jerseys. Earlier
in the season, the team acquired
Jason
Allison who was involved in a contract dispute along with
Mikko Eloranta from the
Boston Bruins in return for
Jozef Stumpel and
Glen Murray. At mid-season they
held the
2002
NHL All-Star Game while still fighting for a playoff spot in
which they clinched seventh place in the Western Conference where
they were matched with the heavily-favored Avalanche. After being
bounced out of the playoffs in the first round by the Avalanche,
the next two seasons would be major disappointments, as the team
failed to make the playoffs in both seasons.
Even though the Kings refused to use it as an excuse, injuries were
the primary reason for the team's failures. In
2002–03, the Kings just missed
breaking the unofficial NHL record for the most man-games lost to
injury in a season with 536. But they would easily surpass the
record in
2003–04 with
629 man-games lost.
Following the resume of play after the
2004–05 NHL lockout, the Kings
acquired
Valeri Bure,
Jeremy Roenick and
Pavol Demitra for the
2005–06 season. Los Angeles began
the new season strong, but the second half of the season saw the
Kings once again stumble badly, freefalling from second in the
Western Conference in early January to tenth place. On March 21,
2006, the team fired head coach
Andy Murray, replacing him with
interim head coach
John Torchetti.
With three games left in the season, Luc Robitaille, the team's
all-time leading scorer and the NHL's all-time highest-scoring left
winger, announced that, at the end of the year, he would be
retiring from pro hockey.
Just one day after the end of the Kings' 2005–06 regular season,
AEG decided to clean house. On April 18, 2006, President/Hockey
Operations and General Manager
Dave
Taylor and Director of Player Personnel Bill O'Flaherty were
relieved of their duties, and Vice President and Assistant General
Manager Kevin Gilmore was re-assigned to other duties within AEG.
Torchetti and assistant coaches
Mark
Hardy and Ray Bennett, along with goaltending consultant Andy
Nowicki, were also fired. Kings CEO Tim Leiweke also announced that
he would no longer be the team's Chief Executive Officer.
On April 21, 2006, the Kings signed
Philadelphia Flyers scout and former
San Jose Sharks general manager Dean
Lombardi as President and General Manager. He was signed to a
five-year contract, signaling big changes in the near future for
the franchise. Soon after he was hired, Lombardi quickly began to
revamp the Kings' hockey operations and just barely over one month
into his tenure as President and General Manager, on May 22, 2006,
he hired
Marc Crawford to be the
Kings' 21st head coach.
There were few highlights during the
2006–07 season. On January 13,
2007, the Kings made hockey history by putting
Yutaka Fukufuji in goal for the third period
of the game with the
St. Louis
Blues. This marked the first time in hockey history that a
Japanese-born player played in an NHL regular season game. On
January 20, 2007, the Kings retired Luc Robitaille's jersey in an
hour-long ceremony prior to the game with the
Phoenix Coyotes. It was the fifth Kings
jersey to be retired by the team.
In the 2007–08 off-season, the Kings signed six unrestricted free
agents, including center
Michal
Handzus, left wings
Ladislav Nagy
and
Kyle Calder, and defensemen
Tom Preissing,
Brad
Stuart and
Jon Klemm.
However, despite
opening the season with a win against the defending Stanley Cup champion Anaheim Ducks in the first NHL regular season
game in Europe at the new O2 Arena
(also owned by AEG) in London
, England
, the new acquisitions did little to change the
Kings' fortunes as the team finished with the second worst record
in the league. On June 10, 2008, the team announced the
firing of head coach Marc Crawford.
In the
2008 NHL Entry Draft,
the Kings had a busy day, starting with a 3-way trade with the
Calgary Flames and the
Anaheim Ducks. The Kings traded
Mike Cammalleri to the Flames, and the 28th
overall pick to the Ducks. The Kings received the 12th overall pick
(which eventually was traded to the
Buffalo Sabres for the 13th overall pick).
The Kings used the 2nd overall pick to select defenseman
Drew Doughty, and the 13th overall pick to
select
Colten Teubert.
On July 17, 2008, the Kings hired
Terry
Murray, who became the 22nd head coach in franchise history. on
October 8, 2008, right wing Dustin Brown was named as the Kings’
fifteenth captain in franchise history. Brown, 23, is also the
youngest captain and the first American-born captain in Kings’
history.
Season-by-season record
This is a partial list of the last five seasons completed by
the Kings. For the full season-by-season history, see
Los Angeles Kings
seasons
Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses,
T = Ties, OTL = Overtime losses/Shootout losses, Pts = Points, GF =
Goals for, GA = Goals against, PIM = Penalties in minutes
| Season |
GP |
W |
L |
T1 |
OTL |
Pts |
GF |
GA |
PIM |
Finish |
Playoffs |
| 2004–05 |
Season cancelled due to 2004–05 NHL Lockout |
| 2005–061 |
82 |
42 |
35 |
-- |
5 |
89 |
249 |
270 |
1440 |
4th, Pacific |
Did not qualify |
| 2006–07 |
82 |
27 |
41 |
-- |
14 |
68 |
227 |
283 |
1215 |
4th, Pacific |
Did not qualify |
| 2007–08 |
82 |
32 |
43 |
-- |
7 |
71 |
231 |
266 |
930 |
5th, Pacific |
Did not qualify |
| 2008–09 |
82 |
34 |
37 |
-- |
11 |
79 |
207 |
234 |
1182 |
5th, Pacific |
Did not qualify |
- 1 As of the 2005–06 NHL season, all games
will have a winner; the OTL column includes SOL (Shootout
losses).
Notable players
Current roster
Team captains
Hall of famers
Players
- Paul Coffey, D, 1991–1993, inducted
2004
- Marcel Dionne, C, 1975–1987,
inducted 1992
- Dick Duff, C, 1970, inducted 2006
- Grant Fuhr, G, 1995, inducted
2003
- Harry Howell, D,
1971–1973, inducted 1979
- Wayne Gretzky, C, 1988–1996,
inducted 1999
- Jari Kurri, RW, 1991–1996, inducted
2001
- Larry Murphy, D,
1980–1984, inducted 2004
- Bob Pulford, LW, 1970–1972, inducted
1991
- Larry Robinson, D, 1989–1992,
inducted 1995
- Luc Robitaille, LW, 1986-1994,
1997-2001, 2003-2006, inducted 2009
- Terry Sawchuk, G, 1967–1968,
inducted 1971
- Steve Shutt, LW, 1984–1985, inducted
1993
- Billy Smith, G,
1971–1972, inducted 1993
Builders
- Broadcasters (Foster Hewitt Memorial Award Recipients)
Retired numbers
- 16 Marcel Dionne,
C, 1975–87, number retired November 8, 1990.
- 18 Dave
Taylor, LW/RW, 1977–94, number retired April 3, 1995.
- 20 Luc
Robitaille, LW, 1986–94, 1997–2001, and 2003–06, number retired
January 20, 2007.
- 30 Rogatien "Rogie"
Vachon, G, 1972–78, number retired February 14, 1985.
- 99 Wayne Gretzky,
C, 1988–96, number retired by the league on February 6, 2000, and
by the team on October 9, 2002.
All time Kings team
As voted by the media and fans, an all time Kings team was selected
to celebrate the club's 40th anniversary in the NHL The first and
second teams were as follows:
Goalies: first team -
Rogatien "Rogie"
Vachon, second team -
Kelly
Hrudey
Defensemen: first team -
Rob Blake and
Steve Duchesne, second team -
Larry Murphy and
Bob Murdoch
Centers: first team -
Wayne Gretzky,
second team -
Marcel Dionne
Forwards: first team -
Dave
Taylor and
Luc Robitaille, second
team,
Charlie Simmer and
Mike Murphy
Coach: first team -
Bob Pulford, second
team -
Barry Melrose
First-round draft picks
Franchise scoring leaders
These are the top-ten point-scorers in franchise history. Figures
are updated after each completed NHL regular season.
Note: Pos = Position; GP = Games Played; G =
Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; P/G = Points per game; * =
current Kings player
NHL awards and trophies
Franchise individual records
- Most goals in a season: Bernie
Nicholls, 70 (1988–89)
- Most assists in a season: Wayne
Gretzky, 122 (1990–91)
- Most points in a season: Wayne
Gretzky, 168 (1988–89)
- Most points in a game: Bernie
Nicholls, 8 (1988–89)
- Most penalty minutes in a season: Marty McSorley, 399 (1992–93)
- Most points in a season, defenseman: Larry Murphy, 76 (1980–81)
- Most points in a season, rookie: Luc
Robitaille, 84 (1986–87)
- Most wins in a season: Mario
Lessard, 35 (1980–81)
- Most shutouts in a season: Rogie
Vachon, 8 (1976–77)
Miscellaneous
General managers
See also
Other Professional Teams in the Los Angeles Area
References and footnotes
External links