Kings’ playoff losses to Avalanche stoke confidence, frustration
DENVERΒ βΒ Before Anze Kopitar left the ice after the final regular-season home game of his NHL career, he told the fans he was saying good-bye, not farewell.
He would return, he promised, in the playoffs.
Heβll make good on that pledge Thursday when his Kings and the Colorado Avalanche face off in Game 3 of their first-round series at Crypto.com Arena. But it could prove to be a short encore because after losing the first two games of the best-of-seven Stanley Cup playoff in Denver, the Kings need a win Thursday or in Game 4 on Sunday to extend both their season and Kopitarβs Hall of Fame career.
The Kingsβ β and Kopitarβs β last six playoff appearances have all ended after just one round. And theyβre halfway to another first-round loss this year, though they probably deserve better after giving the leagueβs best team everything it could handle, only to lose twice by a goal, including a 2-1 overtime loss in Game 2 on Tuesday.
βTo a man weβre playing hard,β interim Kings coach D.J. Smith said. βWe hoped to split here, but regardless weβre gonna have to win at home. Weβve got to find a way to win a game.
βClearly good isnβt enough.β
Kopitar announced his retirement before the start of this season, the 20th in his Hall of Fame career. And while many of his teammates talked of their desire to see their captain hoist the Stanley Cup one more time, just making the playoffs appeared beyond the Kingsβ reach until the final two weeks of the regular season.
Colorado, meanwhile, led the league in everything, winning the most games, collecting the most points, scoring the most goals and allowing the fewest. The Kings? Not so much. They gave up 22 more goals than they scored, worst among playoff teams, and needed points in 11 of their last 13 games just to squeak into the postseason as the final wild-card team.
Colorado left wing Joel Kiviranta skates under pressure from Kings center Scott Laughton and goaltender Anton Forsberg during Game 2 of their first-round NHL playoff series Tuesday in Denver.
(Jack Dempsey / Associated Press)
Yet two games into this series, itβs been hard to tell the teams apart on the ice. The Kings have outhustled, outhit and outskated the Avalanche for long stretches. But those moral victories have been their only wins.
Asked if he can take solace for the way the team has played, goalie Anton Forsberg, who was outstanding in his first two career playoff games, stared straight ahead.
βNo,β he said. βWe wanted to go to home [with] a win.β
Forward Trevor Moore was a little more forgiving.
βWe would have liked to steal one,β he said. βBut you canβt look back. You have to look forward. Confidence-wise, we hung in there with them for two games and weβve been competitive. I think we could have won either night.β
They won neither night, however, which leaves little margin for error in the next two games.
If the Kings lacked wins in Denver, they didnβt lack chances. On Tuesday they had a man advantage for nearly a quarter of the first 25 minutes and had five power plays and a penalty shot on the night.
When Quinton Byfieldβs second-period penalty shot was stuffed by Colorado goalie Scott Wedgewood, a group of Avalanche fans celebrated by pounding on the protective plexiglass behind the Kingsβ bench with such force it shattered, raining shards down on the teamβs coaches
βWhoever the guy [was] just kept pushing and pushing and pushing,β Smith said. βI looked back because it hit me a bunch of times, then it broke.β
The Kings couldnβt score on the power play either until Artemi Panarin finally found the back of the net with less than seven minutes left in regulation, giving the team its first lead of the series.
βWe had every opportunity,β Smith said. βYouβve got to be able to close it out.β
They couldnβt. So when Colorado captain Gabriel Landeskog evened the score 3 Β½ minutes later, the teams headed to a fourth period.
The overtime was the 34th in 84 games for the Kings this season, an NHL record by some distance. But it ended in the teamβs 21st overtime loss when Nicolas Roy banged home a rebound 7:44 into the extra period.
βWe had some good looks. I thought we really had the momentum in overtime,β Smith said. βMaybe a bad bounce or a turnover, whatever, it ends up in your net. But to a man this team is playing hard and weβve got to find a way to win.
βI expect that weβll be better at home.β
If they arenβt, the Kings face another long summer and Kopitarβs retirement will start earlier than he had hoped.