Kings lost more than a game on Monday night. They also lost control of playoff fate

Kings lost more than a game on Monday night. They also lost control of playoff fate
Los Angeles Kings right wing Viktor Arvidsson (33) reaches for the puck during the second period of an NHL hockey game against the Minnesota Wild, Monday, April 15, 2024, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Kyusung Gong)
(Kyusung Gong / Associated Press)

Kings lost more than a game on Monday night. They also lost control of playoff fate

Kevin Baxter April 16, 2024

The Kings held their playoff fate in their hands, until it slipped through their fingers. They were in control of their own destiny, now they need help.

After Mondays 3-1 loss to the Minnesota Wild, the teams second setback in four games, the Kings lead over Vegas in the battle for third place in the Pacific Division is down to a point with one game to play.

The Knights, however, had two games left

late

Tuesday with the Chicago Blackhawks and Thursday against the Ducks, two of the three worst teams in the 32-team NHL. And both are at home, where the reigning Stanley Cup champions have the fifth-most wins in the league.

Win out and Vegas finishes third, saddling the Kings with the Western Conferences second wild-card berth and the eighth seed in the eight-team playoff bracket. Even a win and an overtime loss in their final two games would be enough for the Knights to finish third no matter what the Kings do in their final game Thursday with Chicago.

Kings lose to Wild, jeopardizing their chances of finishing third in the Pacific

Heres why that matters: Finish third in the division, and you open the playoffs next week against either Edmonton or Vancouver, who were 1-2 entering Tuesdays games. The Kings are a combined 4-2-2 against those teams this season.

But the eighth seed will likely start the postseason in Dallas, where the Kings havent won since 2019. So for coach Jim Hiller, Mondays missed opportunity was massive.

We’re in a playoff race. You have to want to win every game, and then you’ll let the chips fall where they may, he said. Tonight was not a game indicative of the playoff race.

And for a team that hasnt won a playoff series since 2014, that letdown couldnt have come at a worst time.

You can describe it a bunch of different ways. Not enough intensity, not enough emotion, he said. A bunch of words and they all mean the same thing.

We didn’t want to go to work and battle. It’s a challenge to have to do that and we weren’t committed to do it.

All of which complicates the path forward since its out of the Kings hands.

We can control how we play and what we do. You cant control the teams above or behind us, forward Pierre-Luc Dubois said.

Refocusing in Thursdays regular-season finale with Chicago will help after two lackluster performances at home against Anaheim and Minnesota.

If you can go to the playoffs feeling good, it kind of helps your teams mind-set, defenseman Matt Roy said. You just kind of feel more ready. You dont want to go in losing focus or confidence. You want to be ready to go and you want your teammates to be ready to go as well.

And if the Kings have to take that focus to Dallas for the first round, well they would have had to play there eventually, defenseman Mikey Anderson said.

I don’t think it matters who we play. Obviously anyone that’s making postseason is is a really good team, he said. Whoever it is we need to be ready to play. You’re going to have to play them at some point

if you want to

if you want to win it all.

Maybe the change of scenery will do the Kings good. Finishing third likely would have sent the Kings back to Edmonton to play the Oilers, a team they havent beaten in the postseason since 1989, Wayne Gretzkys first season in Los Angeles.

The only time the Kings played the Stars in the playoffs was 1968, the inaugural season for both teams,

and a time

when the Stars

still

played in Minnesota.

Analysis: As Kings shift focus to another challenging playoff series, Ducks search for answers

The Kings can still avoid that fate, of course. All that would require is a Kings

win over Chicago on Thursday and Vegas losing two in a row at home for the first time in two months, against two of the worst teams in the league.

OK, so maybe that wont happen.

But when the playoffs open, the Kings will again be in control of their own destiny. And they cant afford to let that slip away again.

I’m not concerned, Hiller said. It’s not like we didn’t talk about it. It’s not like [the players] didn’t talk about it amongst themselves. We all know what the situation is.

Destiny awaits. Only its waiting in Texas, not Canada.

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