Wild uncover their nemesis as Kings beat Minnesota a second time
LOS ANGELES – On an evening when they celebrated Star Wars Night at a hockey rink a few miles south of the iconic Hollywood sign, the Minnesota Wild may have found their arch-nemesis. And fittingly, the Los Angeles Kings come clad in all black, Darth Vader style.
For the second time this season, the Kings had their way with Minnesota, using the force to take a first-period lead and rendering the Wild mostly powerless to mount a comeback. The Kings’ 4-1 win was just the second regulation road loss suffered by the Wild this season, as they fell to 11-2-3 in games played outside of St. Paul.
Minnesota goalie Marc-Andre Fleury suffered his first regulation loss of the season despite 30 saves and the Kings were the aggressors right from the start. Coupled with a 5-1 win by Los Angeles on Election Night at Xcel Energy Center, the Wild have clearly found a weak spot in their otherwise impressive run over the season’s first two months.
Yakov Trenin scored Minnesota’s only goal with just 1:13 remaining, and the Kings got a pair of empty-net goals in the win.
Darcy Kuemper, the Kings goalie who started his career in Minnesota a decade ago, had 23 saves and was within 73 seconds of becoming the first puck-stopper to turn in a shutout versus the Wild this season.
Both goalies were busy in the first period, with Kuemper thwarting a solo rush by Marcus Foligno and Fleury leaning over the back of his net to grab a deflection that was coming hard off the glass.
The Kings finally broke through with 43 seconds remaining in the opening period, as Adrian Kempe redirected a cross-ice pass from Anze Kopitar. Kempe was crashing the crease and missed the puck with his stick, but it deflected off Kempe’s skate and past Fleury.
The Wild have now gone five games without a first-period goal, last scoring in the opening 20 minutes the night before Thanksgiving in a 1-0 win at Buffalo.
With Marcus Johansson in the penalty box for a knee-on-knee collision with Kings forward Vladislav Gavrikov, Los Angeles doubled the lead when Alex Laferriere ripped a wrist shot past Fleury on the power play.
After Fleury denied Kevin Fiala with a toe save early in the second, Foligno dropped the gloves with Kings forward Tanner Jeannot. Both men got a five-minute rest mandated by the officials as a result. Minnesota managed just three shots on Kuemper in the second period, despite two abbreviated power plays.
With Fleury pulled for an extra attacker, Trevor Moore hit the empty net with 1:54 left to put the home team up by three before Trenin spoiled the shutout bid with his second goal of the weekend, and of the season. Moore hit a second empty-netter on the next shift.
After Friday night’s 5-1 win in Anaheim, Hynes elected to run it back, assembling the same 12 forwards and six defensemen, and starting Fleury in goal as the only lineup change.
During a third period media timeout, the Kings gave a video board salute to Fleury, who has announced this season will be his last. The goalie gave a wave to the crowd to acknowledge their applause.
Kopitar was honored in the first period to mark the veteran forward playing in 1,400 career games — 700 at home and 700 on the road. He joined Luc Robitaille as the only players in Los Angeles franchise history to reach that milestone.
The Wild conclude their three-game road trip on Tuesday, making their first-ever visit to Salt Lake City to face the Utah Hockey Club. That franchise relocated from Arizona last summer, where they had been the Coyotes for more than 25 years.
Related Articles
For Wild, a raucous celebration when Yakov Trenin scores, finally
Another road rout as Wild shoot down Ducks
Wild’s deadly top line forcing opponents to play on-ice chess
Wild teammates look forward to making 4 Nations frenemies
Five Wild players to skate for a medal at 4 Nations Face-Off