Anze Kopitarâs eyes were suspiciously watery. He rubbed them more than once as the finality set in that the Kingsâ season had ended.
After seven games of a wildly back-and-forth Stanley Cup playoff series between the Kings and the Edmonton Oilers, the margin of difference between going home and going to the second round proved to be agonizingly narrow. Edmonton defenseman Cody Ceci scored from the right circle at 13:15 of the second period on setups from Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl, and McDavid provided an insurance goal with a slicing backhand at 16:07 of the third period as the heavily favored Oilers emerged with a jitter-inducing 2-0 victory on Saturday at a raucous Rogers Place.
The Oilers will face the winner of the Calgary-Dallas series, which will be decided in a Game 7 on Sunday in Calgary. The Kings will begin to work on a newly promising future, but one that will require upgrades and reassessments at many positions in order for that promise to be transformed into triumphs. âNext year, starting tomorrow, is going to be one tough year,â Kings coach Todd McLellan said.
The Kings, who havenât won a playoff series since they won the Cup in 2014 for the second time in three seasons, were left with regrets that they wonât get to continue a journey this season that they alone believed they could ride to a successful finish.
They couldnât close out the superstar-driven Oilers in Game 6 at home on Thursday. They had no offense against the formidable and determined forces of the Oilers on Saturday. Goaltender Jonathan Quick kept the Kings in it until the end, making 39 saves, but his teammates couldnât give him any offensive support.
âRight now itâs very frustrating, obviously. The series was hard-fought. We gave it all. We should be proud of that,â Kopitar said. âI think thereâs certainly an element of growth within the group throughout the season, even throughout the playoffs. It didnât go today and itâs extremely frustrating because we came in here believing that we can get it done, and we didnât.â
The game was the NHL finale for Kings forward Dustin Brown, who announced he would retire at seasonâs end. The captain of their 2012 and 2014 Cup teams, he came to personify the hard-hitting teams that earned the precious right to have their names engraved on the Cup. âIâm going to miss him a lot,â Kopitar said, his voice choking up.
McLellan saw the loss on two levels. âI think thereâs small picture/big picture. Small picture, weâre disappointed. We, I on behalf of the group, said weâre in this to win it. We werenât just coming here to gain experience,â he said. âAnd when youâre all in and you want to win and you donât itâs disappointing. Thereâs a lot of water-filled eyes in there, grown men that are feeling that way, and thatâs because we were all in. And it stings right now.
âNow, thereâs the other side of the coin, where the organization four years ago came up with a plan about transforming the team, changing the way we play, the identity of the group, bringing younger players in, relying on the older players, and that was the positive throughout the year.â
The Oilers have been building toward a championship since they chose generational star McDavid in 2015, the fourth time in six years theyâd landed the No. 1 overall draft pick. But something always held them back from being competitive, let alone being great.
Sometimes it was weak goaltending. Other times, a leaky defense. Most often it was a thin supporting cast around four-time NHL scoring champion McDavid and 2020 scoring champion Draisaitl, their No. 2 center. Coaches came and went and little changed, so the pressure mounted. They know champions in Edmonton â they watched the Wayne Gretzky-led dynasty of the 1980s â and they werenât getting championship-caliber hockey anymore.
This yearâs team was flailing until Jay Woodcroft replaced Dave Tippett as coach on Feb. 20. With better structure they finished fast, getting strong goaltending from Mike Smith â who made 29 saves for the shutout on Saturday â and otherworldly exploits from McDavid as they sprinted five points ahead of the Kings and landed second in the Pacific Division.
That the game was scoreless after one period favored the light-scoring Kings. Even after Ceciâs goal, the Kings had some chances. âIt is one shot away,â Kopitar said, âbut we couldnât get sustained pressure.â
Phillip Danault, whose signing last summer gave the Kings terrific depth at center â and whose skills made better players out of every linemate he was given â said he felt a lot of pride in the team getting this far.
âA lot of pride and a lot of work. A long year. A lot of ups and downs,â he said. âIâm proud of the group we have and the characterâ¦. I think the experience we got this year is going to carry us a long way for the next few years. Obviously bad ending, but we gave it all and Iâm very proud of the group we have.â
This experience can help their young players and invigorate some of the veterans. As painful as it was for the Kings to lose Saturday night and end a season they were sure should have gone longer, they will have better days ahead if they use this experience the right way, as a motivator and a launching pad for longer playoff runs. The series was not lost, but not all was lost for them.
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.