The Kings are relying on creative math to persuade themselves that being steamrolled 14-2 by the Edmonton Oilers the past two games and giving up the lead in the teamsâ first-round Stanley Cup playoff series isnât as bad as it seems.
Or as bad as it looked Friday, when the Oilers drew on their balance and ramped-up physicality to rout the Kings 8-2 and take a 2-1 lead in the best-of-seven series, which resumes Sunday at Crypto.com Arena.
According to the Kingsâ calculations, six Edmonton goals in Game 2 plus eight more in Game 3 added up to two losses. Two uncharacteristically disjointed defeats, absolutely, but still two. Nothing more. Not disaster, not the obliteration of the identity the Kings labored to create this season.
âI think for myself you kind of take the scores, the individual scores of the game, and kind of throw them out,â center Blake Lizotte said Saturday after the Kings practiced in El Segundo.
âI look at it as a series thatâs 2-1 and I think any team thatâs sitting at home right now would be killing [to be in] a 2-1 playoff series, so I think for us itâs just important to keep that mindset and emphasize how important that next one is.â
They have to think that way, or they might as well not show up Sunday. Clearly, theyâre facing the biggest test of a season filled with growing pains and challenges as their veterans vie for one more kick at the Cup and the kids continue to seek consistency in a fast and character-testing league.
The Oilers have dictated the pace the last two games, forcing the Kings to play a chance-for-chance game they canât possibly win. Eleven Oilers got at least one point in Game 3, led by Evander Kaneâs hat trick and two goals each from Zach Hyman and third-line center Ryan Nugent-Hopkins. The Oilersâ power play is five for 11 in the series, while the Kings are one for 12 and have conceded a short-handed goal.
The Oilersâ scoring depth has extended to their defensemen, another edge over the Kings. Edmonton defensemen contributed six assists Friday for a series total of one goal and 13 points; the Kingsâ defensemen have produced one assist by Alex Edler and one by Sean Durzi in their series-opening 4-3 victory at Edmonton.
In a classic good news/bad news scenario, the Kings on Friday held Connor McDavid to two assists and Leon Draisaitl to a goal and an assist but were swamped anyway by the Oilersâ second and third lines.
âTheyâre a complete team, and we have to be a complete team to beat them. We canât just focus on two players,â Kings coach Todd McLellan said.
Focusing on their new math helps. Asked if they have a lot to correct, team captain Anze Kopitar said the fixes go beyond strategy and to mindset.
âI think most importantly itâs just mentally, really, because we let it snowball a couple times now,â he said. âObviously you donât want to get scored on 14 times in two games. Thereâs some stuff that we can look at that we did pretty good, too, so itâs not all negative and the bottom line is that weâre down 2-1 in the series.â
At this point, the Kings are who they are. No one is going to suddenly develop the unerring aim of a 40-goal scorer. No one is going to wake up Sunday and become a power-play quarterback. Their defense isnât going to become big and fearsome overnight. Those holes must be addressed this summer through trades or free agency or continued development of the talent they’ve stockpiled. Based on the kidsâ performance this season and under the playoff spotlight, general manager Rob Blake and his staff might have more holes to plug than they thought they would.
Making the playoffs was a significant achievement for the Kings. Being competitive in postseason play is proving to be a tougher task. They did it in Game 1, controlling the tempo while both teams battled nerves. They have no choice but to somehow impose their will again Sunday.
âWhatâs different in the playoffs is that youâre given a seven-game lifeline and after each night you play it shrinks or gets extended a little bit,â McLellan said. âDuring the regular season you get 82 lives and you move on, and thereâs some nights that you can die and then recover. I donât know if thatâs a good analogy to be using, but in the playoffs a win propels the confidence, makes everybody feel good. A loss does the other, and for us the mindset was as important today as the structure and the physical part of the game.â
Kopitar remembered when a group of promising young players who had been entrusted with the franchiseâs future made their playoff debut together and exited in the first round. Twice, in fact, before they won the Cup in 2012.
âItâs a learning curve,â he said. âEverybodyâs learning but learning on the fly, which is, I can assure you, itâs not easy.
âLike I said, weâre down 2-1. Nothing else matters.â
Only the math.
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.