Kings knock out Blues in sweep
Eighth-seeded Los Angeles steamrolls top seeds in push to Western final
— Dustin Brown scored two goals, Jonathan Quick made 23 saves, and the eighthseeded Los Angeles Kings finished an improbable four-game sweep of the St. Louis Blues with a 3-1 victory Sunday, advancing to the conference finals for just the second time in club history.
Rookie Jordan Nolan scored an early goal for the Kings, the first No. 8 seed in NHL history to eliminate their conference’s top two seeds in the same postseason.
After steamrolling top-seeded Vancouver and second-seeded St. Louis with eight wins in nine games, the Kings will face the winner of Phoenix’s series with Nashville in the Western Conference final.
Los Angeles won despite its weakest effort of the postseason, clinging to its 2-1 first-period lead through 40 minutes dominated by St. Louis. The Kings didn’t adapt well to an unusually early start time of noon, yet Quick made a handful of stellar saves before Brown scored his sixth first-round games last month.
“I can only imagine how happy Kings fans are right now,” said Brown, who has never played for another organization. “They’ve been through a rough stretch, and to win on home ice, that’s huge for everyone in this room. It’s nice to see the fans get jacked up as much as they could. They haven’t an opportunity to celebrate like that at home.”
Kevin Shattenkirk scored his first career playoff goal for the Blues, who were outscored 15-6 in the series to end their most successful season in more than a decade. Brian Elliott stopped 17 shots in an improved performance, but the Kings’ momentum couldn’t even be stopped by a bad game.
“L.A. plays the way you need to play to win the Cup,” said St. Louis coach Ken Hitchcock, who won the title with Dallas in 1999. “Over the disappointments of the last three or four years, they’ve figured it out.”
Los Angeles’ only previous playoff series sweep happened in 1976 in a best-of-three elimination of Calgary.
The Kings failed to sweep Vancouver in the first round this year, but barely managed to avoid another trip to St. Louis by winning at Staples Center for just the third time in their past nine home playoff games.
The sellout crowd had barely settled in its seats when Blues defenceman Roman Polak turned over the puck near his own net. Nolan, the 22-year-old son of former Buffalo coach Ted Nolan, jumped on Dustin Penner’s rebound to score his first career playoff goal just 4:36 in.
St. Louis managed just one shot in the first 11 minutes, but evened the score with its second — a rocket from Shattenkirk, who beat Quick for a rare clean goal against the Kings’ all-star goalie. Shattenkirk hadn’t scored in the Blues’ past seven playoff games aftergettinganassistforhisfirstcareer postseason point in the opener.
Brown put the Kings back ahead late in the period when he used Blues defenceman Alex Pietrangelo as a screen for a sneaky shot to beat Elliott. The captain has been a dominant physical force throughout the postseason, but he hadn’t scored a goal since Game 3 of the first round.
Afterward, Hitchcock acknowledged Pietrangelo is playing with a serious injury, but wouldn’t disclose the specifics. Pietrangelo missed Game 2 after a hard hit from Dwight King in the opener.
While St. Louis dominated the second period with solid forechecking and desperate offence, the Kings fell into one of their biggest funks of the postseason, managing just one shot in the first 18 minutes of the period. The Blues couldn’t beat Quick, who also wasn’t his usual sharp self.
The Blues again dominated early in the third, and Matt D’agostini’s deflected shot barely caught Quick’s crossbar early on. A few minutes later, David Perron nearly scored on a rebound before Kopitar slid into the crease and knocked the puck underneath Quick.