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Los Angeles Kings

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Los Angeles Kings
2022-23 Los Angeles Kings season
Conference Western
Division Pacific
Founded 1967
History Los Angeles Kings
1967–present
Home arena Crypto.com Arena
City Los Angeles, California
Colors Black, white, silver
     
Media FS West
Prime Ticket
My13
KCOP-TV
KABC (AM)
Owner(s) Los Angeles Kings Hockey Club, L.P., an AEG company
(Philip Anschutz, chairman)
General manager Rob Blake
Head coach Todd McLellan
Captain Anze Kopitar
Minor league affiliates Ontario Reign (AHL)
Stanley Cups 2 (2011–12, 2013–14)
Conference championships 3 (1992–93, 2011–12, 2013–14)
Presidents' Trophies 0
Division championships 1 (1990–91)

The Los Angeles Kings are an ice hockey team in the National Hockey League (NHL).

The team began in 1967. They were named at least in part for a former minor league hockey team called the Los Angeles Monarchs. They made the finals in 1993, and lost to the Montreal Canadiens. They won their first Stanley Cup in team history on June 11, 2012, defeating the New Jersey Devils 4 games to 2.[1] The team won their second Stanley Cup on June 13, 2014 after they defeated the New York Rangers in double overtime of Game 5.[2]

The Kings have been known for their high scoring teams. Marcel Dionne won the Art Ross Trophy as NHL scoring champion in 1980, and Wayne Gretzky won it on the Kings in 1990, 1991, and 1994. Gretzky also won the Hart Trophy as the NHL's most valuable player on the Kings in 1989. Charlie Simmer tied for the most goals (now the Richard Trophy) in 1980. Luc Robitaille, one of the ten highest goal scorers in NHL history, spent most of his years on the Kings.

Other strong players have included Rob Blake, who won the Norris Trophy as best defenceman in 1998; goaltender Rogie Vachon, who was second in voting for the Hart Trophy in 1975; and Dave Taylor, Bernie Nicholls, and Larry Murphy.

References

[change | change source]
  1. "Los Angeles Kings win first Stanley Cup - The Star". The Toronto Star. 12 June 2012.
  2. "Kings' Martinez again plays hero, scores Cup-winner". NHL. Retrieved 2014-06-14.

Other websites

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