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    Kings build early lead, beat Blues
    • March 27, 2023

    Viktor Arvidsson #33 of the Los Angeles Kings celebrates a goal against the St. Louis Blues in the first period at Crypto.com Arena on March 26, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images)

    Jordan Binnington #50 of the St. Louis Blues plays the puck against the Los Angeles Kings in the second period at Crypto.com Arena on March 26, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images)

    Viktor Arvidsson #33 of the Los Angeles Kings celebrates a goal against the St. Louis Blues in the first period at Crypto.com Arena on March 26, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images)

    Pavel Buchnevich #89 of the St. Louis Blues skates the puck against the Los Angeles Kings in the third period at Crypto.com Arena on March 26, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images)

    Kasperi Kapanen #42 of the St. Louis Blues celebrates a goal with Pavel Buchnevich #89 against the Los Angeles Kings in the third period at Crypto.com Arena on March 26, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images)

    Viktor Arvidsson #33 of the Los Angeles Kings celebrates a goal against the St. Louis Blues in the first period at Crypto.com Arena on March 26, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images)

    Viktor Arvidsson #33 of the Los Angeles Kings celebrates a goal against the St. Louis Blues in the first period at Crypto.com Arena on March 26, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images)

    Viktor Arvidsson #33 of the Los Angeles Kings celebrates a goal against the St. Louis Blues in the first period at Crypto.com Arena on March 26, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images)

    Brandon Saad #20 of the St. Louis Blues skates the puck against Mikey Anderson #44 of the Los Angeles Kings in the first period at Crypto.com Arena on March 26, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images)

    Viktor Arvidsson #33 of the Los Angeles Kings takes a penalty shot against Jordan Binnington #50 of the St. Louis Blues in the second period at Crypto.com Arena on March 26, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images)

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    LOS ANGELES — If the Kings weren’t cognizant of the records they were setting, they certainly seemed eager to hit their marks as they slathered on five goals in the first period, but they needed all that scoring and more to earn a 7-6 victory over the St. Louis Blues Sunday night at Crypto.com Arena.

    They have now compiled the longest points streak in team history at 12 games and equaled the lengthiest home points streak in franchise lore with at least one point in 13 straight. Even though the Kings, to a man, said they weren’t watching such statistics closely and they snapped a string of 10 straight games with two goals or fewer allowed, they certainly appreciated the steam they were gathering as April’s postseason loomed.

    “I don’t think that game that we played or brought to the rink tonight, in the last 50 minutes of the game, will get us a lot of wins in the playoffs. But the other games in the homestand will give us a chance,” Coach Todd McLellan said.

    The Kings leapt back within two points of the top overall record in the Western Conference, magnifying the importance of an April 6 clash in Vegas with the first-place Golden Knights. Since Jan. 22, the Kings have picked up 80% of all possible points, the best rate in the NHL with Vegas’ 73.1% positioning as the next best team in the West and third best overall during that span.

    Wingers Viktor Arvidsson and Adrian Kempe each potted a pair of goals with Arvidsson also notching an assist. Trevor Moore, who moved to center Sunday while Blake Lizotte served a one-game suspension, contributed a goal and an assist. Winger Alex Iafallo and defenseman Drew Doughty had a goal apiece. Defenseman Sean Durzi and winger Kevin Fiala both returned from early-March injuries, and their two-assist performances lagged behind only center Phillip Danault’s game high of three. Pheonix Copley plodded toward his 23rd win by making 16 of 22 saves.

    Blues forward Jordan Kyrou tallied twice. Winger Brandon Saad, defenseman Justin Faulk, center Pavel Buchnevich and winger Kasperi Kapanen also found the net for St. Louis. Faulk added an assist while linemates Sammy Blais and Robert Thomas each chipped in two helpers. Joel Hofer stopped just 12 of 17 shots before being relieved by Jordan Binnington.

    The Kings scored at even strength, on the power play and shorthanded, and all before the halfway mark of the first period Sunday.

    They wasted little time as Arvidsson precisely placed a shot from the left dot just inside the near post a mere 27 seconds into the game. The Kings had scored in the first 90 seconds of three of their last four periods, including an early goal by Arvidsson to ignite the scoring in Saturday’s 4-1 win over the Winnipeg Jets.

    A tic-tac-toe play with the extra man extended the Kings’ edge to two goals before the three-minute mark. Danault slid the puck low to Arvidsson, who slipped it across the crease for an Iafallo tap-in, his 12th goal of the season. After scoring four power-play goals all year, Iafallo has one in each of his last two games.

    To complete the variety pack, Moore won a puck battle in the neutral zone and dropped the puck to Kempe during a penalty kill. He rambled onward and let fly with a tough-angle shot from the top of the right circle that caught a chunk of Hofer’s glove on its way past him on the short side at 7:35.

    St. Louis did find some respite during the deluge, getting a power-play marker off Saad’s shot from the slot 29 seconds after the Kings’ third goal.

    The Kings restored their three-goal lead with a second power-play goal with as 5:30 displayed on the clock. A failed clearing attempt was intercepted along the wall at the blue line by Durzi before he alertly fired a seam pass to Arvidsson at the backdoor for a tap-in tally. Arvidsson’s second consecutive multi-goal performance was his fourth of the campaign and brought his total to 24.

    They cushioned their lead with the second unit’s third power-play goal of the first period when Moore deflected Danault’s shot home for his ninth goal of the campaign, sending Hofer to the bench and summoning Binnington.

    “We’ve got good chemistry, obviously, skilled players making skilled plays, and the execution was there,” Durzi said.

    St. Louis cut their deficit to three just over three minutes into the middle frame. A contentious sequence settled the puck onto Faulk’s stick before he let a slap shot rip from the right point for his ninth goal of the year.

    Arvidsson had opportunities to complete a hat trick in the second period, most notably the second penalty shot of his career just after the game’s midpoint. Unlike his first one, he failed to convert.

    The Blues clawed back a goal off the counterattack and then halved their deficit with the extra man, making it 5-4.

    First, Blais drew both Kings defensemen to him and found a wide open Buchnevich for goal No. 24 of 2022-23 with 3:55 left in the stanza.

    Ninety seconds later, Kyrou breathed life into the Blues with a power-play goal, his team-leading 32nd tally.

    Yet the Kings wouldn’t stay in a tight affair for long, 4:37 into the third period, Kempe set a new career high with his 36th goal and gave the Kings breathing room with a one-timer from between the circles.

    “It’s pretty easy playing with the guy next to me, he feeds me a lot of pucks and it’s up to me to put it in the net,” said Kempe, referring to captain Anze Kopitar. “I’m happy that I can live up to the expectations.”

    Kempe’s marker elicited an exchange of goals between the two sides. First, Kapanen scored his seventh goal in 14 games as a Blue and his second in two meetings with the Kings, 8:11 into the closing stanza.

    Just 39 seconds later, Doughty struck back with a power-play goal of his own off a slap shot from the point. Doughty has five goals and seven points in his last six outings.

    That goal stood as the game-winner after Kyrou added a second tally, his 33rd, with 49 seconds to play.

    ​ Orange County Register 

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