The Los Angeles Kings are returning to the Stanley Cup Playoffs—again. With their latest 3-0 shutout victory over Edmonton on Saturday and a Calgary Flames loss to the Vegas Golden Knights later in the night, the Kings secured their playoff spot for the fourth consecutive year.
WE’RE IN ‼️
— x - LA Kings (@LAKings) April 6, 2025
📲 https://t.co/GBuBWqCo9w#GoKingsGopic.twitter.com/1F3s8KPoFc
Despite the Kings beating the Oilers on Saturday, the game still shouldn't mean much to the Kings or their fans because it was without arguably their two best players, Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl, who have been out with injuries. The last time the Kings played a healthy Oilers team was on Jan.13, when they were held to zero points and lost the game with McDavid and Draisaitl healthy.
The game will mean much more in a week when they meet again for the final time this season at Edmonton when, most likely, McDavid or Draisaitl will be back for that game, which will be very crucial in who will get home ice in this potential first-round matchup.
But as the team seeks to possibly repeat the last three year's first-round series against the Oilers, fans and analysts ask: Will this year be different?
The Kings are no strangers to postseason disappointment the past few years. If they play Edmonton, it will be the fourth year the two clubs meet in the first round. Connor McDavid and his team shipped L.A. home in all three of the last series.
The Kings' pattern of first-round eliminations is beginning to sound like a tough patch in franchise history between 1978 and 1981, during which the team did not get beyond Round 1 for four consecutive postseasons.
But there is an increased feeling around the NHL—and among the Kings themselves—that 2025 might be different.
A More Balanced, Battle-Tested Group
One of the most significant differences this season is the Kings' depth and experience. Having ridden out a rocky midseason stretch that included a change in coaches—firing Todd McLellan and promoting Jim Hiller—the Kings have caught fire. Under Hiller, L.A. has played a more physical, disciplined game, and the results are evident. The team has won four straight, outscoring opponents 19-3 in the process, and is now positioned for home-ice advantage in the first round.
Offensively, the Kings are getting good play out of their top six forwards. Kevin Fiala has restored his goal-scoring skills, Anže Kopitar is the pulse of the franchise, their newly acquired players in Warren Foegle and Andrei Kuzmenko have started to fit in very well, and young guns like Quinton Byfield and Alex Laferriere have become reliable contributors. Meanwhile, the blue line—led by Drew Doughty and Darcy Kuemper—is physical and disciplined.
The Kings current top nine is outscoring opponents 45-16 during 5-on-5 play.
Easily the most balanced forward group in the Rob Blake era.Save Story Topics in this Story