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FLORIDA LOS ANGELES |
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| 5 | 0 Final 4 |
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9 | FLORIDA | +240 | Ov 5,-105 | +240 | Ov 5,+100 | 10 | LOS ANGELES | -275 | Un 5,-115 | -275 | Un 5,-120 |
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All Games | 26-44-0 | -11 | 26-44 | -11 | 33-32 | 2.5 | 29.6 | 3.2 | 31.0 | Team Stats (Road Games) | 13-24-0 | -4.6 | 13-24 | -4.6 | 18-16 | 2.4 | 29.2 | 3.4 | 31.4 | Last 5 Games | 2-3-0 | +0.9 | 2-3 | +0.9 | 3-2 | 3.2 | 25.0 | 3.2 | 33.4 |
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Team Stats (All Games) | 70 | 173 | 41 | 53 | 72 | 7 | 11 | 2069 | 8.4% | 238 | 25 | 10.5% | 265 | Team Stats (Road Games) | 37 | 90 | 21 | 30 | 36 | 3 | 4 | 1081 | 8.3% | 131 | 9 | 6.9% | 140 | Team Stats (Last 5 Games) | 5 | 16 | 4 | 4 | 8 | 0 | 1 | 125 | 12.8% | 14 | 3 | 21.4% | 24 | Stats Against (All Games) | | 225 | 72 | 77 | 68 | 8 | 14 | 2172 | 10.4% | 220 | 55 | 25.0% | 375 | Stats Against (Road Games) | | 125 | 43 | 41 | 38 | 3 | 6 | 1160 | 10.8% | 119 | 31 | 26.1% | 207 | Stats Against (Last 5 Games) | | 16 | 7 | 5 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 167 | 9.6% | 17 | 5 | 29.4% | 26 |
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SCOTT CLEMMENSEN (All Games) | 16 | 13 | 414 | 371 | 89.6% | 0 | 6-7 | +1.3 | 6-7-0 | +1 | 7-4 | SCOTT CLEMMENSEN (Road Games) | 11 | 9 | 291 | 262 | 90.0% | 0 | 4-5 | +1.2 | 4-5-0 | 0 | 5-3 | SCOTT CLEMMENSEN(vs. Non-Conference) | 1 | 1 | 32 | 26 | 81.2% | 0 | 0-1 | -1 | 0-1-0 | -1 | 1-0 | SCOTT CLEMMENSEN (Last 4 Games) | 4 | 3 | 121 | 109 | 90.1% | 0 | 1-2 | +0.4 | 1-2-0 | 0 | 3-0 | DAN ELLIS (All Games) | 14 | 12 | 354 | 315 | 89.0% | 0 | 5-7 | -1.5 | 5-7-0 | 0 | 9-3 | DAN ELLIS (Road Games) | 7 | 6 | 176 | 154 | 87.5% | 0 | 1-5 | -3.4 | 1-5-0 | -3 | 4-2 | DAN ELLIS (Last 4 Games) | 4 | 4 | 104 | 92 | 88.5% | 0 | 1-3 | -1.6 | 1-3-0 | -1 | 3-1 | ROBERTO LUONGO (All Games) | 49 | 48 | 1388 | 1275 | 91.9% | 3 | 23-25 | -4.1 | 23-25-0 | -2 | 15-26 | ROBERTO LUONGO (Road Games) | 21 | 20 | 614 | 562 | 91.5% | 0 | 9-11 | -0.4 | 9-11-0 | 0 | 6-10 | ROBERTO LUONGO(vs. Non-Conference) | 22 | 21 | 625 | 573 | 91.7% | 1 | 11-10 | +0.6 | 11-10-0 | +1 | 7-11 | ROBERTO LUONGO (Last 4 Games) | 4 | 4 | 139 | 129 | 92.8% | 0 | 2-2 | +1.9 | 2-2-0 | +2 | 2-2 |
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All Games | 39-31-0 | -5.9 | 39-31 | -5.9 | 18-35 | 2.4 | 31.4 | 2.1 | 26.4 | Team Stats (Home Games) | 20-15-0 | -7 | 20-15 | -7 | 11-19 | 2.5 | 32.5 | 2.1 | 23.5 | Last 5 Games | 2-3-0 | -3.2 | 2-3 | -3.2 | 1-2 | 2.2 | 33.8 | 2.4 | 24.8 |
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Team Stats (All Games) | 70 | 170 | 54 | 44 | 61 | 11 | 16 | 2201 | 7.7% | 249 | 38 | 15.3% | 275 | Team Stats (Home Games) | 35 | 89 | 33 | 23 | 27 | 6 | 9 | 1136 | 7.8% | 135 | 21 | 15.6% | 149 | Team Stats (Last 5 Games) | 5 | 11 | 6 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 169 | 6.5% | 16 | 3 | 18.7% | 19 | Stats Against (All Games) | | 149 | 45 | 48 | 50 | 6 | 7 | 1846 | 8.1% | 261 | 44 | 16.9% | 256 | Stats Against (Home Games) | | 73 | 22 | 21 | 27 | 3 | 2 | 823 | 8.9% | 125 | 21 | 16.8% | 127 | Stats Against (Last 5 Games) | | 12 | 4 | 2 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 124 | 9.7% | 16 | 3 | 18.7% | 21 |
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MARTIN JONES (All Games) | 16 | 15 | 425 | 396 | 93.2% | 3 | 10-5 | +3.8 | 10-5-0 | +4 | 5-5 | MARTIN JONES (Home Games) | 7 | 6 | 155 | 145 | 93.5% | 2 | 4-2 | +0.7 | 4-2-0 | +1 | 1-3 | MARTIN JONES(vs. Non-Conference) | 6 | 5 | 174 | 165 | 94.8% | 1 | 4-1 | +2.8 | 4-1-0 | +3 | 3-2 | MARTIN JONES (Last 4 Games) | 4 | 3 | 90 | 81 | 90.0% | 0 | 2-1 | +0.6 | 2-1-0 | +1 | 1-1 | JONATHAN QUICK (All Games) | 40 | 40 | 955 | 874 | 91.5% | 3 | 22-18 | -4.6 | 22-18-0 | -6 | 12-21 | JONATHAN QUICK (Home Games) | 24 | 24 | 552 | 500 | 90.6% | 2 | 14-10 | -3.4 | 14-10-0 | -5 | 9-13 | JONATHAN QUICK(vs. Non-Conference) | 17 | 17 | 379 | 345 | 91.0% | 1 | 8-9 | -5.8 | 8-9-0 | -6 | 3-9 | JONATHAN QUICK (Last 4 Games) | 4 | 4 | 105 | 95 | 90.5% | 0 | 2-2 | -1.7 | 2-2-0 | -2 | 2-1 |
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| Average power rating of opponents played: FLORIDA 3.18, LOS ANGELES 3.12 |
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2/27/2014 | WASHINGTON | 4-5 | L | 0, -105 | L | 5.5 un | O | 3/1/2014 | at COLUMBUS | 3-6 | L | 0, +170 | L | 5.5 un | O | 3/2/2014 | at NY ISLANDERS | 5-3 | W | 0, +130 | W | 5.5 ov | O | 3/4/2014 | at BOSTON | 1-4 | L | 0, +205 | L | 5.5 un | U | 3/7/2014 | BUFFALO | 2-0 | W | 0, -160 | W | 5.5 un | U | 3/9/2014 | BOSTON | 2-5 | L | 0, +140 | L | 5.5 un | O | 3/11/2014 | PHOENIX | 1-3 | L | 0, +105 | L | 5.5 un | U | 3/13/2014 | at TAMPA BAY | 4-5 | L | 0, +220 | L | 5.5 un | O | 3/14/2014 | NEW JERSEY | 5-3 | W | 0, +140 | W | 5 ov | O | 3/16/2014 | VANCOUVER | 3-4 | L | 0, -110 | L | 5 ov | O | 3/18/2014 | at SAN JOSE | 3-2 | W | 0, +265 | W | 5.5 un | U | 3/20/2014 | at PHOENIX | 1-2 | L | 0, +185 | L | 5.5 un | U | 3/22/2014 | at LOS ANGELES | | 3/23/2014 | at ANAHEIM | | 3/25/2014 | OTTAWA | | 3/27/2014 | CAROLINA | | 3/29/2014 | MONTREAL | | 3/31/2014 | at NEW JERSEY | | 4/1/2014 | at NY ISLANDERS | |
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2/26/2014 | at COLORADO | 6-4 | W | 0, -110 | W | 5 ev | O | 2/27/2014 | at CALGARY | 2-0 | W | 0, -140 | W | 5 ov | U | 3/1/2014 | CAROLINA | 3-1 | W | 0, -190 | W | 5 un | U | 3/3/2014 | MONTREAL | 2-1 | W | 0, -175 | W | 5 ev | U | 3/6/2014 | at WINNIPEG | 3-1 | W | 0, -135 | W | 5 ov | U | 3/9/2014 | at EDMONTON | 4-2 | W | 0, -170 | W | 5 un | O | 3/10/2014 | at CALGARY | 3-2 | W | 0, -175 | W | 5 un | P | 3/13/2014 | TORONTO | 2-3 | L | 0, -205 | L | 5 ov | P | 3/15/2014 | ANAHEIM | 1-2 | L | 0, -145 | L | 5 ov | U | 3/17/2014 | PHOENIX | 3-4 | L | 0, -165 | L | 5 un | O | 3/20/2014 | WASHINGTON | 2-1 | W | 0, -200 | W | 5 ev | U | 3/22/2014 | FLORIDA | | 3/24/2014 | at PHILADELPHIA | | 3/25/2014 | at WASHINGTON | | 3/27/2014 | at PITTSBURGH | | 3/29/2014 | WINNIPEG | | 3/31/2014 | MINNESOTA | | 4/2/2014 | PHOENIX | |
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| | | FLORIDA: SUNRISE, Fla. (AP) - When the lockout ended and last season started for the Florida Panthers, there was so much promise.
A banner commemorating the team's division title was unfurled on opening night, the franchise's star-in-waiting scored on his first NHL shot and everything looked bright.
That good feeling disappeared in a hurry. The Panthers went from celebrating to collapsing without warning, and wound up finishing the season having given up more goals than any other team while being tied for last in goal-scoring - and posting the worst record in the NHL.
``It wasn't pleasant,'' Panthers captain Ed Jovanovski said.
One disaster after another - injuries and scoring droughts, mostly - plagued Florida last season, and the Panthers haven't forgotten. When camp opened earlier this month, the Panthers talked of both a need to move ahead but the necessity to remember how painful it was to be out of the playoff chase so early last season.
``I think we all pretty well know that we don't want to have another disaster like last year,'' Panthers general manager Dale Tallon said. ``Guys are professional. They should be able to figure it out and if they don't figure it out, I'll figure it out for them.''
Panthers coach Kevin Dineen said his team cannot ignore the memory of last season's freefall. Not counting goals awarded in shootouts, Florida skaters scored 109 times last year, tied with Nashville for the worst total in the league.
``We had to acknowledge what happened as a group. We had to understand that there was ownership by all of us, from the GM to the coaching to the players and I think we all did that,'' Dineen said. ``I think the commitment was made to be better. There's been some hard decisions made this summer ... but we need to put a team and a style of that gives us the best chance to win.''
Changes were made, such as letting longtime Florida forward Stephen Weiss leave through free agency, and bringing Stanley Cup-winning goaltender Tim Thomas into the organization as a veteran influence. Thomas and Jacob Markstrom figure to get the bulk of the work in net early. | | LOS ANGELES: LOS ANGELES (AP) - After the most successful two-year stretch in franchise history, the Los Angeles Kings just want to keep it going.
That's because the Kings historically aren't used to good times. The 2012 Stanley Cup champions returned to the Western Conference finals last summer, winning six total playoff rounds - twice as many as this long-struggling team had ever managed in any two-year stretch.
To stay on top, Los Angeles plans to rely on the same unflashy, workmanlike style that allowed coach Darryl Sutter's club to raise the Cup for the first time. |
| | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ PA SPORTSTICKER HOCKEY PREVIEW (FLORIDA-LOS ANGELES) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
*Panthers-Kings Preview* ========================
Florida (26-36-8) at Los Angeles (39-25-6), 4:00 p.m. EDT
Jonathan Quick is already a major part of Los Angeles Kings history, having led the franchise to its first Stanley Cup two years ago.
He's on the verge of adding to that legacy.
Before potentially getting a chance to lead another playoff run, Quick could become Los Angeles' winningest goaltender Saturday against the visiting Florida Panthers.
Quick was awarded the Conn Smythe Trophy after helping the Kings win the 2011-12 championship, and he's a big reason they are in good position to reach the postseason for a fifth straight year. They're five points ahead of Phoenix for the Pacific Division's third and final automatic berth, and nine clear of being out of a wild-card spot.
The U.S. Olympian, 7-2-0 with a 1.54 goals-against average in his past nine games, tied Rogie Vachon for the most wins in franchise history Thursday in a 2-1 shootout victory over Washington. Quick made 21 saves and stopped two shots in the tiebreaker to improve to 171-115, with 11 overtime losses and 20 additional defeats that ended in shootouts. Vachon was 171-148 with 66 ties.
"It means a lot, and it's special because wins are a team effort - 20 guys each night contributing to every win," Quick said. "The biggest thing is I've had the luxury of shootouts and Rogie didn't. If you took away those shootout wins, I'd still be behind Rogie, so I guess I'm fortunate they implemented that a few years back."
Thursday's shootout win followed three consecutive regulation losses by the Kings (39-25-6), each by one goal.
"We've been on a little bit of a skid, obviously, with a three-game losing streak. Beating Washington feels good," said Anze Kopitar, who increased his team lead to 58 points with his 22nd goal.
A big key to the victory was Los Angeles' penalty kill, which prevented Washington from scoring on any of its three power-play opportunities - one in overtime. The Capitals had been leading the league in that category at 24.2 percent after going 5 for 9 in their previous three games.
The Kings had surrendered a power-play goal in three of their previous four games.
"When we did well in 2012 in the playoffs, our PK was a huge, huge reason. When we were winning games last year in the playoffs, our PK was a huge reason," Quick said. "When we were losing games last year, our PK was a reason. We've got the guys here that know how to do it, and that's something that we need to continue to get better at, and we need that going forward through the back end of the season here, and hopefully through the playoffs."
Poor penalty killing is one reason the Panthers (26-36-8) are out of the playoff chase. They rank last in the league at 75.0 percent and have allowed a power-play goal in seven consecutive games.
Florida yielded a goal on Phoenix's only power-play opportunity - just 2:56 into the game - en route to a 2-1 loss Thursday.
"I'd like to stop allowing the first penalty kill, or their first power play, to score within 10 seconds," coach Peter Horachek said. "Seems like that happens quite often, we have to eliminate that situation."
The Kings won 3-0 at Florida on Oct. 11 behind Ben Scrivens' 20 saves for their eighth victory in nine meetings. The Panthers have lost four straight in Los Angeles since Nov. 27, 2002.
Quick is 3-1-0 with a 2.14 GAA against Florida.
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| Last Updated: 9/28/2024 6:07:07 PM EST. |
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