So.... It's been a while... but without any further, here is your Royal Ally Report.
The Kings, who started out slow after lifting their franchise's first stanley cup, began to feel the wear and tear of battle as they lost Matt Greene in game 1, and until the playoffs. Willie Mitchell has also been rehabbing and offseason knee injury since the start of the training camp. Now, Alec Martinez is also out with an unknown injury. That my friends is half of the LA Kings starting d-core. Half of your cup winning defenseman. The average age of our D-men in the playoffs was: 28.3 years of age. Now, in come Keaton Ellerby, Jake Muzzin, and Davis Drewiske (the healthy scratch of the playoffs). The D is much less experienced, and the Kings traded Andrei Loktionov, Simone Gagne, and a 5th round pick, to acquire what they have now. Of course the trash cans acquired in these deals are conditional, so, with the exception of Keaton Ellerby, the kings may have got nothing, not even replacements for their garbage, in these deals. The new average age of the Top 6 is: 26. Thats nearly a two and a half year difference.
So in come the new young defenseman, Ellerby, and Muzzin. Then we have the rise of Slava Voynov, (only 23 years old), who is playing the best hockey of his life right now. Drewiske, who was promoted to see some power play time, due to the fact he has shown Head Coach Darryl Sutter that he can shoot the puck as well, not just head butt it. Ellerby has played like the big man he is at 6'5" 221 lbs. He has been decent at moving the puck, but he looks hard to knock down. Then there's rookie defenseman Jake Muzzin. Muzzin, who has two goals on the year as of last night, has played stellar on the power play, and cashed in big last night against Anaheim, with a laser of a wrist shot that beat Viktor Fasth. The Kings handed Fasth his 1st loss of the year, and his record is now 8-1-0.
So, the Kings are back, right? Since a tough last second loss to Detroit on February 11, the Kings have won 6 out of their last 7 games, and four in a row. They now have a lot more games at Staples Center coming up, and with this roll they have, and the noise and passion of the home fans, I expect the Kings to keep it going. I remember thinking after the win in Edmonton, "ok, the Kings are back." Keep in mind though, we will eventually get Alec Martinez, Matt Greene, and Willie Mitchel back, and when that time comes, the Kings will truly be back. I see them playing the same way they did at the end of last season and in the early playoffs, with a lesser top 6 on defense. Credit to Darryl Sutter? Credit to Kings defensive leaders? Or who else? tell me who you think has earned the most credit from the Kings play, and I may talk about it next week.
Bye for now,
J.K.
The Royal Ally Report
twitter: @jasonkavesh
The Royal Ally Report
Tales of a life long Kings fan and half season ticket holder since 1997.
Tuesday, February 26, 2013
Friday, June 15, 2012
Champions? The Kings? Champions? Really?
So, it has finally happened. My dad and I have been waiting a long, long time to be in this photo. The Los Angeles Kings are the 2012 Stanley Cup Champions! Boy, that's got a nice ring to it doesn't it? I will be honest I still don't believe it. Every night I go to sleep, I wonder if I will just wake up and realize this was all some crazy, elongated dream. I remember waiting in the airport for my flight to LAX, while coming home from college to catch the finals. I was talking to my new friend Mike, a fellow Kings fan I ran into in the terminal, and I said, "I still can't believe we are in the finals, maybe it will hit me once the puck is dropped during game 3 at staples." Well, it didn't. After that I started saying, "Maybe it will hit me when they bring out the cup."
There's no denying that the feeling of disbelief was imminent for me throughout the finals. Sure, the run to the cup was spectacular, but this feeling of disbelief probably originates from the fact that I am so used to seeing the Kings season end in tragedy, or disappointment. It almost doesn't feel like the Kings are the champions, because the season can't be over if Kings fans aren't going home disappointed....or can it be?
Regardless of whether or not it has hit me in its full effect that we are the Stanley Cup Champions, that moment of seeing the cup being brought out to the ice at Staples Center... there is no word in the English language that could accurately describe my emotion. I wish I could live in that moment for the rest of my life. The emotions just poured out of me in the most overwhelming way. I was smiling, crying, and screaming "WE GOT THE CUP!" all at the same time.
I have been going to Kings games with my dad since I was a young boy, and I remember the first game I went to in 1997-98 between the Kings and the Coyotes in which the Kings lost. This memory sticks out to me because I remember the disbelief I had that my team could lose. I recall that I cried after that game too, in the backseat on the way home. The good guys can be defeated? Really!?
Well, now the good guys, our boys in black have prevailed. Kings fans, the curse is over, the Kings are the 2012 Stanley Cup Champions.
tweet me
@jasonkavesh
There's no denying that the feeling of disbelief was imminent for me throughout the finals. Sure, the run to the cup was spectacular, but this feeling of disbelief probably originates from the fact that I am so used to seeing the Kings season end in tragedy, or disappointment. It almost doesn't feel like the Kings are the champions, because the season can't be over if Kings fans aren't going home disappointed....or can it be?
Regardless of whether or not it has hit me in its full effect that we are the Stanley Cup Champions, that moment of seeing the cup being brought out to the ice at Staples Center... there is no word in the English language that could accurately describe my emotion. I wish I could live in that moment for the rest of my life. The emotions just poured out of me in the most overwhelming way. I was smiling, crying, and screaming "WE GOT THE CUP!" all at the same time.
I have been going to Kings games with my dad since I was a young boy, and I remember the first game I went to in 1997-98 between the Kings and the Coyotes in which the Kings lost. This memory sticks out to me because I remember the disbelief I had that my team could lose. I recall that I cried after that game too, in the backseat on the way home. The good guys can be defeated? Really!?
Well, now the good guys, our boys in black have prevailed. Kings fans, the curse is over, the Kings are the 2012 Stanley Cup Champions.
tweet me
@jasonkavesh
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