Vegas Golden Knights hockey captured at T-mobile Arena, Las Vegas, Nevada.

LA Kings Visit Vegas and Defeat Golden Knights Again Sunday, 4-1, Before 18,419; VGK’s Eight-Game Win Streak Snapped

By Alan Snel of LVSportsBiz.com

LVSportsBiz.com photos by J. Tyge O’Donnell

The LA Kings have haunted the Vegas Golden Knights once again at the Big Ice House by the Strip.

Maybe you recall the Kings’ prior win over VGK this season when LA ambushed the Knights, 4-0, after the first period. There were boos from the VGK faithful after the first period that night.

Well, the Kings jumped out again over the Golden Knights with a 3-0 lead by the second period Sunday evening and knocked off Vegas, 4-1, before an announced crowd of 18,419.

The LA win stopped the Golden Knights from winning their ninth consecutive game.

It’s not like the Knights didn’t have their chances. They responded by outplaying the Kings in period two and had more shots on goal than LA for the game, 43-17.

Standings:

VGK coach Pete DeBoer said he didn’t think his team wasn’t ready to play. Coming back from a 2-0 deficit is hard in the NHL, DeBoer said. Here are his comments after the game:

Here’s a subdued Reilly Smith at his locker after the game:

VGK forward Paul Stastny:

Defenseman Nate Schmidt:


In the VGK lineup were Tomas Nosek anchoring the Chaos Line line between Bash Brothers Ryan Reaves and William Carrier and just-called up Brandon Pirri with newcomer Nick Cousins and versatile Nic Roy on the third line. With forward Mark Stone week-to-week with a leg injury, Chandler Stephenson has been moved up to the second line with William Karlsson and Max Pacioretty. And in goal was Flower, Marc-Andre Fleury.

Knights’ Nick Cousins

 

 

Pumping up the crowd was local radio personality Wayne Danielson, known as Big D.

Big D before VGK game.

 

Fans get ready for VGK vs LA.

The Knights enjoyed another big crowd. After 36 home dates, the VGK are averaging 18,311 a game, or filling the arena to 105.4 percent of capacity. The Knights say capacity is 18,367 at T-Mobile Arena.

The Kings jumped out to a 1-0 lead two minutes into the game with a goal by LA veteran Anze Kopitar — his 19th of the season. Kopitar added his second goal of the game (his 20th) on a power play about six minutes later and the Knights were down, 2-0.

Even Knights fan igniter Cameron Hughes and Blue Man Group could not spark the Knights in period one.

Midway through period two, Trevor Lewis fired a shot past Fleury and LA led, 3-0.

Shea Theodore scored the Knights’ lone goal of the game with 6:46 left in period two to cut the lead to 3-1. It was Theodore’s 11th of the season.

VGK celebrate Theodore goal.

During the second period, the Knights did convert a Kings fan to the VGK with their pledge ceremony that’s one of the team’s better promotions. Check it out here:

The Kings’ Alex Iafallo scored a power play goal with 56 seconds left in the second period and LA took a 4-1 lead into period three.

Kings score their fourth goal.

 

The VGK stepped it up in period two by outshooting the Kings, 18-7. But after two periods, the Kings led the Knights by three goals.

The Knights fans did enjoy Benny the skating dog between periods two and three.

The Knights could not solve Kings goaltender Calvin Petersen. The Golden Knights had some terrific scoring chances in the second and third periods.

But in the end, it was Kings 4 Knights 1 and the Golden Knights music crew played, “Don’t Stop Believing,” in the final minute of the game.

The VGK’s next game is Tuesday at T-Mobile Arena as the Knights host the New Jersey Devils.

 


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Alan Snel

Alan Snel brings decades of sports-business reporting experience to LVSportsBiz.com. Snel covered the business side of sports for the South Florida (Fort Lauderdale) Sun-Sentinel, the Tampa Tribune and Las Vegas Review-Journal. As a city hall beat reporter, Snel also covered stadium deals in Denver and Seattle. In 2000, Snel launched a sport-business website for FoxSports.com called FoxSportsBiz.com. After reporting sports-business for the RJ, Snel wrote hard-hitting stories on the Raiders stadium for the Desert Companion magazine in Las Vegas and The Nevada Independent. Snel is also one of the top bicycle advocates in the country.