Los Angeles Kings
Coyotes face old nemesis while in pursuit of playoff spot
Los Angeles Kings

Coyotes face old nemesis while in pursuit of playoff spot

Published Apr. 2, 2019 3:42 p.m. ET

The race for the final playoff spot from the Western Conference appears to be down to two teams.

The Arizona Coyotes are one of them, and they can take over the second wild-card spot with a regulation or overtime win against the visiting Los Angeles Kings on Tuesday.

The Coyotes enter Tuesday two points behind the Colorado Avalanche for the final playoff spot from the West.

In order to move into a playoff spot, Arizona (38-33-8, 84 points) would also need Colorado (36-92-14, 86 points) to lose in regulation on Tuesday to the visiting Edmonton Oilers.

The Coyotes and Avalanche each have three games remaining, and both have 34 regulation and overtime wins, which is the first tiebreaker used in the standings.

The Coyotes haven't been to the postseason since 2012, and they haven't experienced a playoff race this far into a season since 2014.

The Kings eliminated the Coyotes in the 2012 Western Conference Finals before winning their first Stanley Cup championship.

They'll try to put a dent in Arizona's playoff hopes in 2019 after a lackluster effort on Monday night, losing 7-2 to the visiting Calgary Flames.

Kings forward Anze Kopitar had three goals and two assists in the five-game series win against the Coyotes in 2012, and he owns 73 points in 70 regular-season games against Arizona in his career, the most against any team.

Kopitar played in his 1,000th NHL game on Monday, assisting on the team-leading 22nd goal of the season by longtime linemate Dustin Brown late in the first period, tying the score at 2-2 before Los Angeles collapsed in the second and third periods.

Growing in Slovenia, Kopitar never envisioned playing in 1,000 NHL games. He told Fox Sports Prime Ticket before the game Monday that he was just hoping to get "a crack at it."

"A kid from Slovenia, not a hockey country by any means," he said. "(NHL) draft rolls around and you get drafted and then it's a lot of hype with that. And then you just want to play the one (game). And then from one you go to two, and you just want to stick."

The Coyotes will likely continue to lean on goalie Darcy Kuemper. He has started 20 straight games, and seems to be getting stronger with each outing.

Kuemper has shut out two of the past three opponents and hasn't allowed an even-strength goal in that span.

"I don't see fatigue," Arizona coach Rick Tocchet told reporters after Kuemper made 39 saves in a 4-0 win against the Minnesota Wild on Sunday. "I obviously don't want to see fatigue. I don't even ask him if he's playing, he knows he's playing. He's carrying the torch for us."

Despite not taking over as the No. 1 goalie until late November, Kuemper has established career-highs in games played (53), wins (26), and shutouts (five). Among the NHL goalies with at least 50 appearances this season, Kuemper ranks No. 1 with a 2.34 goals-against average and No. 2 with a .924 save percentage.

"The team's playing great in front of me," Kuemper said "I'm just trying to contribute as well."

Kuemper has faced the Kings twice this season and given up two goals each time. The Kings won 2-1 in Los Angeles on Dec. 27 to cap their season-long four-game winning streak.

The Coyotes hosted the Kings on March 9 and came away with a 4-2 win.

"The confidence in (Kuemper) right now is unbelievable," Arizona forward Josh Archibald said. "He's the backbone of our team right now."

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