The Sabres entered the afternoon coming off consecutive wins over likely playoff teams, having outpaced the highwire Toronto Maple Leafs and outbattled the physical Minnesota Wild. They scored five goals in each of those victories.
The Kings, who occupy second place in the Pacific Division, presented a different sort of challenge. Their shutdown identity was exemplified by their league-best shots against average (28.7) entering Sunday.
"I don't know how many chances we gave up in the game, but it wasn't a lot," Sabres alternate captain Kyle Okposo said. "We didn't get a lot in return. It was just kind of a grind-it-out game and that's the game you have to learn how to play sometimes."
Learning how to impose their game plan - predicated on speed and aggressiveness - regardless of the opponent's identity is part of the Sabres' growing process.
"You have to find your strengths and you have to play to them because if you try to play somebody else's game, more often than not you're going to lose," Okposo said.
The Sabres did manage to create chances despite their low shot total. Tage Thompson had a point-blank attempt go wide during the dying second of the first period, one of six individual scoring chances he created according to the analytics website Natural Stat Trick.
Alex Tuch took a run at the game-tying goal during the third period, using his speed to drive past a defender for a shorthanded attempt. He bullied his way to his own rebound after an initial shot was turned away by goaltender Cal Petersen, then collided with the post after a second attempt.
Tuch left the game after the collision and did not return. He was able to skate off the ice on his own.
"It's really in moments like that you're best players can rise because they're special, and Alex Tuch in the short-handed situation when he got injured, that was a moment where you see pure talent taking over," Granato said.
"… We're going to be able to handle those moments better and be able to impose more will on them. Tonight, we were challenged in that."