"One was a breakaway, I think that was my second one," he said.
After setting up the Kings' third goal, just over six minutes later, Kempe got loose at center ice and skated in all alone towards the Montreal net. Although Andrew Shaw made a diving attempt to thwart his advance, Kempe evaded his attempted defensive effort and put the puck up and over Montoya for his second of the night.
And as for the third one?
"That was a one-timer from the slot," Kempe recalled.
Less than two minutes later, Mike Cammalleri, who assisted on Kempe's first tally, found him just outside the left faceoff circle. Kempe wired it into the back of the net as he completed the hat trick to cap off a four-goal third period for the Kings.
As the hats poured onto the ice, Kempe embraced the moment.
"It was cool," he said. "It was my rookie year too and pretty early on, so it was a good feeling to score all three in the same period, so it was cool and very exciting."
The three-goal output triggered a breakout season for Kempe, who tallied three times in his next four games. He went on to post 16 goals and 37 points in his first full season in the league, totals he would not surpass until last season, when he notched 35 goals and 54 points.
Kempe's next hat trick came nearly three years later and marked an important milestone in franchise history. Playing against Anaheim, Kempe became the first Kings player to record a three-goal performance against the rival Ducks. A pretty remarkable feat when you consider the nearly 30 years of history between the two teams until that point.
"It always feels good to score in Anaheim, so to get all three was great," Kempe said. "We ended up losing in OT, so it kind of sucked [with the result] but other than that it was a good feeling."
When the Kings squared off in Anaheim again two nights later, Kempe almost accomplished the feat a second time in as many nights. After he opened the scoring early in the first period, Kempe got another goal late in the middle frame, but could not find a third in a 5-1 victory.
"I had chances for a hat trick that night," he said. "Could've been a back-to-back one but unfortunately not."
It's almost just as well. With fans still shut out of NHL arenas at that point in the season due to the pandemic, there wouldn't have been any hats for Kempe. Assuming it comes at home, when Kempe inevitably buries his next hat trick - he had eight, two-goal games a season ago and already has one here in the early stages of the 2022-23 season - the overflow of hats on the ice will certainly make up for it.