If there was one person on the Kings who could carry a selfish approach towards the acquisition of Andrei Kuzmenko, you might think it could be Alex Turcotte.
Kuzmenko, after all, was acquired from Philadelphia and was immediately slotted onto a line with Anze Kopitar and Adrian Kempe, a place Turcotte had been playing for the bulk of the season. It’s fair to wonder how Turcotte, playing in his first full NHL season, would handle the switch.
If you did think that though, rest assured you’d be wrong.
“We all just want to win so bad and I just want to do anything to help the team win,” Turcotte said. “Obviously it's cliche answer but it's the truth. Whatever that is. If they want me to play defense, I’ll play defense. It doesn't matter.”
Turcotte is still in his first lap around the league on a regular basis.
Playing on the top offensive line was a first for him for an extended stretch, after largely featuring lower in the lineup during his first callups over the past couple of seasons. And he recognizes that. It's his first time doing these things and when a situation like this came about, he approached it the right way.
“It’s my first year in the NHL, so I feel like I'm learning a lot and I’ve got to be open to anything and be versatile,” he added. “It's been a great experience to be in different situations throughout the year and especially this time of the year so close to playoffs.”
That’s not to say Turcotte doesn’t want to play more or want more responsibility.
He does and he knows what will come with time and experience.
But his current situation is also really important for a Kings team that seems to have found its ideal combination of 12 forwards and six defensemen. If you want to look at it from a different angle, over the last three games, Turcotte has gone from a complimentary piece to a play driver. With Kopitar and Kempe, Turcotte found himself deferring at times. Too regularly for his liking. He is not the first younger player to defer when playing with Kopitar and when you add the team’s leading scorer in Kempe into the mix as well, we certainly saw it happen more than it should have.
“Honestly, probably too much,” he said of deferring to veterans. “I think my goal eventually is to not ever do that when I get older, but it's hard. It's your first year and they're such good players. I think like with anybody, your brain wants to get them the puck, because they make such good plays, they're superstars and they make great things happen. I probably forced it sometimes with them, even though I know they want me to make plays and hold on to the puck and then try and find them.”