As Sturm and his knees progressed towards mid-season form, he racked up eight points in 15 games until a case of tendonitis in his left knee landed him back on the IR. After being off the ice for more than a month, Sturm returned on February 23, only to be waived a few days later as the Kings looked for more roster flexibility heading into the trade deadline.
Given Sturm's limited action that season, the club expected he would go unclaimed. Instead, he was nabbed by the Capitals and was on the first plane to Washington. And just like that, Sturm's time with the Kings had come to an end.
Although his tenure with the Kings was short-lived, Sturm has nothing but fond memories about his fleeting time with the club.
"They treated me so good and that shows the character of the team. It was really respectful, it was really fun. It was a tight group. You could tell one day they would have the chance to win the Cup and it came really fast because the following year they won it," he recently recalled.
Now an assistant coach with the Kings, Sturm may be back in familiar territory, but it's not somewhere he thought he would have been at the end of his NHL career. Following his final season in 2012, Sturm admitted that he did not have any plans about joining the coaching ranks.
"I never wanted to be a coach, so that came out of nowhere," he said.
Sturm's interest in coaching only really developed during retirement when he became involved in his children's hockey.
"That is how it all started. I enjoyed youth hockey, but I was never really looking ahead," he noted. But when the German national team came calling in 2015, it was an opportunity that Sturm simply couldn't pass up.