The Los Angeles Kings are out to prove last season was an aberration.
After finishing next to last in the NHL with 71 points, their fewest in a full season since they had 68 in 2006-07, the Kings hired Todd McLellan as coach April 16 to replace Willie Desjardins, who took over after John Stevens was fired following a 4-8-1 start in his second season.
"I thought our team was not used to losing," Kings assistant Marco Sturm said. "I think last year, it caught them maybe a little bit off guard … and that's why we just couldn't get out of the hole and all of a sudden, the season was over. So I think it's going to be a totally different mindset this season for sure."
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McLellan spent the past 11 seasons as coach of the San Jose Sharks and Edmonton Oilers, who fired him Nov. 20 after they went 9-10-1 to begin last season, his fourth with Edmonton. In 2016-17, he guided the Oilers to their first playoff appearance in 11 seasons before a seven-game loss to the Anaheim Ducks in the Western Conference Second Round.
His familiarity with the Pacific Division could help make for a quick transition.
"I think so. I think being in the West all the time, playing against the Kings in a lot of years, a lot of games, managing also big, high-end players like he did in San Jose and Edmonton, and now in L.A. as well, I think it really does," Sturm said. "He knows the Kings inside and out."
One of McLellan's biggest tasks will be to help turn around an offense that scored the second-fewest goals in the NHL (199), ahead of the Anaheim Ducks (196), and finished 27th on the power play (15.8 percent). McLellan has shown an ability to get the most out of an offense since his time as an assistant with the Detroit Red Wings. When working with Detroit's power play, it led the NHL in 2005-06 (22.1 percent) and finished third in 2007-08 (20.7 percent). In McLellan's 10 full seasons as a coach, his teams have finished in the top eight in goals per game five times and on the power play seven times.