Indeed, Iginla will be wearing No. 88 when he makes his debut against the Toronto Maple Leafs on Thursday at Staples Center (10:30 p.m. ET; FS-W, SNO, NHL.TV).
Where others might see a possible disappointment, Iginla managed to find opportunity and answers.
Then and now.
If this is to be his last waltz, NHL style, Iginla, 39, is giving it a go with his customary class and will be pushed along by a familiar face: Kings coach Darryl Sutter.
Sutter and Iginla were together in Calgary and forged a bond when the Flames reached the Stanley Cup Final in 2004 and lost to the Tampa Bay Lightning in seven games. Sutter went on to win two Stanley Cup championships, in 2012 and 2014, with the Kings, and Iginla went on to have a Hall of Fame career.
His resume is still missing the Stanley Cup despite decent shots in Pittsburgh and Boston after leaving Calgary in 2013. The Avalanche were more than willing to accommodate Iginla at the trade deadline.
"It's a respect thing," Avalanche general manager Joe Sakic said on a conference call. "It's a respect for Jarome Iginla. It's respect for him as a person, him as a hockey player. He's a Hall of Fame hockey player for his career. In discussing with him, I wanted to give him an opportunity in a great place where he wanted to go."
Iginla's goal production has slipped from 29 two seasons ago to eight this season with the last-place Avalanche. He is a minus-21 in 61 games.
"I hadn't gone through that in my career," Iginla said. "I've missed the playoffs a number of times but at the end of the year you're battling and you're close, but this was a tough go all the way around … it was something that hopefully the young guys never have to experience again and (can) learn from it."