Lombardi's best signings were defenseman Tom Gilbert (one year, reportedly worth $1.4 million) and backup goalie Jeff Zatkoff (two years, reportedly worth $1.8 million, with an average annual value of $900,000) to fill depth needs, along with the signings of forwards Teddy Purcell (one year, reportedly worth $1.6 million) and Michael Latta (one year, reportedly worth $600,000), and defenseman Zach Trotman (one year, reportedly worth $650,000).
With fewer than $30,000 of salary cap space, according to General Fanager, the Kings again will rely heavily on their foundation, which shifted when Kopitar took over the captaincy for Brown on June 16. Kopitar signed an eight-year contract extension in January reportedly worth $80 million (AAV $10 million) and won the Selke Trophy to firmly establish himself as the face of the Kings.
"I think that one of the problems that we've had with our success is that thing I said four years ago: Whenever you've won, it's not recapturing the feeling, it's re-inventing the feeling," Lombardi said. "And that requires these guys now to establish their own identity, their own basis to lead and their own basis to get to the same place that Dustin took us."
Lombardi is big on identity, and he doesn't feel that needs to change by following the blueprint of the Cup champion Pittsburgh Penguins and their strong skating game.
"I'm not into flavor of the month," Lombardi said.
The Kings remain top-heavy with Kopitar, Quick, Norris Trophy winner Doughty and 31-goal scorer Tyler Toffoli. Lombardi points to their 12-3 record in 3-on-3 overtime last season as evidence of their skill.
Defensively, Los Angeles continues to be exceptional, with 192 goals allowed last season, second-fewest in the Western Conference behind the Ducks (188).