Hockey

Oilers score 4 times in the 3rd to get past Kings

Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, Kailer Yamamoto, Zach Hyman and Evander Kane scored third-period goals Tuesday as the visiting Edmonton Oilers rallied for a 5-2 victory over the Los Angeles Kings on Tuesday to give new coach Jay Woodcroft his third victory in three tries.

Edmonton is now 3-0 under interim head coach Jay Woodcroft

Edmonton Oilers centre Connor McDavid (97) and LA Kings center Anze Kopitar (11) battle for the puck in the first period at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles on Tuesday. (Kirby Lee/USA TODAY Sports)

Kailer Yamamoto scored the tie-breaking goal with 4:46 left and the Edmonton Oilers remained undefeated under new coach Jay Woodcroft with a 5-2 win over the Los Angeles Kings on Tuesday night.

Connor McDavid and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins each had a goal for the Oilers, who are 3-0-0 since Woodcroft replaced Dave Tippett last Thursday. Zach Hyman and Evander Kane added empty-net goals, and Mike Smith made 30 saves.

"We've asked everybody to up the work rate," Woodcroft said. "We're asking the team to play a certain style, a demanding style, and very happy that the team is seeing results."

Phillip Danault and Arthur Kaliyev scored for the Kings, who had their six-game point streak snapped. Cal Petersen allowed three goals on 27 shots as Los Angeles played its first game in nearly two weeks.

"I thought physically, we were there. We looked rested. I was concerned we'd be a little bit slow or sluggish, and I don't think we were that. Mentally, I don't think we were as sharp as we have been," Kings coach Todd McLellan said.

Yamamoto was at the front of the crease to capitalize after Leon Draisaitl took the puck from Matt Roy following Petersen's indecision, continuing the Oilers' recent turnaround. They moved one point ahead of the Kings for third place in the Pacific Division.

"Woody has obviously come in and made some changes, but I think, all in all, players got to want it. You've got to want it as a player. You've got to want to win and do anything it takes to do that. The details in the game matter so much, and that comes down to the players willing to do that, willing to do what it takes to play a whole 60," Smith said.

Danault scored with 8:18 left in the third period to tie it 2-all, finishing off Viktor Arvidsson's centering pass from behind the net and cancelling out Nugent-Hopkins' seventh goal at 7:44 that gave Edmonton its first lead.

"We had some good practices, and I thought we were prepared, but we just didn't have all our stuff tonight. We didn't have everybody," Kings defenceman Drew Doughty said.

More than skill

McDavid tied it 1-all late in the second on his 25th goal. There was a lengthy conversation among the officials on the ice about whether it should count before determining the reason Jesse Puljujarvi made contact with Petersen was because Kings D Mikey Anderson pushed him into the goalie, and Woodcourt loved the grit McDavid's line showed there.

"Started with a great neutral zone forecheck," Woodcroft said. "We picked one off, Puljujarvi picks one off, we go right back down the Kings' throat. I loved the skill play to knock the puck down, and then to see the bodies around the blue paint and score a May-type goal when we're down 1-0 at the end of the second period."

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