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Adrian Kempe scores twice in third period to rally Kings past Penguins

Kings forward Adrian Kempe, left, celebrates after scoring during the third period of the Kings' 2-1 comeback win.
Kings forward Adrian Kempe, left, celebrates after scoring during the third period of the Kings’ 2-1 comeback win over the Pittsburgh Penguins on Sunday.
(Gene J. Puskar / Associated Press)
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The Kings began a four-game East Coast road swing last week with perhaps their lowest point of the season.

They finished it with arguably their highest. So far anyway.

Adrian Kempe scored twice in the third period, including a short-handed go-ahead goal with 3:10 to play as the Kings rallied past the Pittsburgh Penguins 2-1 on Sunday night.

The Kings won their third straight following a 7-0 blowout loss to Buffalo last week that threatened to send them into a tailspin.

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Instead, they responded by knocking off New Jersey, Boston and then the Penguins, playing the role of spoiler on a night Pittsburgh honored franchise icon Jaromir Jagr, who had his No. 68 retired during a pregame ceremony.

Brandt Clarke scores on a breakaway with 27 seconds left in overtime to rally Kings to a 5-4 victory over the Boston Bruins.

Feb. 17, 2024

“Pretty proud of the team, for sure,” Kings interim coach Jim Hiller said. “The last period looked like the first period in Jersey, which is when we really started getting ourselves going.”

Sidney Crosby scored his 31st goal of the season for Pittsburgh with a power-play goal late in the first period, but the Penguins let a chance to build momentum at the start of a pivotal four-game homestand slip away over the final 20 minutes.

Kempe tied it with 6:11 to play with a slap shot from the point that appeared to deflect off Pittsburgh’s Rickard Rakell to get past goalie Tristan Jarry. Just over three minutes later, Kempe gave the Kings the lead when he finished off a short-handed two-on-one by ripping a wrist shot between Jarry’s legs.

“Pretty even game, but we played solid again,” Kempe said. “We got the two deserving points that maybe we didn’t get a couple weeks ago.”

Cam Talbot finished with 29 saves for the Kings, who have won five of six.

“We saw the resiliency yesterday [in Boston],” Talbot said of the team’s 5-4 overtime win over the Bruins when rookie defenseman Brant Clarke scored his first NHL on a breakaway after serving a penalty. “We knew that even though we were down going into the third period that we could pull another one out tonight. That’s what we were able to do.”

The Penguins, scrambling to stay in the Eastern Conference playoff race, struggled to generate much on offense while playing without second-leading scorer Jake Guentzel, who is out for up to four weeks because of an upper-body injury. Jarry made 31 saves and was just over six minutes away from his NHL-leading seventh shutout before things fell apart.

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“We weren’t quite on our toes enough in the third,” Crosby said. “Obviously, they were going to push, but they played yesterday and I think we were probably guilty of allowing them to dictate the game a little bit more there late.”

Crosby practically willed the Penguins to victory last Thursday in their first game without Guentzel, scoring twice in a win at Chicago. He seemed poised to do it again when he rifled a shot by Talbot to put Pittsburgh in front with Jagr — the NHL’s second all-time leading scorer — watching from a luxury suite.

Yet the Penguins, who have had trouble finding the back of the net all season, couldn’t add on while letting a lead entering the third period get away for the fourth time.

Honoring Jaromir Jagr

The comeback put a damper on “Jaromir Jagr Day” in Pittsburgh. The 52-year-old kicked off a joyous return to the city where he played the first 11 of his 24 NHL seasons by watching his No. 68 join Hall of Famer Mario Lemieux’s No. 66 and Michel Briere’s No. 21 in the rafters at PPG Paints Arena.

The 40-minute jersey retirement ceremony — which included a Jagr speech peppered with one-liners — was followed shortly thereafter by the Penguins coming onto the ice for warmups wearing No. 68 jerseys and mulleted wigs in honor of Jagr’s iconic hairstyle during his early years as a pro.

Jagr himself joined in, flipping pucks into an empty net before doing one final lap as the sellout crowd — many of them wearing a jersey from one of Jagr’s various stops — gave him one last ovation 23 years in the making.

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“The main thing for us is that he had the best experience possible,” Crosby said. “And we showed him what it meant to us as best we could.”

Up next for the Kings: vs. Columbus at Crypto.com Arena on Tuesday night.

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