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Kings fall to Oilers in a Game 4 shutout, moving to the brink of elimination

LOS ANGELES, CA - APRIL 28, 2024: Los Angeles Kings left wing Trevor Moore (12) skates away.

The Kings needed a change in fortune Sunday, so they made a change in goal.

And while that changed the way the team played it didn’t change the momentum of the Kings’ best-of-seven NHL playoff series, with defenseman Evan Bouchard’s second-period power-play goal giving the Edmonton Oilers a 1-0 victory to send the Western Conference playoff series back to Canada for Game 5 on Wednesday with the Oilers leading 3-1.

The loss was just the fifth in 20 games for the Kings at home since the All-Star break. Two of those have come in the last four days against the Oilers and Sunday’s loss could wind up being the last game at Crypto.com Arena this season with the Kings needing to win in Edmonton to avoid elimination.

Read more: Frustrated Kings have no answer for high-scoring Oilers in Game 3 blowout loss

Given the stakes, Kings coach Jim Hiller really had no choice but to make a change. With the Oilers overwhelming goalie Cam Talbot in the first three games of the series, scoring 17 times, the Kings were in danger of being run out of the playoffs.

It wasn’t all Talbot’s fault; seven of the goals he allowed came against the Kings’ once-vaunted penalty kill, which ranked second in the NHL during the regular season. Still, Hiller had to do something to change the direction of the series so he sat Talbot for Game 4 and gave Rittich his second career playoff start.

Rittich had previous success against Edmonton, going 5-5-1 with a 2.73 goals-against average in 13 games. And in February he shut out the Oilers, giving the Kings their only win over Edmonton in the regular season.

He played well again Sunday, holding the explosive Oilers scoreless before Bouchard’s goal ruined the Kings’ most complete performance of the playoffs.

Kings forward Kevin Fiala gets knocked down by Edmonton Oilers forward Derek Ryan.Kings forward Kevin Fiala gets knocked down by Edmonton Oilers forward Derek Ryan.

The Kings were aggressive and physical from the start Sunday, outshooting Edmonton 10-4 in the first period and delivering punishing hits on both ends of the ice. More importantly, the Kings stayed out of the penalty box and kept the Oilers off the board.

The two things are undoubtedly related since Edmonton, which has been exceptionally good on the power play,…

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