Los Angeles Kings centre Jarret Stoll celebrates his teammate Willie Mitchell's (not pictured) second period power-play goal against Vancouver Canucks goalie Roberto Luongo (1) during Game 1 of their NHL Western Conference quarter-final hockey playoffs in Vancouver April 11, 2012.
ANDY CLARK/REUTERSRon Sudlow The Canadian Press
VANCOUVERâ"Maybe it was too much adrenalin flowing in the opening game of the Stanley Cup playoffs.
Or a lack of discipline.
Whatever the reason, the Vancouver Canucks paid the price for too many penalties Wednesday night in a 4-2 loss to the Los Angeles Kings.
âSome guys who are killing them, they play a ton of minutes,â said Vancouver captain Henrik Sedin. âOther guys sit on the bench and do nothing for 10-15 minutes.
âThatâs something weâve really got to focus on for next game. They had a good power play. They kept us in our end for the full two minutes and itâs tough, mentally.â
The best-of-seven Western Conference quarter-final continues in Vancouver on Friday before shifting to Los Angeles for games Sunday and Wednesday.
The Kings went 2-for-7 on the power play and stayed in the game by getting their first two goals with extra skaters.
At one point, Vancouver took seven of eight penalties over the first two periods, including a pair of two-man advantages.
The last of those penalties was a boarding major and a game misconduct to Byron Bitz, a fourth-liner called up from the AHL Chicago Wolves.
He hammered Kyle Clifford into the corner boards and his head struck the glass.
Clifford remained on the bench in the second period but left the game with what the club called an upper body injury. He didnât play a shift after the hit.
âI thought we had a lot of energy but maybe we ran out of position to get those big hits,â said Alex Burrows who scored on his own rebound of the first shot of the game.
âWeâve just got to channel our energy a little bit better and make sure we play better as a team.â
Sedin agreed.
âIf you give them two five-on-threes and a five-minute power play itâs tough to stay in a playoff game when you do that,â he said.
Vancouver was trying to kill off the Bitz penalty when former Canuck Willie Mitchell, who had a career-high five goals during the regular season, gave the Kings a 2-1 lead.
Mike Richards took advantage of the first Los Angeles two-man advantage of one minute 11 seconds when he threaded a shot through the legs of Vancouver goalie Roberto Luongo.
Ryan Kesler started the Canucksâ penalty parade when he came out of a post-whistle goalmouth scrum with an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty.
Chris Higgins compounded the problem by taking the first of two Vancouver delay-of-game penalties for firing the puck out of the rink.
âTheyâre tough calls,â Burrows said.
âSome of those calls, we made it easy on the refs, shooting pucks out of play. Itâs part of the game. It doesnât affect us. Weâre going to move on and get ready for Game 2.â
Burrows and rookie Zack Kassian were assessed charging calls.
âNormally in April or May hockey that callâs out of the books but we saw them tonight,â Burrows said. âThatâs fine with us. We just have to regroup and play better next game.â
Canuck coach Alain Vigneault said the Kings were helped by Vancouverâs penalty troubles but were still the better team.
âYou canât take the number of penalties we took tonight,â Vigneault said.
âOur top personnel were playing tons of minutes. Instead of attacking, weâre killing penalties. Itâs definitely not what we want to do.â
Penalty killer Jannick Hansen, who deflected Mitchellâs shot past Luongo, said the Canucks did well to enter the third period tied 2-2 despite the penalties.
âYou canât be too upset about that,â Hansen said. âItâs a pretty good result considering how many penalties we took.
âMaybe there was a little too much emotion where you take a hit at a guy right now and for some reason the refs were calling those. We need to be aware of that and take a little bit off it.â
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