MacKinnon leads Avalanche to 5-1
win and 1st-round sweep of LA Kings, ending Anze Kopitar's career
[April 27, 2026]
By GREG BEACHAM
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Nathan MacKinnon had two goals and an assist,
Nicolas Roy and Devon Toews scored in the third period, and the
top-seeded Colorado Avalanche swept the Los Angeles Kings out of the
first round of the Stanley Cup playoffs with a 5-1 victory in Game 4
on Sunday.
Cale Makar also scored and Scott Wedgewood made 24 saves as the
Presidents' Trophy-winning Avs advanced to face the winner of the
heavyweight first-round series between Dallas and Minnesota.
Colorado coach Jared Bednar praised his team's defensive acumen
after holding the defense-first Kings to five goals in four games,
noting that his high-powered lineup would probably prefer to
emphasize offense.
“It's not as fun to commit on the defensive side and really dig in
there and spend a bunch of energy there to chip away at the game,
but I think they bought into the way we needed to play the LA
Kings,” Bednar said. “And that may change a little bit for the next
opponent ... but they did a heck of a job playing the right way in
order to win it.”
Colorado also ended the 20-year career of Kings captain Anze Kopitar,
who announced his pending retirement in September.
The Slovenian center is the top scorer in franchise history and a
two-time Selke Trophy winner, and he was a star on the Kings’ two
Stanley Cup championship teams in 2012 and 2014 before spending the
past decade as their captain. The Kings crowd repeatedly chanted
“Kopi! Kopi!” in the final minutes of the blowout, and he got
standing ovations when he came out for his final two shifts.

With a masterful four-game demonstration of the roster-wide talent
on a team ready to win it all, Colorado earned at least five
consecutive days off before the second round, and quite possibly
more. The Wild and Stars are tied heading to Game 5 on Tuesday.
“(A sweep) just shows that we stuck to the details this entire
series,” Makar said. “I felt like they were pushing us at times, and
we were able to weather it. It's a good test for us. That's a stingy
defensive team over there that has a lot of offensive threats, and
we found different ways to shut them down.”
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Colorado Avalanche's Gabriel Landeskog (92) and Martin Necas (88)
battle Los Angeles Kings' Mikey Anderson (44) for the puck during
the first period of Game 4 in the first round of an NHL hockey
Stanley Cup playoff series Sunday, April 26, 2026, in Los Angeles.
(AP Photo/Scott Strazzante)

Joel Edmundson scored and Anton Forsberg stopped 27
shots for the Kings, whose fifth consecutive trip to the Stanley Cup
playoffs ended with their eighth consecutive postseason defeat over
the past two years and their seventh straight first-round exit since
hoisting the Cup 12 years ago.
Although interim coach D.J. Smith was able to extend his team’s
streak of postseason appearances with a late surge into the last
wild-card spot, Los Angeles has not won a playoff round since
raising the Stanley Cup for the second time.
“We fought hard, there's no doubt about that, but they're the best
team in the league for a reason,” Kings defenseman Drew Doughty
said. “We were in games, but didn't ultimately get the job done.
Proud of our effort.”
After scoring 53 goals in the regular season, MacKinnon got his
first goal of these playoffs in the first period on a power play,
ending the Avs’ 0 for 9 start to the series with the man advantage.
Colorado never trailed in Game 4, putting it away with two goals in
less than three minutes early in the third.
Although Los Angeles began the series by slowing down the powerhouse
Avs and even holding MacKinnon to one assist in three games, the
Kings scored just four goals while being pushed to the brink.
Makar glided past Taylor Ward early in the second period and fired a
beautiful wrist shot for the Conn Smythe Trophy winner’s second goal
in two games.
MacKinnon added an empty-net goal, giving him 57 goals in 99 career
playoff games.
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