The win snapped a two-game losing streak courtesy of a pair of 2-1 losses in Anaheim and San Jose, respectively, before arriving in the City of Angels. It was also the Canadiens' first victory on California soil since March 5, 2014.
"The team definitely hasn't had a lot of success out here, so to get a win here in LA against a big, strong team, who every year competes, it's important for us," said captain Max Pacioretty, who scored his sixth and seventh goals of the season on Sunday. "This is a measuring stick team that I think teams come in and try to see what they have when they play against a team like this. It shows a lot about our character."
Plagued by a lack of offense in recent weeks, the Canadiens certainly got their groove back in the goal-scoring department against the Kings. The last time they'd managed to light the lamp on four occasions in regulation time was back on November 12 in a 5-0 win over Detroit at the Bell Centre, so getting things going again was a long time coming.
And, it all started with the first of Pacioretty's two snipes just 2:30 into the opening frame.
"It was a great character win by our team. Getting that early goal gave our team a lot of momentum, a lot of juice in the game. We gave up a couple back to them, but just kept grinding away and found a way to win," said Byron, referencing a six-goal second period in which the Kings solved Carey Price four times on 12 shots to head to the final frame holding a 4-3 advantage.
Then, it was Andrew Shaw's turn to come up clutch with his third goal in the last five games, putting a loose puck past Kings netminder Peter Budaj to level the scoreline at the 2:03 mark of the period.
"He's doing a lot of good things. That was a big goal. We needed to tie things up as quickly as possible in the third period," said Therrien, referencing Shaw's contributions on offense as of late. "We're seeing the player we want to see more and more as the season goes on. He's been playing some really good hockey lately."