The Kings are eight points behind the Colorado Avalanche for the second wild card into the Stanley Cup Playoffs from the Western Conference after going 3-1-1 in their past five games and 8-6-2 in their past 16. That was part of Desjardins' message before practice: The odds of making the playoffs may be long, but not impossible.
"It's not that we've been playing bad, but I said not anybody in our room thinks that's the best we can play," Desjardins said. "We all feel we have more, so saying that, it's how could we get more? If there's more there, we have to get it."
They'll have to get it without Muzzin and possibly others who could be traded prior to the deadline. General manager Rob Blake said Monday they're looking at more trades that could improve the future of the organization.
Los Angeles got forward Carl Grundstrom, the rights to defenseman prospect Sean Durzi and a first-round pick in the 2019 NHL Draft for Muzzin. Grundstrom was assigned to Ontario of the American Hockey League.
While the Kings are ready to turn the page, Muzzin likely will get another shot at the Cup with the Maple Leafs (30-17-2), who are second in the Atlantic Division.
"[Blake] looked at individually who he might possibly trade, and you knew that he was probably going to trade our top guys," said Doughty, who played on a pair with Muzzin when the Kings won the Stanley Cup for the second time in three seasons in 2014. "[Muzzin] was probably the guy we would get the most for, that's just the bottom line. If I was him, you have to look at the bright side. He might win a Stanley Cup over there and you're a god for life in Canada."
Muzzin played 496 games with the Kings from 2010-19 but was not part of their Cup-winning team in 2012. The 29-year-old had 213 points (51 goals, 162 assists) and a plus-24 rating for Los Angeles.