The Kings’ front office pulled the plug on Jim Hiller 60 games in, betting that D.J. Smith can rescue a sinking season and end a decade-long playoff-series victory drought before the clock strikes April.
How the axe fell
Sunday’s move came 48 hours after the Kings were booed off Crypto.com Arena ice in an 8-1 demolition by Edmonton that had fans chanting “Fire Hiller!” before the second intermission. GM Ken Holland, who inherited Hiller when he arrived last May, wasted no time once the club slipped three points below the playoff bar.
Holland’s statement praised Hiller’s “dedication” but labeled the change “necessary to give our group the best opportunity to reach its potential.” Translation: the 93-58-24 regular-season mark was irrelevant without postseason traction.
Hiller’s résumé: better record, zero breakthroughs
- Two playoff berths, two first-round exits—both at the hands of Connor McDavid’s Oilers.
- Last year’s 48-win, 105-point campaign matched franchise highs yet produced the same fatal matchup.
- Defensive structure improved, but the attack dipped to 22nd in 5-on-5 goals this season even after adding Artemi Panarin at the Olympic break.
Why the panic timing matters
Los Angeles has 22 games left and sits outside the wild-card cut. The front office already sacrificed a first-round pick for Panarin; letting the season flat-line would burn both draft capital and leverage to re-sign the 33-year-old wing this summer. Smith inherits a roster built to win now—Kevin Fiala’s Olympic leg break notwithstanding—and will be judged almost entirely on whether he can drag the Kings back into the bracket before April 15.
Who is D.J. Smith?
Smith, 47, spent four-plus seasons in Ottawa, guiding a youthful Senators group to competitive nights but zero playoff gates. Known for player-friendly communication and up-tempo forecheck principles, he returns to the head seat 14 months after the Senators cut him loose 26 games into 2023-24. His familiarity with the Kings’ younger core—developed while working under Hiller—gives him a half-season audition with no interim label stigma.
Instant tactical pivot to watch
Expect Smith to loosen Hiller’s neutral-zone trap in favor of more aggressive D-zone exits and a heavier cycle below the goal line. With Panarin on the left, Adrian Kempe on the right and Anze Kopitar still winning 56 percent of draws, the Kings’ top unit has the skill to trade chances; Smith’s challenge is coaxing that offense without hemorrhaging the league’s fifth-worst high-danger chance rate at 5-on-5.
Playoff math: the mountain is steep
Seattle currently owns the final wild-card slot at 72 points; the Kings sit on 69 with a game in hand. The remaining slate is brutal—14 of 22 opponents are in current playoff position, including three more dates with Edmonton and two versus Vegas. SportsClubStats puts playoff odds at 31 percent; a 13-7-2 finish likely punches the ticket.
Historical context: a decade of spring futility
Since hoisting the Stanley Cup in 2014, Los Angeles has:
- Zero series wins
- Six first-round exits
- Five coaching changes (Sutter, Stevens, McLellan, Hiller, Smith)
- Only nine postseason victories total—fewer than Colorado achieved en route to the 2022 Cup.
Pressure points inside the room
Kopitar, 38, has one year left on his deal and remains the defensive conscience. If the Kings crater, his future becomes a summer flashpoint. Ditto 26-year-old goalie Cam Talbot, whose .898 save percentage since January is the worst among starters on contending teams. Smith’s first binder is clear: fix Talbot’s five-hole leaks and restore a penalty kill that has surrendered at least one power-play goal in 10 of the past 12 games.
Fan pulse: skepticism, but a sliver of hope
Social channels exploded with two conflicting narratives: excitement that Hiller’s cautious shell is gone, and dread that Smith’s mediocre Ottawa ledger signals more of the same. The common denominator—everyone wants to see the kids fly. Quinton Byfield’s 18-goal breakout has plateaued; Brandt Clarke is stapled to the third pair. Smith’s willingness to trust youth could flip the mood faster than any X’s and O’s tweak.
Domino watch across the league
Hiller becomes the second coach fired this season after Columbus axed Dean Evason in January. With Calgary, Philadelphia and Buffalo skidding, the coaching carousel may spin again—impacting trade-deadline selling prices and front-office job security. Meanwhile, expect Hiller, a respected tactician, to surface quickly as an assistant on a contender; his special-teams acumen is too prized to stay idle long.
Bottom line
Holland bet his own legacy on a mid-season jolt. Anything short of a playoff berth sparks a June teardown that could move Panarin again, expose prospects to offer sheets, and thrust the Kings into a full transitional retool. Smith isn’t just coaching for 2026—he’s auditioning to be the man who finally slays the ghosts of 2014.
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