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Stars' penalty kill is a pain point for the next Kings

The Dallas Stars are looking for a way to end their three-week slump. They have put a priority on improving their penalty kill.

When they play the Los Angeles Kings in a Monday night match, the Stars will try to avoid the penalty box. If and when they are?short-handed, the Stars hope to minimize the damage.

Dallas has killed just?7 out of 13 penalties over the last three games. In the Stars' last eight games they have allowed 11 power play goals. In that time, the Stars have gone 1-3-4 and are now 12 points behind Colorado Avalanche in the Central Division.

Dallas lost 5-4 to the San Jose Sharks on Saturday after conceding four goals, including the game-winning overtime goal.

Dallas coach Glen Gulutzan explained: "When you stop skating, you reach and take penalties." "You're reaching instead of using your feet, and we had several of these (against Sharks) from start to end. We'll take a look at it and try to fix it. It was evident in the 6-3 defeat we suffered on Tuesday (against Carolina), and it was again (in San Jose).

The Stars and Kings will meet for the third time in this season.

Adrian Kempe's goal 37 seconds into overtime gave the Kings a 3-2 victory in Dallas on October 23. On Dec. 15, the Stars defeated Los Angeles 4-1.

The Kings are back home after a short trip to Canada, where they played the Winnipeg Jets and Edmonton Oilers in two games on Friday.

Los Angeles was not motivated in Winnipeg, and the Jets won 5-1 to end an 11-game losing run. The Kings recovered the following night and won a shootout 4-3 in Edmonton.

Jim Hiller, Kings coach, said: "I believe the back-tobacks are a great way to test your team's character." "We arrived really late Friday night. We don't use an excuse. We haven’t done this, and I’m really proud of our effort. It was a hard-fought match (Friday night), despite the result. We were late for the first time, but we were ready to play from the moment the puck dropped.

Corey Perry returned to the Kings after missing two previous games due to a family illness. Perry scored on a power play late in the 1st period to tie the score at 1-1.

Hiller stated that "he's going through a difficult time and is a hockey fan through and through." "He shows up, he is eager to play hockey and he wants his team to succeed in tough circumstances. Then he scores a goal." He plays for 15-16 minutes and often against the line of (Connor) McDavid. It's incredible. "I just have such a great deal of respect for him."

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(source: Reuters)