The Freeway Face-Off is a series of ice hockey games played between the National Hockey League (NHL)'s Anaheim Ducks and Los Angeles Kings. The series takes its name from the massive freeway system in the greater Los Angeles metropolitan area, the home of both teams; one could travel from one team's arena to the other simply by traveling along Interstate 5. The term is akin to the Freeway Series, which refers to meetings between the Los Angeles metropolitan area's Major League Baseball teams, the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.
Video Freeway Face-Off
History
The Kings and Ducks are rivals due to geographic proximity. The two teams are situated in the same metropolitan area and share a television market. The rivalry started with the Ducks' inaugural season in 1993-94 and has since continued.
The Kings' first appearance in the Stanley Cup Finals came in 1993. As of the end of the 2016-17 season, they have reached the Stanley Cup playoffs 29 times in franchise history (10 appearances since the Ducks joined the NHL). The Ducks have made the playoffs 12 times in franchise history, reaching the Stanley Cup Finals twice: in 2003 and winning in 2007. The Kings and the Ducks did not meet in the playoffs until the 2014 Western Conference Semifinals.
For regular and pre-season games, Kings fans have typically attended away games at the Ducks' home ice, Honda Center, in high numbers. Ducks fans have done the same for away games at the Kings' home ice, Staples Center. Games between the two teams are often very physical, typically including multiple fights and penalties. The rivalry was showcased for the NHL premiere in London at the start of the 2007-08 season with two games between the teams. It was also showcased as part of a 2014 NHL Stadium Series match at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, where Anaheim reigned victorious in a 3-0 shutout.
The rivalry was further heated during the 2010 NHL Entry Draft, which was hosted by the Kings at Staples Center. When the Ducks took the stage to announce Cam Fowler as their first-round, 12th overall pick, the audience predominantly consisting of Kings fans, let out boos.
Prior to 2007, there was no official name for the regular season meetings between the Ducks and Kings. The "Freeway Face-off" name was chosen by a poll of 12,000 local hockey fans. Other names being considered were "Freeze-way Series" and "Ice-5 Series."
Maps Freeway Face-Off
Common players
Several players have played for both teams, including: (boldface indicates Stanley Cup win with both teams)
- Tomas Sandstrom --Kings 1990-1994; Ducks 1997-1999
- Jim Thomson--Kings 1991-1992, 1993; Ducks 1993
- Lonnie Loach--Kings 1992-1993; Ducks 1994
- Ken Baumgartner--Kings 1987-1990, 1993; Ducks 1995-1997
- Jari Kurri--Kings 1991-1996; Ducks 1996-1997
- Warren Rychel--Kings 1992-1995; Ducks 1996-1998
- Doug Houda--Kings 1993-1994; Ducks 1998
- Sean Pronger--Ducks 1995-1998; Kings 1999
- Bob Corkum--Ducks 1993-1996; Kings 1999-2001
- Stu Grimson--Ducks 1993-1995, 1998-2000; Kings 2000-2001
- Dan Bylsma--Kings 1995-2000; Ducks 2000-2004
- Ted Donato--Ducks 1999-2000; Kings 2002
- Craig Johnson--Kings 1996-2003; Ducks 2003-2004
- Sean O'Donnell--Kings 1994-2000, 2008-2010; Ducks 2005-2008
- Kip Brennan--Kings 2001-2004; Ducks 2005-2006
- George Parros--Kings 2005-2006; Ducks 2006-2012
- Mathieu Schneider--Kings 2000-2003; Ducks 2007-2008
- Josh Green--Kings 1998-1999; Ducks 2008-2011
- Kyle Calder--Kings 2007-2009; Ducks 2009-2010
- Jason Blake--Kings 1998-2001; Ducks 2010-2012
- Lubomir Visnovsky--Kings 2000-2008; Ducks 2010-2012
- Dustin Penner--Ducks 2006-2007, 2013-2014; Kings 2011-2013
- Jason LaBarbera--Kings 2005-2006, 2007-2009; Ducks 2014-2015
- Jonathan Bernier--Kings 2007-2013; Ducks 2016-2017
The series
Regular season results
Post-season results
Notable moments
Regular season
- In the 2007-08 season, the Ducks and Kings opened the season by playing a two-game series at O2 Arena in London, England on September 29 and 30, 2007, respectively, with the former date marking the first-ever ice hockey game played at the arena. The opening faceoff was delayed as there was a lighting malfunction in the arena following the national anthems. Los Angeles won the first game by a score of 4-1 with help from then 19-year-old goaltender Jonathan Bernier and two goals from Mike Cammalleri. The Ducks split the series, however, after beating the Kings by a replica 4-1 scoreline in the second game. The second game was notable as Jonas Hiller made his NHL debut, as then-Ducks starting goaltender Jean-Sebastien Giguere was injured to begin the season.
- The Ducks and Kings met on March 26, 2008, at Honda Center in Anaheim for a late-season tilt. Although the Ducks and Kings were near opposites in the standings that year (the Ducks finished fifth in the West while the Kings finished 15th), both teams played to an exhausting effort, as goaltenders Jonas Hiller (Anaheim) and Erik Ersberg (Los Angeles) made game-stopping saves to help their team. The game was focused centrally on the goaltenders, as Hiller stopped 31 of 32 shots, while Ersberg 39 of 40. With the score tied 1-1 on goals from Patrick O'Sullivan (Los Angeles) and Bobby Ryan (Anaheim) through the third period, Kings forward Alexander Frolov stole the puck from a falling Mathieu Schneider at the former's blueline and skated full-speed on a breakaway with under 20 seconds remaining in regulation. Frolov faked a shot, but Hiller made a sprawling pad save, much to the applause of the 17,331 fans in attendance. The two teams then played through overtime scoreless, sending it to a shootout. Kings winger Dustin Brown scored first, but Ducks winger Teemu Selanne evened the shootout on the very next shot, evening the shootout at 1-1. The next five shooters all missed their attempts until the Ducks' Schneider scored to put the Ducks ahead 2-1. Los Angeles forward Brian Willsie was stopped by Hiller on the next shot, giving the Ducks a 2-1 shootout victory. The win gave the Ducks a playoff spot at fourth in the West, clinching a playoff berth.
- On January 8, 2009, the Ducks and Kings met for a mid-season game at Staples Center in Los Angeles. The game featured an earthquake midway through the first period, felt by some of the players and also the press writers and fans in attendance. The game was not delayed, however. Los Angeles got off to a 2-0 lead late in the first period and throughout the second on goals from Dustin Brown and Wayne Simmonds. Then-Ducks Head Coach Randy Carlyle replaced goaltender Jean-Sebastien Giguere in favor of Jonas Hiller shortly thereafter, but the Kings scored again on an Anze Kopitar goal to make it 3-0. The game looked one-sided in favor of the Kings until Ducks winger Bobby Ryan scored a power play goal late in the second to put the Ducks on the board. To start the third, Ryan scored again, scoring a rebound off of a Ryan Carter wristshot to cut the Kings' lead to one goal. The most notable moment of the game, however, came just about a minute later when Ducks center Ryan Getzlaf fed an open Ryan on the left wing for a scoring attempt. Ryan put on arguably one of the most dazzling moves of the season, as he skated in on an angle towards the net and put on a roller-hockey style spin move around Kings defenseman Peter Harrold. With Harrold frozen from the play, Ryan pulled the puck back on his stick and tucked it in the back of the net past a sprawling Jonathan Quick. Ryan's hat-trick set a Ducks franchise record for fastest hat-trick in team history at 2:21. The score was tied 3-3, giving the visiting Ducks momentum until Los Angeles re-gained the lead on a power play goal from Alexander Frolov. The Ducks made many last-ditch efforts to tie the game, but Jonathan Quick stonewalled the Ducks' attempts, giving the Kings a 4-3 victory over the Ducks.
Post-season series
As division rivals, the Ducks and Kings could theoretically meet in either the first or second round of the Stanley Cup playoffs. They could also meet in the conference finals, provided that either or both teams qualify for wild card spots. However, neither team can meet in the Stanley Cup Finals. This differs from the similar Freeway Series between MLB's Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim and Los Angeles Dodgers, who are in separate conferences (the American League and National League, respectively), and the Los Angeles Chargers-Los Angeles Rams rivalry (Chargers and Rams are in the American Football Conference and National Football Conference, respectively) between so they can only meet in the final round of the MLB post-season, the World Series.
The Ducks and the Kings met in the playoffs for the first time 2014 in the Western Conference Second Round. Anaheim held home ice advantage as a result of winning the Western Conference title. The series began on May 3 at the Honda Center and ended on May 16.[1][2][3]
Fan reaction
While the Freeway Face-off is not as renowned as other NHL rivalries, Western Conference hockey fans know the rivalry to be intense. The Kings were the first NHL team in Southern California, brought in by the six-team expansion of 1967-68. The Kings' success of the late 1980s and early 1990s, largely due to the arrival of Wayne Gretzky in 1988, helped spike interest in hockey in Los Angeles, also spawning the growth of inline hockey in the area. The Ducks, formerly known the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim, came into the League for the 1993-94 season along with the Florida Panthers. With the Kings having been in existence for 26 years before the Ducks arrived, many saw the Ducks as taking away from the Kings' fanbase and attention in the local market. The Ducks' arrival in nearby Orange County brought new fans to the Southern California hockey scene, creating rivalry between the two teams and their fans. Many Kings fans who were disillusioned with the team's troubles after their 1993 Stanley Cup Finals appearance, and later with the imprisonment of former owner Bruce McNall, became Ducks fans. However, both teams have large, loyal fanbases.
The rivalry is also known for local bragging rights, pitting big-city Los Angeles against its southern neighbor Orange County, which is more suburban. Staples Center and Honda Center are less than an hour apart via local freeways; many Kings fans fill Honda Center in great numbers, but numerous Ducks fans also make the short trip up the freeway to Staples Center as well. In recent years, crowds at both venues are quite diverse due to both teams' recent successes.
See also
- National Hockey League rivalries
Other rivalries in the Los Angeles area
- Major League Baseball: Freeway Series
- College football: UCLA-USC rivalry
References
Source of the article : Wikipedia