A front-office change in Los Angeles brought sweeping change to the Kings’ blue line this summer. With Hall-of-Fame executive Ken Holland at the helm, the club lost their top left-shot defender in Vladislav Gavrikov to the Rangers in free agency and also traded promising puck-moving righty Jordan Spence to the Senators for futures. Their replacements were a pair of declining but hardened top-four fixtures, Cody Ceci and Brian Dumoulin, on the open market.
But Brandt Clarke, the club’s eighth overall pick in 2021, remains with L.A. as he enters the final season of his entry-level contract. That’s despite reporting that the Kings were open to moving him at last season’s trade deadline in their pursuit of a forward upgrade. They ended up not making a move large enough to require parting ways with him, and of course, those ideations of a trade were under a previous regime.
The 22-year-old’s development has been handled in somewhat of a puzzling manner. The 6’2″ righty always faced a bit of an uphill battle as an OHLer who had his draft year completely upended due to COVID. While most of his peers ended up sitting on the sidelines for the entire season, he was high-end enough of a prospect to play pro hockey overseas. He was thus loaned to HC Nove Zamky of the Slovak Extraliga, where he logged 15 points in 26 games en route to becoming a top-10 selection by the Kings.
Clarke returned stateside and didn’t miss a beat, exploding offensively. He was arguably the best player in major junior hockey in 2022-23 aside from the draft-year phenom Connor Bedard, posting 61 points in just 31 games from the blue line for the Barrie Colts.
He also made his NHL debut that season, posting two assists in a nine-game trial. But as he made the jump to pro hockey full-time in 2023-24, that offensive outburst the prior season wasn’t enough to get him an extended runway in the NHL. He made 16 appearances for the Kings but ended up playing most of the campaign for AHL Ontario, where he clicked at nearly a point per game in his first real taste of high-level hockey and led the league in rookie assists.
That made Clarke essentially an undeniable piece for the Kings’ main roster. While he made the team out of camp and never looked back, he was still used rather sparingly, despite top righty Drew Doughty missing a good portion of the season due to an ankle injury.
Concerns about his individual defensive acumen limited his playing time to just 16:17 per game, although he was still relatively involved physically with 121 blocks. He churned out five goals and 33 points in 78 games – fine production for that limited usage – and posted good possession numbers in sheltered minutes with a +13 rating and 54.0 CF% and 54.2 xGF% at even strength.
As he enters a contract year, there should be more opportunities for him. Even if he doesn’t necessarily slot in above Ceci on the team’s depth chart, he should get the additional power-play minutes that Spence is vacating and, realistically, his general mobility should make him a candidate to leapfrog the newcomer and begin the season as L.A.’s No. 2 option on the right side behind Doughty.
That roster math, plus a new braintrust in place, has likely bought him some time to make a lasting impression on the Kings’ brass. While general manager Ken Holland told RG’s James Murphy that Clarke is “a really talented guy with a bright future,” he neither committed to a change of scenery nor long-term belief. “Now we’ve got to figure out where it’s going. I think the best way is to…I mean, I know him, but I don’t know him. Do you know what I mean?” Holland said.
You baited. I clicked. Shame on me.
Aren’t all of these posts click bait? Or are there some that they are hoping don’t receive any clicks?
You should look up the definition
Expecting LA to take 2 steps backwards this season. Older and slower.
Their whole brain-trust needed replacing, especially Luc.
Brandt Clarke was never available at the trade deadline despite the trade rumors that were created by people playing too much PlayStation. Ken Holland may have different ideas but the overall sentiment has been that he’s expecting the younger players to take a big step forward and his offseason moves to bolster depth seem to bear that out.
The Kings would be fools to part ways with Clarke.
God I love rooting for the 1990s LA Kings gold buddy club. Yeah trade Clarke so we can lose the last of the insanely good RHD depth built up and turn the defense into nothing but old farts
Durzi,
Roy,
Walker,
Spence,
Clarke
Someone should write a book about how they messed this up!
Yet somehow they managed to get 105 points and finish 2nd last year in the Pacific.