The Kings announced they’ve signed winger Taylor Ward to a two-year extension worth $875K per season for a total value of $1.75MM. The team didn’t specify whether it’s a one-way or two-way deal. Ward was slated to become an unrestricted free agent this summer.
Including his entry-level contract, this is the fifth contract Ward has signed with the Kings and his first multi-year deal. Signed as an undrafted free agent out of the University of Nebraska-Omaha in 2022, he’s in his fourth full season in the organization and fourth overall after appearing in some games with AHL Ontario at the tail end of 2021-22. A well-rounded, depth offensive threat with some physicality, he slowly worked his way up the organizational depth chart before being rewarded with his NHL debut in the final game of the 2024-25 regular season.
That game, in which he tallied his first NHL goal, evidently gave the 27-year-old renewed confidence. He’s parlayed that into a career year here in 2025-26, already matching his career high in goals (12) in only 32 appearances with Ontario. That earned him a recall to the Kings’ roster earlier this month. He’s provided some much-needed depth scoring in a fourth-line role since coming up, posting a pair of goals and assists each for four points in nine games while pushing north of 11 minutes of ice time per night.
For an L.A. team near the bottom of the league in scoring at 2.60 goals per game, they’ll take all the help they can get from wherever in the lineup. Given his relatively conservative goal-scoring history at the minor-league level, asking him to keep up his 27.3% shooting rate through 10 career NHL contests is highly unrealistic, but he’s shown he can be a legitimate factor – averaging 3.33 shot attempts per game to rank 10th on the team despite his limited role.
The Buffalo native has also gotten some power-play reps since coming up, averaging north of a minute per game on the man advantage. With Anže Kopitar‘s absence, more is being asked of Los Angeles’ depth forwards, and Ward’s helped make sure the Kings’ 3-2-4 record in their last nine hasn’t been any worse.
Now, he gets rewarded with the most financially lucrative commitment of his professional career. If he wants to make a move elsewhere, he’ll have to wait until the end of the 2027-28 season to test unrestricted free agency.

He earned it!