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Glen Murray began and ended his career with the Boston Bruins, but in between, he had a stint with Pittsburgh and a run with Los Angeles, which lasted six years and started late in the 1996-97 Season.
Murray received more ice time in L.A., and he was also beginning the prime of his hockey career. The Right Wing put up 60 Points in his first full year in Los Angeles, and while he dropped to 31 in his second, he rebounded with 62 in his third (1999-00). Murray continued his trend of bouncing up and down in his Kings stint, dropping back to 39 Points in year four, and at this point, the Kings might have thought they knew what they had with him.
Murray was traded to his original team, Boston, very early in the 2001/02 Season, and he was even better, going to two All-Star Games in the second half of his career. With the Kings, Murray tabulated 211 Points in 304 Games.
Jozef Stumpel was coming into his own as a playmaker with the Boston Bruins, and after a 76-Point year, he was traded to Los Angeles, who needed his abilities.
In Stumpel’s first season as a King, he had a career-high 58 Assists, a number that was good enough to land him fifth in the league. Injuries affected Stumpel over the next two years, as he missed a handful of games in both years. However, when he was healthy, he played as well as anyone in the NHL.
Early in the 2001/02 Season, Stumpel was traded back to Boston. Two years later, he was dealt back to L.A., played one more year, and then signed with the Florida Panthers as a Free Agent. As a King, Stumpel scored 267 Points in 334 Games.
Los Angeles Kings owner Bruce McNall felt that Bernie Nicholls could score, but they already had players who could put the puck in the net. McNall wanted grit, and he got that when he engineered a trade with the New York Rangers that sent Tony Granato to the Kings.
Granato did not put up the same Points totals that Nicholls did, but he was a completely different player. The Right Wing still had his best years in Los Angeles, posting three consecutive 60-plus years, peaking with a career-high 82 Points in 1992-93. That year, Granato helped the Kings make the Stanley Cup Finals, and he led all skaters in Shots (77).
After the Finals, Granato’s hard-hitting style caught up to him, and he was frequently out of the lineup due to injury. When his contract expired, he signed with the San Jose Sharks and would go to his first All-Star Game.
With the Kings, Granato scored 305 Points in 380 Games.
Jari Kurri was one of the legends in Edmonton in the 1980s, winning five Stanley Cups with the Oilers and earning five postseason All-Star Selections. Kurri returned to Europe after the fifth Cup win. However, on May 30, 1991, his rights were traded twice: first to Philadelphia, who then dealt him to Los Angeles to reunite him with Wayne Gretzky. Just like that, Kurri was ready to return to North America.
Kurri was not the explosive player he once was, but was still an above-average Right Wing. Playing for L.A. for four-and-a-half years, Kurri averaged .89 Points per Game and was an All-Star in 1993, the same year the Kings went to the Stanley Cup Finals. That year, he scored 87 Points, his best with Los Angeles. He left L.A. when he was traded to the New York Rangers, where, coincidentally, he again joined a former Oiler legend, Mark Messier.
Kurri was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2001.