Traded from Columbus during the 2015/16 Season, Center, Ryan Johansen finished the split year with 60 Points, the third straight campaign where he scored at least 60.
Johansen kept up that consistency, scoring 61 Points in 2016-17, and while he was injured in the playoffs, his contributions were part of the reason they made the Finals that year. After another good year (15-39-54), Johansen had his best year to date with the Predators, netting 64 Points, with a career-high 50 Assists.
In 2019-20 and 2020-21,Johansen's play and ice time dropped off(58 Points in 116 Games), but last season he was healthy and efficient, scoring 63 Points with his 26 Goals being his highest tally since 2013-13 when he was a Blue Jacket. Johansen played another year with the Predators before he was traded to the Colorado Avalanche, leaving behind 362 Points in Music City.
Showing off solid offensive versatility in his career, Mike Cammalleri’s long career began in Los Angeles, debuting in 2002, but cementing himself as a starting NHL forward in 2005, where he had 55 Points in his first full season in hockey’s premier league.
Cammalleri followed this with one of his best seasons, netting 80 Points with a career-best 46 Assists. He earned plenty of power play time over this era, and though Los Angeles was not a competitive team, Cammalleri was a significant component of the success that they did have.
He was traded to Calgary in 2008 and returned as a Free Agent nine years later, albeit for a brief time before he was traded to Edmonton. Cammalleri would tabulate 212 Points in 298 Games as a King.
Tom Williams played 25 Games with the New York Rangers before being traded to Los Angeles, where he had his greatest success in Hockey.
The Left Wing played with the Kings until 1979, doing well on tertiary lines, but having one very good year in 1976/77 where he lit the lamp 35 times with 74 overall Points. He was traded to the Kings in the '79 offseason but never made their team and retired shortly after.
Williams scored 249 Points in 372 Games for Los Angeles.
Sean O’Donnell was traded to the Los Angeles Kings before he made it to the NHL with the team that drafted him, the Buffalo Sabres, and it was with the Kings where he first proved his merits.
O'Donnell played his first five NHL seasons with the Kings, using his grit and fists to protect his end and display traditional stay-at-home defensive acumen. The blueliner had triple-digits in PIM in year two to year five of his run with L.A., and his toughness may not have yielded goals but did prevent them.
Left unprotected in the Expansion Draft, O'Donnell departed Los Angeles for Minnesota in 2000, but he returned as a Stanley Cup Champion in 2008 when the Anaheim Ducks sent him back to Los Angeles. He served the Kings for two more years before leaving as a Free Agent to Philadelphia.
Overall, O'Donnell played 541 of his 1,224 Games with the Kings, with 98 Points and 940 Penalty Minutes.