From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1969–70 Los Angeles Kings
Division6th West
1969–70 record14–52–10
Home record12–22–4
Road record2–30–6
Goals for168
Goals against289
Team information
General manager Larry Regan
Coach Hal Laycoe and Johnny Wilson
Captain Bob Wall and Larry Cahan
Team leaders
Goals Eddie Shack (22)
Assists Butch Goring and Leon Rochefort (23)
Points Ross Lonsberry (42)
Penalty minutesRoss Lonsberry (118)
Wins Gerry Desjardins (7)
Goals against average Denis DeJordy (3.24)

The 1969–70 Los Angeles Kings season was the third ever for the Los Angeles Kings in the National Hockey League. After qualifying for the playoffs in each of their first two seasons, under the direction of coach Red Kelly (who left to take the Pittsburgh job), the Kings finished the season with an NHL-worst record of 14-52-10 (38 points). The team also fired coach Hal Laycoe after just 24 games. His replacement, Johnny Wilson, did not fare much better, winning just nine of the remaining 52 games on the schedule.

The last remaining active member of the 1969–70 Los Angeles Kings was Butch Goring, who retired after the 1984–85 season.

Offseason

In the Entry Draft, the Kings chose goaltender Dale Hoganson with their first pick, 16th overall in the second round.

Regular season

The Kings endured some long stretches of futility during the 1969–70 season:

  • From January 29 through March 5, they went 17 straight games without a victory (0–13–4)
  • From November 8 through November 29, they went 10 straight games without a victory (0–9–1)
  • From January 11 through January 25, and again from January 29 through February 15, they lost 8 straight games
  • From January 11 through February 15, they suffered 11 consecutive road losses.
  • Their only two victories away from home all season were: December 2 (4–3 at Oakland) and January 10 (6–4 at Minnesota)

Season standings

West Division [1]
GP W L T GF GA DIFF Pts
1 St. Louis Blues 76 37 27 12 224 179 +45 86
2 Pittsburgh Penguins 76 26 38 12 182 238 βˆ’56 64
3 Minnesota North Stars 76 19 35 22 224 257 βˆ’33 60
4 Oakland Seals 76 22 40 14 169 243 βˆ’74 58
5 Philadelphia Flyers 76 17 35 24 197 225 βˆ’28 58
6 Los Angeles Kings 76 14 52 10 168 290 βˆ’122 38

Record vs. opponents


Schedule and results

1969–70 Game Log
October
Game Date Opponent Score Location/attendance Record
1 11 Montreal Canadiens 1–5 Montreal 0–1–0
2 15 St. Louis Blues 1–4 St. Louis 0–2–0
3 17 Oakland Seals 1–5 Oakland 0–3–0
4 18 Oakland Seals 5–0 Los Angeles 1–3-0
5 22 Pittsburgh Penguins 2–0 Los Angeles 2–3-0
6 25 Boston Bruins 2–3 Los Angeles 2–4–0
7 29 Detroit Red Wings 2–5 Los Angeles 2–5–0
November
Game Date Opponent Score Location/attendance Record
8 1 Chicago Black Hawks 1–4 Los Angeles 2–6–0
9 5 Toronto Maple Leafs 6–2 Los Angeles 3–6-0
10 8 New York Rangers 1–4 Los Angeles 3–7–0
11 10 Montreal Canadiens 3–6 Los Angeles 3–8–0
12 15 Pittsburgh Penguins 1–3 Pittsburgh 3–9–0
13 16 Boston Bruins 4–7 Boston 3–10–0
14 19 Toronto Maple Leafs 4–4 Toronto 3-10–1
15 20 Philadelphia Flyers 2–3 Philadelphia 3–11–1
16 22 Minnesota North Stars 1–4 Minnesota 3–12–1
17 26 Chicago Black Hawks 0–6 Chicago 3–13–1
18 27 Detroit Red Wings 1–5 Detroit 3–14–1
19 29 St. Louis Blues 1–3 St. Louis 3–15–1
December
Game Date Opponent Score Location/attendance Record
20 2 Oakland Seals 4–3 Oakland 4–15-1
21 3 Philadelphia Flyers 1–7 Los Angeles 4–16–1
22 6 Oakland Seals 5–3 Los Angeles 5–16-1
23 10 Pittsburgh Penguins 0–2 Los Angeles 5–17–1
24 13 St. Louis Blues 1–8 Los Angeles 5–18–1
25 15 Minnesota North Stars 4–4 Los Angeles 5-182
26 17 Chicago Black Hawks 3–1 Los Angeles 6–18-2
27 20 Minnesota North Stars 3–3 Los Angeles 6-18–3
28 24 Toronto Maple Leafs 1–8 Toronto 6–19–3
29 25 Boston Bruins 1–7 Boston 6–20–3
30 28 New York Rangers 3–3 New York 6-20–4
31 30 Minnesota North Stars 0–0 Los Angeles 6-205
January
Game Date Opponent Score Location/attendance Record
32 1 Philadelphia Flyers 4–3 Los Angeles 7–20-5
33 3 Boston Bruins 2–6 Los Angeles 7–21–5
34 6 Montreal Canadiens 3–4 Montreal 7–22–5
35 8 Philadelphia Flyers 1–4 Philadelphia 7–23–5
36 10 Minnesota North Stars 6–4 Minnesota 8–23-5
37 11 Chicago Black Hawks 1–3 Chicago 8–24–5
38 14 Montreal Canadiens 2–4 Montreal 8–25–5
39 15 Boston Bruins 3–6 Boston 8–26–5
40 17 St. Louis Blues 1–3 St. Louis 8–27–5
41 18 Detroit Red Wings 1–3 Detroit 8–28–5
42 22 Toronto Maple Leafs 2–3 Los Angeles 8–29–5
43 24 Pittsburgh Penguins 2–4 Pittsburgh 8–30–5
44 25 New York Rangers 2–3 New York 8–31–5
45 28 New York Rangers 5–4 Los Angeles 9–31-5
46 29 St. Louis Blues 2–3 Los Angeles 9–32–5
47 31 Detroit Red Wings 1–2 Los Angeles 9–33–5
February
Game Date Opponent Score Location/attendance Record
48 5 Montreal Canadiens 3–5 Los Angeles 9–34–5
49 7 Pittsburgh Penguins 1–3 Pittsburgh 9–35–5
50 8 New York Rangers 1–5 New York 9–36–5
51 11 New York Rangers 2–6 Los Angeles 9–37–5
52 14 St. Louis Blues 1–2 St. Louis 9–38–5
53 15 Philadelphia Flyers 1–7 Philadelphia 9–39–5
54 18 Boston Bruins 5–5 Los Angeles 9-39–6
55 19 Pittsburgh Penguins 1–6 Los Angeles 9–40–6
56 21 St. Louis Blues 2–4 Los Angeles 9–41–6
57 25 Minnesota North Stars 3–3 Minnesota 9-41–7
58 26 Pittsburgh Penguins 0–1 Pittsburgh 9–42–7
59 28 Toronto Maple Leafs 3–3 Toronto 9-42–8
March
Game Date Opponent Score Location/attendance Record
60 1 Philadelphia Flyers 4–4 Philadelphia 9-42–9
61 3 Chicago Black Hawks 1–3 Los Angeles 9–43–9
62 5 Toronto Maple Leafs 3–5 Los Angeles 9–44–9
63 7 Oakland Seals 5–3 Los Angeles 10–44-9
64 8 Oakland Seals 2–2 Oakland 10-44–10
65 12 Pittsburgh Penguins 4–1 Los Angeles 11–44-10
66 14 Philadelphia Flyers 3–5 Los Angeles 11–45–10
67 15 Chicago Black Hawks 2–5 Chicago 11–46–10
68 17 Detroit Red Wings 2–3 Detroit 11–47–10
69 19 Montreal Canadiens 1–6 Los Angeles 11–48–10
70 21 Detroit Red Wings 1–4 Los Angeles 11–49–10
71 24 St. Louis Blues 0–4 Los Angeles 11–50–10
72 26 Philadelphia Flyers 3–2 Los Angeles 12–50-10
73 28 Minnesota North Stars 4–2 Los Angeles 13–50-10
74 31 Minnesota North Stars 2–5 Minnesota 13–51–10
April
Game Date Opponent Score Location/attendance Record
75 3 Oakland Seals 1–4 Oakland 13–52–10
76 4 Oakland Seals 4–1 Los Angeles 14–52-10

Playoffs

  • For the first time in team history, the Kings failed to qualify for the playoffs.

Player statistics

Note: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty minutes

Player GP G A Pts PIM
Ross Lonsberry 76 20 22 42 118
Eddie Joyal 59 18 22 40 8
Butch Goring 59 13 23 36 8
Eddie Shack 73 22 12 34 113
Bill Flett 69 14 18 32 70
Leon Rochefort 76 9 23 32 14
Jimmy Peters Jr. 74 15 9 24 10
Ted Irvine 58 11 13 24 10
Phil "Skip" Krake 58 5 17 22 86
Bob Wall 70 5 13 18 26
Bill White 40 4 11 15 21
Dick Duff 32 5 8 13 8
Dennis Hextall 28 5 7 12 40
Larry Cahan 70 4 8 12 52
Mike Corrigan 36 6 4 10 30
Matt Ravlich 21 3 7 10 34
Dale Rolfe 55 1 9 10 77
Bryan Campbell 31 4 4 8 4
Dale Hoganson 49 1 7 8 37
Brent Hughes 52 1 7 8 108
Real Lemieux 18 2 4 6 10
Gilles Marotte 21 0 6 6 32
Howie Hughes 21 0 4 4 0
Garry Monahan 21 0 3 3 12
Juha Widing 4 0 2 2 2
Jacques Lemieux 3 0 1 1 0
Jim Stanfield 1 0 0 0 0
Gary Croteau 3 0 0 0 0

Goaltending

Note: GP = Games played; MIN = Minutes; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; SO = Shutouts; GAA = Goals against average

Player GP MIN W L T SO GAA
Denis DeJordy 21 1147 5 11 4 0 3.24
Gerry Desjardins 43 2453 7 29 5 3 3.89
Wayne Rutledge 20 960 2 12 1 0 4.25

Awards and records

Records

Milestones

Transactions

The Kings were involved in the following transactions during the 1969–70 season. [3]

Trades

May 14, 1969 To Los Angeles Kings
Ross Lonsberry
Eddie Shack
To Boston Bruins
Ken Turlik
1st round pick in 1971 – Ron Jones
1st round pick in 1973 – Andre Savard
June 9, 1969 To Los Angeles Kings
Dennis Hextall
Leon Rochefort
To New York Rangers
Real Lemieux
June 12, 1969 To Los Angeles Kings
Cash
To St. Louis Blues
8th round pick in 1969 – Pat Lange
June 12, 1969 To Los Angeles Kings
Cash
To Montreal Canadiens
6th round pick in 1969 – Guy Delparte
7th round pick in 1969 – Ian Wilkie
September 1, 1969 To Los Angeles Kings
Roger Cote
To Phoenix Roadrunners ( WHL
Jim Murray
November 17, 1969 To Los Angeles Kings
Rights to Jean Potvin
2nd round pick in 1970 – Al McDonough
3rd round pick in 1970 – Terry Holbrook
To Montreal Canadiens
2nd round pick in 1970 – Buster Harvey
3rd round pick in 1970 – Steve Carlyle
4th round pick in 1970 – Cal Hammond
January 23, 1970 To Los Angeles Kings
Dick Duff
To Montreal Canadiens
Dennis Hextall
2nd round pick in 1971 – Larry Robinson
February 1, 1970 To Los Angeles Kings
Gary Marsh
To Toronto Maple Leafs
Jacques Lemieux
February 20, 1970 To Los Angeles Kings
Garry Monahan
Matt Ravlich
Brian Gibbons
To Detroit Red Wings
Gary Croteau
Dale Rolfe
Larry Johnston
February 20, 1970 To Los Angeles Kings
Gilles Marotte
Jim Stanfield
Denis DeJordy
To Chicago Black Hawks
Bryan Campbell
Bill White
Gerry Desjardins
February 27, 1970 To Los Angeles Kings
Real Lemieux
Juha Widing
To New York Rangers
Ted Irvine

Free agent signings

November 15, 1969 From Springfield Kings ( AHL)
Jean Potvin

Intra-league Draft

June 11, 1969 To Chicago Black Hawks
Howie Menard
June 11, 1969 To St. Louis Blues
Ron Anderson

Reverse Draft

June 12, 1969 To Denver Spurs ( WHL)
Jacques Caron
June 12, 1969 From Pittsburgh Penguins
Noel Price

Draft picks

Round Pick Player Nationality
2 16 Dale Hoganson  Canada
3 27 Gregg Boddy  Canada
4 39 Bruce Landon  Canada
5 51 Butch Goring  Canada
  • NOTE: Back before 1979, the amateur draft was held with varying rules and procedures. In 1969, teams only needed to select as many player as they wanted to, which is why there were only four Kings players drafted.

References

  1. ^ "1969–1970 Division Standings Standings - NHL.com - Standings". National Hockey League.
  2. ^ "All-Time NHL Results". NHL.com. Retrieved August 25, 2023.
  3. ^ "Hockey Transactions Search Results".
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1969–70 Los Angeles Kings
Division6th West
1969–70 record14–52–10
Home record12–22–4
Road record2–30–6
Goals for168
Goals against289
Team information
General manager Larry Regan
Coach Hal Laycoe and Johnny Wilson
Captain Bob Wall and Larry Cahan
Team leaders
Goals Eddie Shack (22)
Assists Butch Goring and Leon Rochefort (23)
Points Ross Lonsberry (42)
Penalty minutesRoss Lonsberry (118)
Wins Gerry Desjardins (7)
Goals against average Denis DeJordy (3.24)

The 1969–70 Los Angeles Kings season was the third ever for the Los Angeles Kings in the National Hockey League. After qualifying for the playoffs in each of their first two seasons, under the direction of coach Red Kelly (who left to take the Pittsburgh job), the Kings finished the season with an NHL-worst record of 14-52-10 (38 points). The team also fired coach Hal Laycoe after just 24 games. His replacement, Johnny Wilson, did not fare much better, winning just nine of the remaining 52 games on the schedule.

The last remaining active member of the 1969–70 Los Angeles Kings was Butch Goring, who retired after the 1984–85 season.

Offseason

In the Entry Draft, the Kings chose goaltender Dale Hoganson with their first pick, 16th overall in the second round.

Regular season

The Kings endured some long stretches of futility during the 1969–70 season:

  • From January 29 through March 5, they went 17 straight games without a victory (0–13–4)
  • From November 8 through November 29, they went 10 straight games without a victory (0–9–1)
  • From January 11 through January 25, and again from January 29 through February 15, they lost 8 straight games
  • From January 11 through February 15, they suffered 11 consecutive road losses.
  • Their only two victories away from home all season were: December 2 (4–3 at Oakland) and January 10 (6–4 at Minnesota)

Season standings

West Division [1]
GP W L T GF GA DIFF Pts
1 St. Louis Blues 76 37 27 12 224 179 +45 86
2 Pittsburgh Penguins 76 26 38 12 182 238 βˆ’56 64
3 Minnesota North Stars 76 19 35 22 224 257 βˆ’33 60
4 Oakland Seals 76 22 40 14 169 243 βˆ’74 58
5 Philadelphia Flyers 76 17 35 24 197 225 βˆ’28 58
6 Los Angeles Kings 76 14 52 10 168 290 βˆ’122 38

Record vs. opponents


Schedule and results

1969–70 Game Log
October
Game Date Opponent Score Location/attendance Record
1 11 Montreal Canadiens 1–5 Montreal 0–1–0
2 15 St. Louis Blues 1–4 St. Louis 0–2–0
3 17 Oakland Seals 1–5 Oakland 0–3–0
4 18 Oakland Seals 5–0 Los Angeles 1–3-0
5 22 Pittsburgh Penguins 2–0 Los Angeles 2–3-0
6 25 Boston Bruins 2–3 Los Angeles 2–4–0
7 29 Detroit Red Wings 2–5 Los Angeles 2–5–0
November
Game Date Opponent Score Location/attendance Record
8 1 Chicago Black Hawks 1–4 Los Angeles 2–6–0
9 5 Toronto Maple Leafs 6–2 Los Angeles 3–6-0
10 8 New York Rangers 1–4 Los Angeles 3–7–0
11 10 Montreal Canadiens 3–6 Los Angeles 3–8–0
12 15 Pittsburgh Penguins 1–3 Pittsburgh 3–9–0
13 16 Boston Bruins 4–7 Boston 3–10–0
14 19 Toronto Maple Leafs 4–4 Toronto 3-10–1
15 20 Philadelphia Flyers 2–3 Philadelphia 3–11–1
16 22 Minnesota North Stars 1–4 Minnesota 3–12–1
17 26 Chicago Black Hawks 0–6 Chicago 3–13–1
18 27 Detroit Red Wings 1–5 Detroit 3–14–1
19 29 St. Louis Blues 1–3 St. Louis 3–15–1
December
Game Date Opponent Score Location/attendance Record
20 2 Oakland Seals 4–3 Oakland 4–15-1
21 3 Philadelphia Flyers 1–7 Los Angeles 4–16–1
22 6 Oakland Seals 5–3 Los Angeles 5–16-1
23 10 Pittsburgh Penguins 0–2 Los Angeles 5–17–1
24 13 St. Louis Blues 1–8 Los Angeles 5–18–1
25 15 Minnesota North Stars 4–4 Los Angeles 5-182
26 17 Chicago Black Hawks 3–1 Los Angeles 6–18-2
27 20 Minnesota North Stars 3–3 Los Angeles 6-18–3
28 24 Toronto Maple Leafs 1–8 Toronto 6–19–3
29 25 Boston Bruins 1–7 Boston 6–20–3
30 28 New York Rangers 3–3 New York 6-20–4
31 30 Minnesota North Stars 0–0 Los Angeles 6-205
January
Game Date Opponent Score Location/attendance Record
32 1 Philadelphia Flyers 4–3 Los Angeles 7–20-5
33 3 Boston Bruins 2–6 Los Angeles 7–21–5
34 6 Montreal Canadiens 3–4 Montreal 7–22–5
35 8 Philadelphia Flyers 1–4 Philadelphia 7–23–5
36 10 Minnesota North Stars 6–4 Minnesota 8–23-5
37 11 Chicago Black Hawks 1–3 Chicago 8–24–5
38 14 Montreal Canadiens 2–4 Montreal 8–25–5
39 15 Boston Bruins 3–6 Boston 8–26–5
40 17 St. Louis Blues 1–3 St. Louis 8–27–5
41 18 Detroit Red Wings 1–3 Detroit 8–28–5
42 22 Toronto Maple Leafs 2–3 Los Angeles 8–29–5
43 24 Pittsburgh Penguins 2–4 Pittsburgh 8–30–5
44 25 New York Rangers 2–3 New York 8–31–5
45 28 New York Rangers 5–4 Los Angeles 9–31-5
46 29 St. Louis Blues 2–3 Los Angeles 9–32–5
47 31 Detroit Red Wings 1–2 Los Angeles 9–33–5
February
Game Date Opponent Score Location/attendance Record
48 5 Montreal Canadiens 3–5 Los Angeles 9–34–5
49 7 Pittsburgh Penguins 1–3 Pittsburgh 9–35–5
50 8 New York Rangers 1–5 New York 9–36–5
51 11 New York Rangers 2–6 Los Angeles 9–37–5
52 14 St. Louis Blues 1–2 St. Louis 9–38–5
53 15 Philadelphia Flyers 1–7 Philadelphia 9–39–5
54 18 Boston Bruins 5–5 Los Angeles 9-39–6
55 19 Pittsburgh Penguins 1–6 Los Angeles 9–40–6
56 21 St. Louis Blues 2–4 Los Angeles 9–41–6
57 25 Minnesota North Stars 3–3 Minnesota 9-41–7
58 26 Pittsburgh Penguins 0–1 Pittsburgh 9–42–7
59 28 Toronto Maple Leafs 3–3 Toronto 9-42–8
March
Game Date Opponent Score Location/attendance Record
60 1 Philadelphia Flyers 4–4 Philadelphia 9-42–9
61 3 Chicago Black Hawks 1–3 Los Angeles 9–43–9
62 5 Toronto Maple Leafs 3–5 Los Angeles 9–44–9
63 7 Oakland Seals 5–3 Los Angeles 10–44-9
64 8 Oakland Seals 2–2 Oakland 10-44–10
65 12 Pittsburgh Penguins 4–1 Los Angeles 11–44-10
66 14 Philadelphia Flyers 3–5 Los Angeles 11–45–10
67 15 Chicago Black Hawks 2–5 Chicago 11–46–10
68 17 Detroit Red Wings 2–3 Detroit 11–47–10
69 19 Montreal Canadiens 1–6 Los Angeles 11–48–10
70 21 Detroit Red Wings 1–4 Los Angeles 11–49–10
71 24 St. Louis Blues 0–4 Los Angeles 11–50–10
72 26 Philadelphia Flyers 3–2 Los Angeles 12–50-10
73 28 Minnesota North Stars 4–2 Los Angeles 13–50-10
74 31 Minnesota North Stars 2–5 Minnesota 13–51–10
April
Game Date Opponent Score Location/attendance Record
75 3 Oakland Seals 1–4 Oakland 13–52–10
76 4 Oakland Seals 4–1 Los Angeles 14–52-10

Playoffs

  • For the first time in team history, the Kings failed to qualify for the playoffs.

Player statistics

Note: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty minutes

Player GP G A Pts PIM
Ross Lonsberry 76 20 22 42 118
Eddie Joyal 59 18 22 40 8
Butch Goring 59 13 23 36 8
Eddie Shack 73 22 12 34 113
Bill Flett 69 14 18 32 70
Leon Rochefort 76 9 23 32 14
Jimmy Peters Jr. 74 15 9 24 10
Ted Irvine 58 11 13 24 10
Phil "Skip" Krake 58 5 17 22 86
Bob Wall 70 5 13 18 26
Bill White 40 4 11 15 21
Dick Duff 32 5 8 13 8
Dennis Hextall 28 5 7 12 40
Larry Cahan 70 4 8 12 52
Mike Corrigan 36 6 4 10 30
Matt Ravlich 21 3 7 10 34
Dale Rolfe 55 1 9 10 77
Bryan Campbell 31 4 4 8 4
Dale Hoganson 49 1 7 8 37
Brent Hughes 52 1 7 8 108
Real Lemieux 18 2 4 6 10
Gilles Marotte 21 0 6 6 32
Howie Hughes 21 0 4 4 0
Garry Monahan 21 0 3 3 12
Juha Widing 4 0 2 2 2
Jacques Lemieux 3 0 1 1 0
Jim Stanfield 1 0 0 0 0
Gary Croteau 3 0 0 0 0

Goaltending

Note: GP = Games played; MIN = Minutes; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; SO = Shutouts; GAA = Goals against average

Player GP MIN W L T SO GAA
Denis DeJordy 21 1147 5 11 4 0 3.24
Gerry Desjardins 43 2453 7 29 5 3 3.89
Wayne Rutledge 20 960 2 12 1 0 4.25

Awards and records

Records

Milestones

Transactions

The Kings were involved in the following transactions during the 1969–70 season. [3]

Trades

May 14, 1969 To Los Angeles Kings
Ross Lonsberry
Eddie Shack
To Boston Bruins
Ken Turlik
1st round pick in 1971 – Ron Jones
1st round pick in 1973 – Andre Savard
June 9, 1969 To Los Angeles Kings
Dennis Hextall
Leon Rochefort
To New York Rangers
Real Lemieux
June 12, 1969 To Los Angeles Kings
Cash
To St. Louis Blues
8th round pick in 1969 – Pat Lange
June 12, 1969 To Los Angeles Kings
Cash
To Montreal Canadiens
6th round pick in 1969 – Guy Delparte
7th round pick in 1969 – Ian Wilkie
September 1, 1969 To Los Angeles Kings
Roger Cote
To Phoenix Roadrunners ( WHL
Jim Murray
November 17, 1969 To Los Angeles Kings
Rights to Jean Potvin
2nd round pick in 1970 – Al McDonough
3rd round pick in 1970 – Terry Holbrook
To Montreal Canadiens
2nd round pick in 1970 – Buster Harvey
3rd round pick in 1970 – Steve Carlyle
4th round pick in 1970 – Cal Hammond
January 23, 1970 To Los Angeles Kings
Dick Duff
To Montreal Canadiens
Dennis Hextall
2nd round pick in 1971 – Larry Robinson
February 1, 1970 To Los Angeles Kings
Gary Marsh
To Toronto Maple Leafs
Jacques Lemieux
February 20, 1970 To Los Angeles Kings
Garry Monahan
Matt Ravlich
Brian Gibbons
To Detroit Red Wings
Gary Croteau
Dale Rolfe
Larry Johnston
February 20, 1970 To Los Angeles Kings
Gilles Marotte
Jim Stanfield
Denis DeJordy
To Chicago Black Hawks
Bryan Campbell
Bill White
Gerry Desjardins
February 27, 1970 To Los Angeles Kings
Real Lemieux
Juha Widing
To New York Rangers
Ted Irvine

Free agent signings

November 15, 1969 From Springfield Kings ( AHL)
Jean Potvin

Intra-league Draft

June 11, 1969 To Chicago Black Hawks
Howie Menard
June 11, 1969 To St. Louis Blues
Ron Anderson

Reverse Draft

June 12, 1969 To Denver Spurs ( WHL)
Jacques Caron
June 12, 1969 From Pittsburgh Penguins
Noel Price

Draft picks

Round Pick Player Nationality
2 16 Dale Hoganson  Canada
3 27 Gregg Boddy  Canada
4 39 Bruce Landon  Canada
5 51 Butch Goring  Canada
  • NOTE: Back before 1979, the amateur draft was held with varying rules and procedures. In 1969, teams only needed to select as many player as they wanted to, which is why there were only four Kings players drafted.

References

  1. ^ "1969–1970 Division Standings Standings - NHL.com - Standings". National Hockey League.
  2. ^ "All-Time NHL Results". NHL.com. Retrieved August 25, 2023.
  3. ^ "Hockey Transactions Search Results".

Videos

Youtube | Vimeo | Bing

Websites

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Encyclopedia

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Facebook