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When we are Kings: LA clinch historic first Stanley Cup

WATCH: After 45 years of waiting and two missed chances, the Los Angeles Kings are finally the NHL champions.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=maJxMf1Ci0I

YouTube Credit: ProSonics

DUSTIN BROWN PRACTICALLY snatched the Stanley Cup away from NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman, skating directly to center ice and thrusting it skyward.

Forgive his haste. The Los Angeles Kings’ captain had only been waiting his whole life for this moment. The Kings’ long-suffering fans had been waiting nearly 45 years for somebody to lift that 36-pound silver trophy and remove the burden on a franchise that had never won an NHL title.

Brown, MVP goalie Jonathan Quick and the late-blooming Kings never flinched under all that weight. After an unbelievable postseason run that ended in a triumphant flurry of blood, sweat and power-play goals in Game 6, they’re all champions.

Jeff Carter and Trevor Lewis scored two goals apiece, Quick finished his Conn Smythe Trophy-winning performance with 17 saves, and the Kings beat the New Jersey Devils 6-1 Monday night, becoming the first eighth-seeded playoff team to win the Stanley Cup finals.

When Lewis scored into Martin Brodeur’s empty net with 3:45 to play, the Kings’ decades of tension and frustration finally turned into raw anticipation. After 45 years of existence, one tumultuous regular season and two missed chances to clinch the Cup, the Kings knew they were about to be champions for the first time.

Even the sober, serious Quick got happy.

“You get that four-goal lead, you know, it’s hard for it not to creep into your head a little bit,” he said. “That’s when you take a big, deep breath, relax a little bit, and know it’s going to happen.”

After taking a 3-0 series lead and then losing two potential clinching games last week, the Kings finished ferociously at Staples Center just when the sixth-seeded Devils appeared capable of matching the biggest comeback in finals history.

But the Kings can exhale. They’re reigning over the NHL for the first time.

– Greg Beachem, AP

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