The Kings are loading up their bench with two familiar kinds of voices: one built on blue-line precision, the other on offense that could tilt a game in a hurry.
Per David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period, Los Angeles has hired Hall of Fame defenseman Phil Housley and longtime NHL forward Ray Whitney as assistant coaches. The moves also come with the news that Newell Brown will not return after spending the last two seasons on the Kings bench.
Brown’s time in Los Angeles extended a coaching path that had run through the Western Conference for decades, dating back to the 1996-97 season. With his departure, the Kings are turning those openings over to two former players with a combined mountain of NHL experience.
Housley arrives as a major addition for a defense group in transition. The Kings’ blue line is going through its biggest shift in years, with cornerstone defender Drew Doughty appearing ready to pass top-defenseman responsibilities to Brandt Clarke next season after Clarke posted 40 points in the 2025-26 campaign. Housley’s background gives that evolution another seasoned layer of support, backed by 1,495 NHL games.
As a player, Housley was one of the sport’s most productive defensemen. He topped 20 goals five times and 70 points six times across a career that stretched from the 1980’s into the dead puck era of the 2000’s.
He was also a regular for Team USA on the international stage, helping blue lines win an Olympic Silver Medal and a World Cup Gold Medal. His résumé includes inductions into the Buffalo Sabres’, IIHF, and USA Hockey Hall of Fames, along with his Hockey Hall of Fame nod in 2016.
Coaching came next. Housley started with Minnesota high school hockey in 2004, then moved into the NHL as an assistant with the Nashville Predators in 2013. Since then, he has worked in Buffalo, Arizona, and New York, including one season as head coach of the Sabres.
Whitney brings a different kind of value. The 22-year NHL veteran played 1,330 games over 22 seasons after being selected in the second round in 1991. He carved out a long run as a top-six forward for six different clubs, and his best-known stretch came with the Carolina Hurricanes from 2005 to 2010.
In Carolina, Whitney was a key piece of the 2006 Stanley Cup team and produced 15 points in 24 playoff games during that run. He finished his playing career with 385 goals and 1,064 points, built on skating, a heavy shot, and a knack for slipping past defenders and attacking the zone.
After retiring, Whitney spent time as a pro scout with the Hurricanes from 2015 to 2018. He has not held an NHL role since then, instead working with the Phoenix Jr.
Coyotes AAA club through much of the 2020’s. Now he’s headed to the Kings, where he should be a useful voice for the team’s new-look offense, led by Artemi Panarin and without Anze Kopitar.
Housley and Whitney will work under Peter Laviolette, who is entering his first season behind the Kings bench after replacing Jim Hiller. Assistant coach D.J.
Smith briefly handled the club as interim head coach and was part of offseason interviews, but later moved on to the Edmonton Oilers as an associate coach. With Smith and Brown gone, Los Angeles has filled two empty seats with a pair of veterans who know the league from every angle.
In Other News...
One Kings Prospect Has More Riding On This Week Than Anyone
The Kings are bringing a large group of prospects back to El Segundo when development camp opens June 29 at the Toyota Sports Performance Center, and the week should offer the organization a first real in-person look at its newest draft class alongside a few familiar names. Forty players are set to attend, including all 11 picks from the 2026 NHL Draft, with group practices and scrimmages spread across several days as the club begins sorting out who is ready to take the next step.
For Los Angeles, the camp also puts a spotlight on the players trying to make the strongest early impression, from goalie Carter George to winger Elton Hermansson, who will be under particular attention after hearing his name called in the first round. Hayden Stavroff is another one to watch closely, and his situation gives the week a little extra weight as the Kings evaluate whether there is a fit beyond just another development camp invitation. [Read more 🡒]
Brian Dumoulin Season Review Leaves Kings Fans With One Big Question
Brian Dumoulin gave the Kings exactly what they hoped for in one sense last season: a veteran defenseman who stayed available, played all 82 games and logged steady minutes on a blue line that needed it. He finished with 2 goals and 15 assists, spent most of his time alongside Cody Ceci, and still managed to stack up in a few useful areas, including takeaways, even as his season review looked more complicated once the details were sorted through.
The complication is what makes this such an interesting offseason talking point for Los Angeles. Dumoulins numbers improved when he was used with other partners, and the pair he formed with Ceci drew plenty of attention in the playoffs, where opponents were able to attack that matchup. He also finished with the teams highest giveaway total, so the Kings are left weighing reliability and workload against the question of whether his best usage might not be the one they leaned on most often. [Read more 🡒]
