Kings Just Made Their Brandt Clarke Belief Crystal Clear

The LA Kings are banking on Brandt Clarke's rising star power, inking him to a five-year deal that underscores his critical role in their future game plan.

The Los Angeles Kings made their move during a chaotic draft weekend, locking up defenseman Brandt Clarke on a five-year extension worth an average annual value of $7.4 million.

It was a clear statement from the organization. Rather than let the situation drift toward restricted free agency, the Kings secured one of their most promising young players before any uncertainty could build around his future. Clarke, a 6-foot-2 defenseman, now looks set to stay in the fold as part of the team’s long-term core.

The timing matters, too. The extension came on June 26, 2026, right in the middle of a weekend filled with the 2026 NHL Draft and major trade activity around the league. For Los Angeles, it was another sign of confidence in the direction Ken Holland is steering the club.

Clarke’s breakout 2025-26 season gave the Kings plenty of reason to act. He finished with 32 assists and 40 points across a full 82-game schedule, becoming a steady presence at both ends of the rink. His puck-moving, poise, and ability to help the Kings generate offense from the back end stood out, and his work in transition fits cleanly with the team’s fast-paced style.

There’s also the bigger picture. Clarke was the No. 8 pick in the 2021 NHL Draft, and his rise has made him look more and more like a player the Kings can build around. The extension only sharpens that outlook.

Drew Doughty’s presence has played a major role in that development. One of the NHL’s top defensemen for well over a decade, Doughty has offered Clarke a model for what it takes to stay effective at the highest level. He remains under contract through the 2026-27 season, and the Kings are not expected to open contract talks with him this summer.

For now, Clarke is the young blue-liner who figures to take on a bigger and bigger role. The Kings see him as more than depth.

They see him as a foundational piece, and the contract reflects that. He has shown vision, composure, and the kind of decision-making that can steady a defense under pressure.

There will still be a balance to strike as he continues to develop, but the organization’s plan is plain enough. Los Angeles is betting on Clarke to grow into the center of its defense, and if he keeps progressing the way he has, he won’t just be part of the next era on the blue line. He’ll help define it.

In Other News...

Kings May Have Finally Found The Bargain Fix For Their Offense

The offseason push to juice the offense has led the Kings toward a familiar kind of solution: veteran help on manageable money. Mats Zuccarello and Corey Perry were brought in on short-term deals, giving Los Angeles a pair of experienced forwards who can fit into different parts of the lineup while also keeping the front offices financial flexibility intact.

For Ken Holland, the appeal is clear. Zuccarello should help on the power play, Perry brings scoring and edge, and the bargain structure of both signings opens the door for more roster work elsewhere, including the addition of Erik Haula. The bigger question now is how much lift those moves can actually provide for a team that has been looking for a more reliable offensive punch. [Read more 🡒]

Kings Free Agency Targets Matter More Than Ever After Kopitar's Exit

With NHL free agency set to open July 1, the Kings are heading into a stretch that could shape the post-Anze Kopitar era more than any one trade deadline ever did. General manager Ken Holland is working with a roster that needs help in several places, from blue-line depth to center support and another forward who can slide into the top six and keep the offense moving.

One name already tied to that search is Jack Roslovic, a center who can bring some scoring punch without forcing a major cap commitment. For a team trying to replace a franchise pillar while still patching up multiple spots on the lineup card, those kinds of value bets matter, and the Kings are likely to spend the first days of July weighing which additions fit best before the market thins out. [Read more 🡒]

Corey Perry Is Back And It Says Plenty About The Kings

Corey Perry is sticking around in Los Angeles for at least one more season, with the Kings rewarding the veteran forward with a one-year extension. It is a familiar sort of move for a team that has leaned into experience, and for Perry it adds another chapter to a career that has already stretched across 21 NHL seasons.

What makes the deal notable is the opportunity it creates for a pretty rare milestone. If Perry gets into at least 36 games this season, he will move into the NHLs exclusive 1,500-career-games club, a marker that would further underscore just how long he has lasted at this level. For the Kings, it is another sign they still see value in what Perry brings, even as his career keeps pushing into territory only a handful of players ever reach. [Read more 🡒]