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Dylan Gambrell, Sharks strike late in 3-2 victory over Kings

The Sharks' Dylan Gambrell, left, celebrates his third-period goal past Kings goalie Jonathan Quick April 3, 2021.
The Sharks’ Dylan Gambrell, left, celebrates after he scored the go-ahead goal in the third period past Kings goalie Jonathan Quick on Saturday night.
(Mark J. Terrill / Associated Press)
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Dylan Gambrell scored in the third period, and the San Jose Sharks beat the Kings 3-2 on Saturday night at Staples Center for their fourth straight victory.

Kevin Labanc and Evander Kane each had a goal and an assist for the Sharks, who have won six of eight overall to climb back into playoff contention.

San Jose (17-16-4) is one point behind Arizona for the final postseason spot in the West after being eight points out to start the week.

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“I think we’re making strides,” Sharks center Logan Couture said. “We’re in a spot right now with 19 games left to make a push and see where we end up, so I’m definitely happy with how we’ve played this last stretch.”

Jalen Suggs scores on a three-pointer at the buzzer to lift top-seeded Gonzaga to a 93-90 overtime win over UCLA in the Final Four.

San Jose goalie Martin Jones stopped 35 shots after he made 30 saves in Friday night’s 3-0 win at Los Angeles.

On the winning goal, Jonathan Quick was caught playing the puck out from behind his own net. John Leonard stole it and found Gambrell for an easy shot into an open net at 15:23.

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“Johnny did all the work there, so I can’t take too much credit,” Gambrell said. “He went end to end there and did all the work, and I was just there to tap it in, so kudos to him.”

Quick made 20 saves.

Highlights from the Kings’ 3-2 loss to the San Jose Sharks on Saturday night at Staples Center.

Dustin Brown and Trevor Moore scored for the Kings (14-16-6), who have lost five of six.

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“Lots of good things within the 60 minutes for us,” Kings coach Todd McLellan said. “Aggressive, played hard, checked well. A lot more traffic in and around the net, made the goaltender work a lot more. Short-handed goal. So there were a lot of positives in that game, but it’s only a moral victory. The two-point victories are what really counts at this time of the year, and we’ve got to find a way to get a few more.”

Kane put the Sharks ahead 2-1 at 15:04 of the second, reaching around a sprawling Quick to score his 16th goal of the season into an open net.

Although Moore tied it at 19:06, tapping in his own rebound for his second short-handed goal this season, Sharks coach Bob Boughner said it was important to play the middle period on more even terms after being outshot 18-5 in the first.

“They were digging in and they had a hard, hard push when the puck dropped at the beginning of the night, and I thought it took us a while to get our legs going,” Boughner said. “It’s a period like that, we come out 1-1 and we got outshot badly and are still in position to change the game, and we did that in the second period.”

The Sharks took a 1-0 lead at 4:37 of the first when Labanc shot through traffic in front of the net.

It was the fourth straight game in the series in which the Kings allowed the opening goal, but they mounted a quick response. Brown redirected Kopitar’s centering pass in to tie it at 1 at 6:55.

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Jones is 5-1-0 with a 2.37 goals-against average and .932 save percentage against the Kings this season, continuing his knack for haunting his former team. He is 18-5-3 in his career against them.

“We didn’t play well in the first, and he bailed us out and [was] a big reason why we were able to win that game,” Couture said.

Moore is one of 12 players with multiple short-handed goals in the NHL, trailing only Columbus Blue Jackets forward Cam Atkinson’s four.

“On the penalty kill, you know if you’re on it, first and foremost, you got to get your clears and you got to be solid defensively,” Moore said. “The offensive stuff is great when it happens. You only got to do it when it presents itself. You can’t be forcing it, for sure.”

The Sharks played the final two periods with five defensemen after Marc-Edouard Vlasic left the game early because of an upper-body injury. Vlasic played 5:35 in the first but was not on the bench to start the second.

Kings defenseman Matt Roy did not play after being placed in COVID-19 protocol earlier Saturday.

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Up next, the Kings host the Arizona Coyotes on Monday and the Sharks host the Ducks on Tuesday.

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