It was two points down and six wheels up for the Kings, who finished their brief homestand with a victory Saturday before flying to Calgary for a match with the Flames today.

That’ll be the first of three meetings with their red-and-gold-clad divisional foes, two of which will unfold north of the border. Last season, the two rivals split four meetings with the home team winning each game.

The duo of Phillip Danault and Trevor Moore has been generating both pace and production regardless of the venue lately.

Danault started the season with one point in his first five games and no goals in his first 11, while Moore irrigated a 13-game goalless drought with a shorthanded marker against Columbus on Saturday. Both players are currently coasting atop five-game points streaks, each having contributed six points during that span.

“I don’t think we really got any bounces early, but we also weren’t, maybe, doing the right things to get those bounces,” Moore said. “So we’ve just been trying to work hard and trying to have the puck more. I still think we should have it way more in the O-zone, that’s something we’ve talked about.”

Their most frequent linemate has been Kevin Fiala, who found himself yanked off the top power-play unit briefly and effectively benched for the balance of the first period Saturday. Fiala reminded us that his native Switzerland borders Italy as he served a pizza into the slot that was devoured by two Columbus counterattackers.

“We didn’t like the play, and there was a consequence,” coach Jim Hiller said.

He added: “Kevin has a green light to try to make plays, when the plays are there.”

Hiller was unequivocally satisfied with a decidedly less experienced King, Samuel Helenius, who chipped in with an assist — and more — in his NHL debut Saturday.

“He made a few (skilled plays). He made a nice play down the wing on (Alex Laferriere’s) tip goal. After that, he shot it and then he skated as hard as he could for a line change,” Hiller said. “He understands the game and he understands the details of the game.”

The Flames had an auspicious beginning of their own, kicking off the campaign by earning 11 of a possible 12 points and scoring 24 goals in those six games. They’ve since come up short in seven of nine contests, sinking from first to fourth in the Pacific Division standings.

Defenseman Rasmus Andersson leads Calgary in scoring with 11 points and in average time on ice, logging 24:39 a night. Big-ticket forward Jonathan Huberdeau erupted for five points in the first two games of 2024-25 but has only four since, including just two in his past eight efforts.

Dan Vladar and former Junior King Dustin Wolf have split duties in net almost evenly and produced an identical .906 save percentage.