LOS ANGELES _ Ten years ago, Jack Campbell shared the net with Adam Murray for the U.S. national development team that was getting ready to play in the under-18 World Junior Championships.
Murray is a year older than Campbell and got priority to wear jersey No. 30, so Campbell took No. 1. Winning that tournament prompted Campbell to keep wearing No. 1, until recently when he changed to No. 36.
"I was kind of like, now that I'm going to be with the Kings, I kind of want a fresh start," Campbell said.
Ready or not, it doesn't get any fresher than now. Campbell is the priority goalie after Jonathan Quick got hurt two days into the season. Campbell resumes the starting role as the Kings begin an eastern Canada swing Tuesday.
He stepped in with 36 saves Sunday for his third NHL win, in what the Kings want to be another building block.
"This is what we've been grooming him for, and we don't expect anything different than what he gave us last year," goalie coach Bill Ranford said.
The Kings signed Campbell to a two-year contract extension last November and tabbed him as Quick's backup in February. It stamped the organization's confidence in Campbell after he resurrected his career with some standout one-off performances last season. He beat Vegas and helped the Kings get a point out of a tough game at Winnipeg.
This, for a former first-round draft pick who went four years between NHL appearances.
"Sometimes change is good and he's one of the success stories," Ranford said. "He chose to do the work. It's kudos to him that he went out there and realized he had to make a few changes to his game and he's done that."
Campbell stayed locally in the summer to improve his lower-body strength and get more flexible. Ranford said Campbell changed the medication for his asthma and "he's got a little bit more juice in the tank."
But beyond physical conditioning, Campbell has patterned himself after Quick in trying to be a great teammate. Campbell tends to frame his outlook within the team perspective, and he's humbled by his up-and-down path.
"He's one of the nicest guys, so it's nice to see him get rewarded," teammate and roommate Michael Amadio said.
Quick brought Campbell to the NHL Awards in June even though Campbell didn't qualify to get his name on the Jennings Trophy. Campbell might reach that 25-game criteria this season.
"This is what I expect," Campbell said. "To be here, with this great group, is great but just getting here is the first thing. We've got to win some games and keep getting better."