The Los Angeles Kings have named Dave Lewis as Assistant Coach and have promoted Jamie Kompon to Assistant Coach and Director of Amateur Development, Kings President/General Manager Dean Lombardi and Kings Head Coach Marc Crawford announced today. Lewis joins Mike Johnston (Associate Coach), Kompon, Nelson Emerson (Assistant Coach), Bill Ranford (Goaltending Coach) and Chad Smith (Strength and Conditioning Coach) on Crawford?s coaching staff. Lewis, 54, has served as a head coach and an assistant coach in the NHL for the past 20 years following a 15-year playing career in the NHL, which included three seasons with the Kings (1979-83). This past season, he served as Boston?s Head Coach and compiled a 35-41-6 record. Previously he worked as a head coach (2002-04), associate coach (1996-02) and assistant coach (1988-96) with Detroit where he won three Stanley Cup championships in 1997, 1998 and 2002. ?This is a perfect fit for our staff as we were interested in Dave taking a similar role with the Kings last summer before he accepted the head coaching job with Boston,? said Crawford. ?Dave brings to our coaching staff and to our hockey club a great deal of success and a tremendous amount of experience. He is a member of three Stanley Cup championship clubs as a coach and he played in more than 1,000 career games in the National Hockey League. Dave commands respect because he deserves respect, and he is really anxious to help get this team to be the best it can be. We?re excited to have Dave on board because as a former captain of the Kings, he?ll help us develop a strong tradition of Kings hockey.? Following the 2002 season, Lewis was named as the Red Wings? head coach following the retirement of Scotty Bowman and he led the club to two 48-win and 100-plus point seasons, and two Central Division titles. The Red Wings also captured the Presidents? Trophy in 2003-04 with the League?s top record at 48-21-11-2 (109 points), and in 2005-06 he worked for the team as a professional scout. In all, Lewis has a career head coaching record of 131-82-33 (21 ties). Prior to coaching, Lewis enjoyed a successful NHL career as a defenseman from 1973-88. He played for the Kings for three seasons and served as the club?s captain from 1981-83. He played in his 1,000th career game on April 1, 1987, while with Detroit and he retired on November 6, 1987, and then joined that team?s coaching staff. Originally selected by the New York Islanders in the third-round (33rd overall) of the 1973 NHL Amateur Draft, Lewis played two seasons of junior hockey with Saskatoon (WCHL) and then made the jump directly to the NHL after the Islanders selected him in the Draft. He played seven seasons in New York from 1973-80 before he was acquired by the Kings in a trade on March 10, 1980. During the 1982-83 season with the Kings, Lewis tied a career-high in games played with 79, and he also played in 18 career post-season games with the team from 1980-82. After leaving the Kings in 1983, Lewis played in New Jersey for three seasons before he played his final two years with the Red Wings. In all, Lewis played in 1,008 career regular season NHL contests and had 224 points (36-188=224) and 953 penalty minutes. In 91 career post-season NHL games, Lewis had 21 points (1-20=21) and 143 penalty minutes. A native of Kindersley, Saskatchewan, Lewis and his wife Brenda have two children: a son Ryan and a daughter Megan. Kompon joined the Kings coaching staff last summer as an Assistant Coach. In his new role, he will coordinate all areas of player development throughout the Kings organization. ?Jamie did an outstanding job coordinating our development camps and he has a great passion for teaching,? said Lombardi. ?I have no doubt that Jamie, who is one of the hardest working people in hockey, will exceed in this critical role.? Kompon, prior to coming to Los Angeles, worked for nine seasons with the St. Louis Blues organization where he most recently served as the club?s Video Coach, a position he first held since 1997. He added Strength and Conditioning Coach to his title during the 2002-03 season, and in the spring of 2006 he was on the coaching staff of Team Canada at the World Championship in Latvia where he served as Video Coach. Prior to joining the Blues, Kompon was an Assistant Coach with the Baltimore Bandits of the American Hockey League for the 1996-97 season and he also served as Co-Head Coach at McGill University in Montreal in 1994-95 after being employed there as an Assistant Coach for three seasons. Born in Thunder Bay, Ontario, Kompon, 40, also played four seasons as a defenseman at McGill (1985-89) and then he played two seasons of professional hockey, including stints in the East Coast Hockey League and in the German Elite League.