Showing posts with label erik haula. Show all posts
Showing posts with label erik haula. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Your Name Is Wild: Week #16

Gotta press on, yeah, you know what that's like...


Well hello again, Wild fans!  Welcome to Your Name Is Wild: Week #16!

For those of you who are new to the column, here's the scoop:  The NHL season is a long, tedious journey.  We decided that this season we would ask TCDroogsma of the blog Wildly Biased to stop by each week and give us an update on our local squad.

Droogsy, what'd we miss?



Well hey there, everybody.  Thanks for coming back around after I spent most of last week's post giving examples of just how terrible I can be at predicting the ebb & flow of this year's Minnesota Wild team.  It's not an easy challenge and last week I didn't even come close to getting it right.

Those surprising wins, however, thrust the Wild right back into a playoff spot.  This week brought three consecutive home games against teams that are sitting on the outside of the playoff picture, providing a rare mid-season opportunity for the Wild to bank a little bit of breathing room between themselves & ninth place.

Let's break this thing down.

The Week That Was


Tuesday 1/14: Ottawa: 3  Wild: 0

The Wild welcomed an unfamiliar opponent to the Xcel Energy Center on Tuesday night in the form of the Ottawa Senators.  The Sens were a trendy pick to build on their surprising success of the last two seasons and really throw their hat in the ring that is a pretty wide open Eastern Conference.  So far, they've struggled. As the last couple of years proved, it's easy to exceed expectations when there aren't any.  This season's Sens squad has struggled with the weight of expectations from goaltending on out.

Tuesday night's game, however, served as a reminder of just the kind of talent the Sens can put on the ice.

Yet again the Wild turned to the hot hand in net, giving young Darcy Kuemper another start after he earned his first career shutout in Nashville on Sunday.  Unfortunately, he was just about the only Wild player to show up for this one.

The boys opened this one up by sticking to the same pattern that somehow earned them 6 points last week: getting absolutely thrashed in the first period.  Ottawa came out guns blazing in the opening frame, outshooting the Wild 15-3.  Despite that disparity, it took a moment of shaking officiating for the Sens to get on the board.  With Justin Fontaine in the box for a lazy hooking penalty, Sens forward Kyle Turris carried the puck over the blue line and into the Wild's zone.  On the other side of the ice, it appeared that fellow Sens forward Clarke MacArthur was just a quarter of a step offside.  No whistle was blown, MacArthur crashed the net, and Turris put the puck on his stick.  Boom.  The puck was in the back of the net & the Wild were livid.

Thanks to FSN's uncanny ability to have only the worst possible angles covered with their cameras, replays were inconclusive as to whether or not MacArther was offside.  Frankly, it doesn't matter. Much like they did in St. Louis when an early call didn't go their way (a Zach Parise high-sticked puck in that case), the Wild quickly wilted.  Seriously, two year olds leaving Target without candy handle adversity better than this group.  It was clear at that point that this just wasn't going to be the Wild's night.

(Quick Offsides Sidenote:  Any time there is a questionable onside/offside call, I remember former Wild coach Jacques Lemaire summing up the subject by saying that whenever he & his staff went over replays after games the linesmen got the call right nearly every time.  As my dad is fond of saying, when in doubt I tend to side with the guy who has 11 Cup rings.  It may have been a close call, but I'm inclined to give the guy standing at the blue line the benefit of the doubt for the no-call).

The two teams spent the second period treading water throughout the second period.  In the third the Sens somehow managed to take the lead in heartbreaking fashion despite the fact that neither team was showing much heart. 

As per the usual routine, the Wild finally decided to show up in the third period, peppering Sens goalie Robin Lehner with four quick shots to begin the period.  Unfortunately, as Marco Scandella prepared to fire a one-timer for their fifth shot, his stick shattered.  Sens forward Erik Condra quickly pounced on the loose puck and took off alone toward Kuemper.  Scandella caught up to Condra in the slot, but, still without his stick, wasn't able to thwart the play.  Rather, he gave Condra a bit of a shove (enough so that, had Condra not scored he would have been awarded a penalty shot), but all the shove accomplished was confusing Kuemper.  Condra slid the puck between Kuemper's pads and the Xcel Energy Center faithful conceded defeat.  Kyle Turris added a goal with just over 5:00 left in the game to end the scoring on the night.

Wild Player Of The Game:  Darcy Kuemper - The young netminder continues to show his stuff as an NHL-caliber goalie.  Lord only knows how the three-headed hydra that is the Wild's goaltending situation is going to play out over the rest of this season, but right now Kuemper's the man.

Impression Of The Game:  Not a debacle on par with the loss to the Islanders, but an incredibly disappointing night nonetheless.  By being shut out at home by Robin Lehner (!) & the Sens, the Wild basically gave back two of the points they fought so hard for in L.A. & Phoenix last week.  The loss itself was disappointing, but the double trend whammy (coming out flat, folding when dealt adversity) brought plenty of questions about this Wild team back to the forefront.


Thursday 1/16: Wild: 4  Edmonton: 1

Fortunately for the Wild, all of the questions that arose during Tuesday's loss were rendered moot when the Edmonton Oilers rolled into town.  Nothing cures an ailing team like a visit from the LOiLers.

Now, a typical visit from the Oilers is pretty much an automatic two points, but for the second consecutive time, this Oilers visit wasn't quite typical.  First, a little past:

The last time the Wild & Oilers met in St. Paul was game 47 of last year's lockout-shortened season.  The Wild had returned home from yet another loss in Columbus with a chance to clinch a playoff spot in front of their restless, raucous fans.  All they had to do was beat the Oilers.  Seems easy, right?

Well, not so fast.  Not only did the Wild lose, they lost handily.  The Oilers, playing there now-annual role as spoiler, pasted the Wild 6-0 in a game that is best remembered for Wild fans booing Josh Harding's performance even though it was his first game back after battling MS for the entire season.  Not a fun day in St. Paul.

Tuesday's game did not have the stakes of last spring's meeting, but it was curious game nonetheless.  On Wednesday Oiles GM Craig MACTAVISH! made a couple of moves designed to jump start his struggling squad, first acquiring goalie Ben Scrivens from Los Angeles then acquiring Minnesota native Matt Hendricks from Nashville.  Both suited up for their first game with their new team on Thursday.

However, much like every trade, free agent acquisition, & draft pick made by the Oilers over the last 8 years, it didn't make any difference whatsoever.  Despite outshooting the Wild 9-7 in the first period, the Oilers left the period down 1-0.  Wild forward Mikael Granlund made yet another highlight reel play when he beat the Oilers to a loose puck behind Scrivens' net and threw an impossible angle pass to a crashing Jason Pominville.  Pominville patiently pulled the puck to his backhand and slid it past Scrivens to stake the Wild to the lead.

After Jordan Eberle opened the second period by tying the game at 1-1 with a filthy wrister past Darcy Kuemper, the wheels came off for the Oilers thanks to Nate Prosser.  Prosser's been a thorn in Edmonton's side for a couple of years for his on-ice chippiness, but he finally landed a blow when he fired off a slapshot that was destined to sail over the top of the net.  Fortunately, Scrivens proudly upheld the recent tradition of Oilers goaltening by handling the shot in the worst possible manner.  Scrivens through his catching hand in the air an inch too high, redirecting the puck off the bottom of his glove and into the net to restore the Wild's lead. The goal provided an awkward moment in which both Ben Scrivens & Edmonton's brass must have been thinking, "Shit, what have I/we signed up for here."

Justin Fontaine added a goal just 2:00 later to make it 3-1.  He was followed by Jason Zucker finishing off a Dany Heatley assist just 0:08 into the third period (an especially filthy apple from Heatley on his Bobblehead Night).  That was it for the scoring and Edmonton limped back out of St. Paul just as hapless as when they had arrived.

Wild Player Of The Game:  Dany Heatley - It was Heater Bobblehead Night at the Xcel Energy Center and Heatley proved just why he gets the honor.  His assist on Zucker's goal was saucy enough to warrant mentioning, but, for the first time this season, Heater showed some anger in this game, getting into several scrums with Oilers.  I suppose we shouldn't have been surprised.  After all, Heatley has a long history of trolling Edmonton fans.

Impression Of The Game:  I take as much away from the Wild kicking the shit out of Edmonton as I do from the sun rising in the East each morning.



Saturday 1/18 - Wild: 3  Dallas: 2 (OT)

Sunday was Hockey Day In Minnesota and, as per tradition, it brought the Dallas Stars to town for what was by far the most important game of the week.  In years past FSN has tried to shoehorn these two teams into a rivalry simply because the Stars used to call Minnesota home.  It was a tired and ultimately pointless exercise until this year, when realignment finally gave this matchup the heft lazy FSN execs had been hoping for.

This year's edition of the Stars has been remade on the fly by new GM Jim Nill.  He brought in Lindy Ruff to coach the team and pulled off one of the biggest trades of the offseason by acquiring burgeoning star/housekeeping aficionado Tyler Seguin from the Bruins.  The hope was that these moves would be enough to push the team from perennial also-rans to lower-tier playoff flotsam.  So far, so meh. The Stars entered the game in 10th place, eight points behind the Wild in the wild card race.  Doing some simple math, that meant that a Wild win would push the Stars 10 points back, whereas a Stars victory would vault them to a mere six points back.  With a rematch awaiting both teams in Dallas on Tuesday (where a Wild loss is all but assured), Saturday's game took on extra significance.

Now, if you can believe it, the Wild came out flat in the first period (I know, crazy, right?).  They were outshot 9-3 by the Stars but were once again bailed out by Darcy Kuemper, who stopped all 9 of those shots.  That first period provided a highlight for one of Minnesota's "homegrown" talents (he went to the U, anyway) when Erik Haula scored his first NHL goal by snapping a wrist shot behind Stars goalie Kari Lehtonen.  It was an appropriate start for Haula as most of the fans in attendance had passed the time before the opening faceoff by watching the Gophers kick the shit out of THE Ohio State University on the Jumbotron.

The Wild continued their lackadaisical play in the second period, outshot this time by a 13-6 margin.  Unfortunately, Kuemper wasn't able to stop all of those shots as Ryan Garbutt tied the game nearly 12:00 into the period.  Through a series of fortunate events, however, the Wild regained the lead just 2:00 later when Ryan Suter deflected a Justin Fontaine shot behind Lehtonen.  I'm almost sure I'll never type that sentence again.

The Wild put up a fight during a sloppy third period that saw neither team really playing well enough to deserve a in outright.  Yet again the Stars outshot the Wild (11-8) and yet again they found a way to get the biscuit past Kuemper when Alex Chiasson fired a backhander from the top of the crease into the back of the net at the 9:32 mark of the period.  Neither team was able to finish it off in regulation, which meant a point for everybody involved (Woooh?), but also added significance to the extra point available in OT (Wooooh!).

Fortunately, for a crowd that had slogged through an entire day of televised hockey (and a rather lackluster NHL game in person), everybody was rewarded for their perseverance when Nate Prosser ended the game 2:42 into OT with a wrister.  It was Prosser's second goal in as many games and it was a big one, ensuring that the most ground the Stars could make up on the Wild over the course of this home-and-home is one point.

Wild Player Of The Game: Nate Prosser - As I mentioned above, Saturday was Hockey Day In Minnesota.  This year's festivities kicked off in, of all places, Nate Prosser's hometown of Elk River, so it was appropriate that the day ended on his stick.  Even if Prosser hadn't buried the shot, though, the very fact that he was on the ice in overtime of an important game is a major sign of progress for the ever-patient Prosser.  He's come a long way from the consistent healthy scratches that have defined the past year of his life.  He may or may not ever score a more memorable goal in his life.  Good work, Mr. Prosser.

Impression Of The Game:  This was not a pretty game.  The longer it went on the more clear it became why these two teams are battling for the last available playoff spot.  Neither team was disciplined or talented enough to grab the bull by the horns.  Regardless, gaining that extra point in OT was obviously huge for the Wild.  Like I said, they'll likely be defeated in Dallas (where they are notoriously bad), but that pill will be significantly easier to swallow knowing that they banked two points in St. Paul.

The Week Ahead


Tuesday 1/21: Wild at Dallas

Rematch!  As I mentioned, I have little faith in the Wild's ability to finally figure out a way to win in Dallas on Tuesday, but hell, we live in a world where Nate Prosser scores OT winners.  Anything is possible.


Thursday 1/23: Chicago at Wild

The Blackhawks head to St. Paul on Thursday, meaning that the Xcel Energy Center will be filled with the filthiest, stupidest, drunkest hockey fans in the Midwest.  Oh, and the hottest team in the NHL not named after a Disney movie.  Rumors persist that Zach Parise will make his return Thursday night, which would give the squad a boost against a team that always seems to bring out the best in the Wild.


Saturday 1/25: Wild at San Jose

The Wild open a brutal four game West Coast trip on Saturday night with a visit to Brent Burns, James Sheppard, Martin Havlat, and the rest of the Sharkies.  If the Wild could somehow get out of this game with a point I would be thrilled.  If they just get out of there without anybody separating their shoulder I'm calling it a victory.
The Big Picture


After a two week slide that saw injuries rob the Wild of Zach Parise, Mikko Koivu, Jared Spurgeon, & Josh Harding (and nearly Mike Yeo), the Wild have somehow found a way to make incremental progress in the playoff race.

It's been a different hero every night for the Wild lately (with the exception of the night-to-night heroics of Darcy Kuemper) which, frankly, is the way this team was built.  As good as Zach Parise, Mikko Koivu, Jason Pominville, & Ryan Suter can be, they're not so good that you can surround them with a bunch of stiffs and make the playoffs.  Perhaps the absence of two of those stars (and the ice time/responsibility afforded some of the lesser lights on the roster) will actually make the Wild more formidable in the long run.

This upcoming week consists of three difficult games with the following week consisting of three more.  They may still be clinging to a wild card spot, but the Wild have put themselves in the driver's seat with reinforcements on the way.  Given the circumstances of the last month that's a great place to be.

Until next week...



For more of TCDroogsma's hockey ramblings be sure to give him a follow on Twitter (@WildlyBiased).  He can also be found writing about the Wild in greater detail on his hockey blog Wildly Biased.

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Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Your Name Is Wild: Week #9

Gotta show & prove...


Well hello again, Wild fans!  Welcome to Your Name Is Wild: Week #9!

For those of you who are new to the column, here's the scoop:  The NHL season is a long, tedious journey.  We decided that this season we would ask TCDroogsma of the blog Wildly Biased to stop by each week and give us an update on our local squad.

Droogsy, what'd we miss?




Oh boy, what a week...

Coming into this week the Wild were off to their best start in franchise history.  They'd done so largely by beating inferior opponents.  I don't say that to be disparaging.  If a team is going to make the playoffs in the NHL it has to get points when it plays inferior opponents.  And really, you can only play who the schedule says you play.

The schedule, however, is a harsh mistress.  After 8 weeks of mixing a few tough matches in against mostly beatable teams, this week brought the Wild four games against teams that they will definitely be battling for a playoff spot in the reconfigured Western Conference.  As I noted last week, this was the week that would tell us a lot about just how good the Wild are.  The optimists out there saw it as a chance to prove the Wild could hang with the big boys.  The pessimists among us (Hi!) were terrified.  Happy Thanksgiving!

Let's get into it.

The Week That Was


Monday 11/25 - St. Louis: 3  Wild: 0

The Wild began this week by heading down to St. Louis to face-off with the Blues for the first time since they became Central Division rivals.  Many experts consider the Blues to be true Stanley Cup contenders this year and so far the Blues have looked the part.  They adhere to coach Ken Hitchcock's simple, physical style, get sound defensive play from all six defensemen, and get stellar goaltending from the duo of Jaroslav Halak & Brian Elliott.

This season's edition of the Wild has become known for their first period indifference.  With the significance of the game in mind, however, the Wild came out swinging.  They scored the first goal of the just 30 seconds in when Zach Parise tipped a point shot from Ryan Suter behind Halak, giving the Wild a 1-0 lead and a bit of confidence going forward.

Wait... no, they didn't.  The on-ice official ruled that Parise tipped the puck with a high stick.  They called to Toronto to get an official ruling and the NHL replay held up the ruling on the ice.  Perhaps he ruled this way was the fact that Parise's stick was well above his head to begin the play (creating the illusion that the stick was too high), but he made contact with the puck as he brought his stick down.  How he managed to touch the puck with a high stick when Suter's initial shot never rose above the crossbar is a mystery to me.  Regardless, NHL policy dictates the replay officials have to see conclusive evidence to reverse the call on the ice.  Had the on-ice official ruled "goal," it likely would have been confirmed.  Since he ruled "no goal," the off-ice officials had to find sufficient evidence to prove him wrong.  Evidently they did not.

At that point the wheels came off.  Just one minute later Vladimir Sobotka scored to deflate the Wild even further.  Twelve minutes later goal-scoring automaton Alexander Steen notched his NHL-leading 18th of the year.  Then, as if the period wasn't disappointing enough, Zach Parise blocked a shot with his foot with under 30 seconds left in the period, bruising his foot to the point that he was not able to return.

The Blues spent the final 40 minutes of the game running the Wild ragged.  Their ability to dump the puck in, retrieve it, send it back to the point for a shot, and collapse around the net for the rebound proved to be too much for the Wild.  Though the Wild did manage to outshoot the Blues 12-1 in the third period, the Blues had gone into lockdown mode, taking their foot off the gas and placing it squarely on the Wild's throat.  By the time Steen buried the empty-netter the Wild were thoroughly defeated.

Wild Player Of The Game: Mike Rupp? Sure, Mike Rupp - Rupp played his first game of the season and on a night like this that makes him the star.  Welcome back, Rupper!

Impression Of The Game:  Sweet Lord almighty, this division is going to be tough.  In my season preview I picked the Blues to finish third in the Central.  Ken Hitchcock has a history of turning teams around and then wearing out his welcome.  It happened in Dallas, Philadelphia, & Columbus and I thought this would be the year that he finally wore thin in St. Louis.  I couldn't have been more wrong.  The Blues are not only playing Hitchcock's style perfectly, but they're doing so as a team built to play this style.  A full season of Jay Bouwmeester & the emergence of Alex Steen as a legitimate goal scorer have pushed this team over the edge.  They certainly made the Wild look like pretenders Monday night.


Wednesday 11/27 - Phoenix: 3  Wild: 1

The Wild returned to St. Paul licking their wounds.  Zach Parise's injury was deemed a bone bruise, an injury that typically take 2-3 weeks to overcome.  To make matters worse, the Phoenix Coyotes were in town.

They Coyotes are coached by Dave Tippett, who is, in my opinion, the best coach in the NHL.  He's done such a thorough and consistent job with the Coyotes perennially piecemeal roster that columnists have pretty much permanently affixed the word "surprising" to the words Phoenix Coyotes.

This season Tippett has the peace of mind of new owners, stability in Phoenix, and a roster that is accustomed to his style of play, with young star defensemen Oliver Ekman-Larsson & Keith Yandle filling out their sky-high potential, Mike Ribeiro brought in as the first legit free agent acquisition in years, and Mike Smith in net (though, for the record, I wouldn't let Mike Smith look after my dog, let alone be my #1 goalie).

Despite losing Parise, the Wild seemed to catch a break Wednesday night.  Phoenix had cooled off, coming in sporting a three game losing streak.  Even better, they started backup goaltender Thomas Greiss instead of Mike Smith.

Different game, same old story.  The Wild came out with their guns jammed in the first period.  Mikael Granlund managed to get himself concussed just 29 seconds into the game by leading the forecheck with his head (which was soundly repelled by Connor Murphy's shoulder).  With their lines now completely jumbled, the Wild eventually yielded a goal to Mikkel Boedker 8:13 into the period.  The second period brought a goal by legendary Wild slayer Radim Vrbata, giving the Yotes a 2-0 lead heading into the third period.

Again, the Wild showed signs of life in the third period.  Dany Heatley notched a goal with 10 minutes to go in the game, giving the Wild a glimmer of hope that they could put the pedal to the metal and, at the very least, get an opportunity once they pulled Backstrom.  Nope.  Thwarted at even strength and finished off by a Vrbata empty netter.

Wild Player Of The Game:  Dany Heatley - Ummm... Heatley scored a goal, so he kind of wins by default.

Impression Of The Game:  The Coyotes are pretty much the Pacific Division's version of the Wild.  Both teams play in extremely difficult divisions, both rely on sound defense, scoring by committee, and better-than-average goaltending that could collapse at any moment.  Basically, these two teams will likely be battling each other for one of the wild card playoff spots at the end of the year.  I know it's still just November, but losses to the Yotes are four-point-swing games.

Friday 11/29 - Colorado: 3  Wild: 1


What better way to celebrate the long holiday weekend than a home-and-home showdown with the Colorado Avalanche?  The Avs are the only team that's shared a division rivalry with the Wild since Day 1.  They've traded many memorable games over the years, with teach team defeating the other in a a playoff series over the last 13 years.

This year's Avs have no shortage of storylines.  Rookie head coach (and franchise legend) Patrick Roy has the Avalanche finally playing up to the level of their talent, goaltender Semyon Varlamov has been arrested & accused of domestic violence, first overall pick Nathan MacKinnon made the team out of camp, and the Avs took the West by storm during the first quarter of the season.

Fans came out in droves for Friday's showdown, packing the Xcel Energy Center with its largest crowd of the season.  With a day off from work, a long-time rival in town, and the triumphant return of Zach Parise after missing just one game (!), the crowd was overflowing with energy.  That energy certainly translated to the ice, as both teams began the game flying around as if they had something to prove to one another.  Unfortunately, that high energy play suits the Avs more than the Wild, a fact that became obvious just 3:45 into the game.  Jonas Brodin circled behind his own net with the puck, panicked, and dumped the puck off to Ryan Suter (his only passing option).  The Avalanche forecheck, realizing that Brodin had no other play, swarmed on Suter, and forced a turnover that eventually led to a Jan Hejda goal to open the scoring.

The Wild did all they could to tread water during the remainder of the period and found themselves rewarded when professional jackass Cody McLeod took a boarding penalty at 17:24, slamming Jonas Brodin face-first into the boards.  McLeod was kicked out of the game and the Wild were handed the greatest gift a team can receive:  A five minute power play that begins at the end of a period (potentially allowing them to a chance to score and thus rewrite the narrative of the period) and resumes at the start of the next period (the dreaded fresh-ice power play and a chance to grab the narrative of that period as well).

Of course, this is the Wild and nothing ever comes easy.  The Wild limped through both halves of the power play with the urgency of a codeine addict.  The Wild managed just one shot during the five minute man-advantage (and surrendered a two-on-one scoring opportunity to the Avs) as a sense of doom pervaded the once-raucous arena.  Two minutes after being thwarted by their longtime nemesis J-S Giguere the Wild found themselves beaten by MacKinnon, a player that Wild fans will likely come to fear over the next decade.

The Wild showed some life later in the period when Dany Heatley finished off a brilliant cross-ice feed from Nino Niederreiter (a play that began with some great work from former Gopher Erik Haula, making his NHL debut).  Unfortunately, that would be all the offense the Wild mustered on the night.  Avs captain Gabriel Landeskog finished off the night by scoring an empty-net goal as Giguere shut the door.

Wild Player Of The Game:  Erik Haula - With Mikael Granlund on the shelf the Wild needed a center.  In year's past this meant it was time for Nick Johnson or Jed Ortmeyer or Warren Peters.  This year, however, it meant it was time for adopted Minnesotan Haula to get his shot in the NHL.  I would have awarded Haula POTG honors simply for not being Nick Johnson, but Haula earned the designation on the ice.  He used his speed to set up Zach Parise during a two-on-one in the first period and eventually notched his first assist of the season in the second.  If I was Kyle Brodziak I'd be very, very afraid.

Impression Of The Game:  I've been a longtime hater of the Colorado Avalanche.  From their hideous sweaters to their indifferent fans to that Sasquatch foot logo to Peter Forsberg to their dump of an arena, there is nothing I like about the Avs.  As such, I was able to make my peace with their hot start by reminding myself that their goalie got arrested, their captain is 21 years old, Patrick Roy's never been a head coach in the NHL before, and their sweaters are still grotesque.  I'm still holding out hope that this team is going to collapse at some point, but right now, they are young, fast, talented, and a little crazy.  Basically they're the Jennifer Lawrence of the NHL.  And nobody's hotter than Jennifer Lawrence right now.


Saturday 11/30 - Colorado: 3  Wild: 2 (SO)

(First things first, check out that Keith Ballard photobomb.  Veteran move.)

Alright, second half of the home-and-home in the Mile High City (and that no longer refers to the altitude) as the Wild looked to salvage a week that had seem them gather zero out of six possible points thus far.

Both teams changed up their goalie for this one, with loyal, adversity-overcoming, humble Canadian hero Josh Harding manning the net for the Wild and alleged woman-beater Semyon Varlamov at the other end.

Unfortunately the change in netminders yielded similar results.  Yet again, the Wild gave up the first goal of the game and yet again, it came very early in the first.  Gabriel Landeskog (who had scored the empty-netter the night before) opened the scoring by putting a backhander behind Harding just 2:22 into the game.

The Wild found themselves behind the proverbial 8-ball when Nathan MacKinnon scored nearly 13 minutes into the second.  The goal was a reminder that MacKinnon has the potential to be the next Joe Sakic in the pantheon of "Guys Who Own The Wild" (it also meant that the Avs last four goals over the two games had gone MacKinnon-Landeskog-Landeskog-MacKinnon, a palindromic nightmare that Wild fans may relive for the next decade).

Fortunately, much as the Wild had spent the week sucking in the first period, they maintained their trend of playing their best in the third.  Matt Cooke notched his first goal in about a month at the 16:33 mark.  The goal proved to be a spark for the Wild.  The boys played valiantly until they were finally rewarded.  With just six seconds left Mikko Koivu buried the game-tying goal behind Varlamov.

The Wild were unable to score in OT and, as is typically the case with shootouts, lost.  The big three of Parise, Koivu, & Pominville came up empty.  Harding held his own, stopping Parenteau & MacKinnon before yielding Ryan O'Reilly's game winner.

Wild Player Of The Game:  Mikko Koivu - This week had been the most unsatisfying and depressing week of the season, begining with Parise's injury, three consecutive losses, and the reminder that Mike Rupp is on the team.  Then, for one brief, shining moment, Koivu reminded us all why watching hockey late into a Saturday night can be so exhilirating.  His clutch, game-tying goal was enough to make you forget the brutal 12 periods of hockey you've watched over the week.

Impression Of The Game:  I'll admit right away that I'm reading too much into this, but don't underestimate the mental ramifications of Koivu's late goal.  If the Avalanche had just flat-out beaten the Wild two nights in a row they would have been able to file the Wild away under the "We got these guys" section of their brain.  Now, ever so slightly, there's a crack in that confidence.  The Wild and Avs will likely be battling all season for third place in the Central Division and every little edge helps.

So that's the week that was.  The Wild gained 1 out of a possible 8 points and ceded ground to two teams they'll be battling for a playoff spot.  They lost Mikael Granlund, found out what they had in Erik Haula, welcomed Mike Rupp back to the team, watched Zach Parise turn a two-week injury into just one game, and ended the week on a high note (that happened in a loss, but still...).  All in all, an adventurous way to end November.

The Week Ahead


Monday 12/2 - Philadelphia at Wild

The big, bad, perennially dysfunctional Flyers roll into town to start the month of December.  The Flyers started the season by by collapsing in a fiery ball of failure, costing head coach Peter Laviolette his job.  Like a phoenix from the ashes, the Flyers have clawed their way back to .500 under new coach Craig Berube.  Just a hunch, but I'd keep an eye on Pominville & Coyle in this one.


Thursday 12/5 - Chicago at Wild

The last time the Blackhawks rolled into St. Paul it was as the second half of a home-and-home.  Having been beaten soundly by the Wild in Chicago the Blackhawks returned the favor in Chicago (much to the delight of the large contingent of out of shape, poorly dressed, drunken Chicagoans living in the Twin Cities).  The Blackhawks occasionally bring out the best in the Wild.  It won't be easy, but Thursday's game definitely presents an opportunity for the Wild to circle the wagons, refocus, and get back on track.


Friday 12/6 - Wild at Columbus

Friday finds the Wild heading to Columbus for the first time this season.  For reasons that are pretty much inexplicable, the Wild have always had trouble in Nationwide Arena.  For reasons that are the definition of "explicable" this year's Blue Jackets squad is a blight on the Midwest and perfectly suited to play in a second-rate college town.  Something has to give.


Sunday 12/8 - San Jose at Wild

The Wild return to the Xcel Energy Center on Sunday to face the San Jose Sharks for the first time this season.  I picked the Sharks to win the Pacific this year and so far they're making me look like a prophet (as long as you don't look up my picks for Colorado or St. Louis).  They're big, fast, talented, and, for reasons I don't totally understand, pay James Sheppard to play hockey.  Can't win 'em all, I suppose.
The Big Picture

Last week sucked.  There's just no way to sugar-coat it.  The Wild learned that the Avalanche are for real.  They learned that the Blues are just as good as they seem on television.  And, perhaps most troubling, they learned that they're just one Zach Parise injury away from being worse than the Coyotes.

Now, one week in November does not a season make.  I don't want to overreact here, but for all the hype surrounding the Wild finally being measured against the best in the West this week it's had not to be dejected.  Do the Wild really have the firepower (or the goaltending) to hang with the Avs & Blues?  I sure hope so, but this week's games certainly make that seem like a fool's bet.

Until next week!

 
 
For more of TCDroogsma's hockey ramblings be sure to give him a follow on Twitter (@WildlyBiased).  He can also be found writing about the Wild in greater detail on his hockey blog Wildly Biased.
 
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