Showing posts with label senators. Show all posts
Showing posts with label senators. 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.

For more Newest Industry be sure to give us a follow on Twitter (@NewestIndustry1) to stay up on the work being done by all of our contributors.  More importantly, we have a Facebook page here.  Trivial as it seems stopping by & giving us a "Like" is a free & legitimate way to support the blog.

Monday, November 25, 2013

Your Name Is Wild: Week #8

What a bunch of hosers...



Well hello again, Wild fans!  Welcome to Your Name Is Wild: Week #8!

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 hello again, Wild fans!  Welcome to Week #8 of Your Name Is Wild!  As always, I know you could have chosen any Wild blog in the world, but you're here with me and I appreciate that.

The Wild entered Week #8 coming off a three game homestand in which they won all three games by one manner or other.  Winning at home is a huge key to success in the NHL, so with those points in the bank the Wild spent last week traveling Central Canada.  They embarked on a three game road trip hoping to steal points from Eastern Conference opponents (Montreal & Ottawa) before heading to division-rival Ottawa for a Saturday matinee showdown with the Jets.

Let's get into it...

The Week That Was


Tuesday 11/19 - Montreal: 6  Wild: 2

Good freakin' god...  the less said about this game the better.

As I mentioned above, the Wild headed to Montreal riding a wave of confidence after an unbeaten homestand.  The Habs (perhaps still a little bit upset that they left St. Paul without a point on November 1st) made sure to put a stamp on this game.

The Wild and Canadiens played a relatively even first period (with Montreal leading 9-7 in shots), but that was as long as this one would remain competitive.  The floodgates sprung a leak at the 2:57 mark of the second period when Max Pacioretty snuck his first goal of the night past Josh Harding.  They began to strain when Pacioretty netted his second of the game at the 10:06 mark.  They were officially broken when Pacioretty finished off the natural hat trick at 13:36.

That goal brought with it the end of Josh Harding's night.  With the Wild heading to Ottawa to face the Senators the next night (and Niklas Backstrom sidelined with concussion issues), Harding gave way to Darcy Kuemper.  Sadly, young Kuemper didn't fair any better, allowing a Michael Bournival deflection to sneak past him.  By the end of the second period the Wild were being outshot 20-15 but trailed 4-0 on the scoreboard.

The third period brought with it the expected "when it rains, it pours" goals from the Habs (courtesy of Daniel Briere & Alex Galchenuyk) with a couple of Wild goals in between (Nino Niederreiter at 5:30 and Dany Heatley, trolling Wild fans by scoring at 19::58 of the third).  By the period didn't even feature any of the typical feistiness that accompanies a blowout.  The Wild were beaten, badly, and knew it.  The sooner they could get out of Quebec the better.

Wild Player Of The Game:  Darcy Kuemper - Now, make no mistake, Kuemper did not play well.  Goalies pride themselves on being ready "whenever your number gets called," but after stopping only 6 of the 9 shots he faced, it was clear Kuemper wasn't ready.  So why name him Wild Player Of The Game?  Because, for his second straight appearance, Kuemper was not put in a position to succeed.  That's a theme I've come back to several times and I'm granting Kuemper the same benefit of the doubt.  Not only were the Wild clearly off their game, but by the time Keumper assumed his post between the pipes, they'd quit expending even that lackluster effort.  Mike Yeo could have put Dominik Hasek out behind this night's version of the Wild and he would have allowed at least three.

Impression Of The Game:  Despite being absolutely slaughtered, there was a positive to take away from this one.  The Canadiens play an inherently Eastern Conference style of hockey.  Very physical, strong on the forecheck, lots of extra-curriculars...  While disappointing, it's no entirely surprising that the Wild weren't able to match that style.  Fortunately, the Wild's season hardly hinges on their ability to play that style.  Theirs is a puck-possession, speed, & sound defense style that, at least to this point in the season, has proven to be pretty effective in the Western Conference race.


Wednesday 11/20 - Wild: 4  Ottawa: 3

 The Wild may have been soundly beaten by the Habs on Tuesday night, but Wednesday provided a good test:  Would the Wild limp into Ottawa and continue on one of their typical Canadian-road-trip death spirals or would they show some resolve and put the previous night's embarrassment behind them?

The answer: resolve.  Despite being outshot 2-1 in the first period (and outshot 18-6), the Wild stuck to Mike Yeo's speed/puck possession/mobile defense style and it paid off.  Jonas Brodin notched his third goal of the season at the 3:00 mark of the second period.  Just 3:15 later Ottawa's favorite villain Dany Heatley snuck a garbage goal past Craig Andreson to give the Wild a 3-2 lead.

That successful period gave way to a tense third period.  Mika Zibanejad scored early to tie the game up.  With the fans behind them, the Senators took control of the game for stretches of the third.  However, Josh Harding stood tall in net and, just as we were all preparing for this one to go to OT, Mikko Koivu buried a shot from the circles to give the Wild a 4-3 lead with only 2:57 to play.  The Wild held their ground and took the victory in regulation.

Wild Player Of The Game:  Mikko Koivu - The Assassin may have signed his name on this one by scoring the winner late in the third, but his line was a force all night.  Koivu and linemates Zach Parise & Charlie Coyle combined for one goal, five assists, and eight shots on goal over the course of the game.  Despite the varying shot totals each period, that first line was a threat whenever they were on the ice.  The took a team licking its wounds and put it on their backs. leading to two big road points and a suddenly .500 road trip.

Impression Of The Game:  The Senators have struggled to play up to expectations this season.  My theory?  Unlike division rivals Montreal, Toronto, & Boston, they play a Western Conference style of hockey.  The Wild were helpless against the physical Canadiens, but against against a Sens team that was trying to beat them at their own game they stepped up and delivered.  As a Wild fan I've pretty much been trained to expect that,when the opposing team ties the game in the third period it's only a matter of time before they score the winner.  I'm sure I'm overreacting to the Wild beating a struggling team in November, but the fact that the Wild fought back instead of rolling over says a lot about the character of this year's squad.


Saturday 11/23 - Wild: 3  Winnipeg: 2 (SO)

With their foray into the Eastern Conference redeemed the Wild returned to the Central Division Saturday afternoon when they visited Winnipeg for the first time this season.

Coming into the game the Wild were 2-0-0 against the Jets, having won both games in St. Paul.  The Jets have cobbled together a disappointing season thus far, occupying the cellar of the Central and nearly playing themselves out of the playoff picture before December.

Fortunately for the Jets they were dealt two breaks before the game.  First off, Mike Yeo announced that Mikael Granlund would miss the game with an upper-body injury, thus jumbling the Wild's top six forwards.  As if that wasn't enough, goaltender Josh Harding left pre-game warmups with a lower-body injury.  He was ruled out for the game, which meant that Niklas Backstrom (himself returning from a concussion) would get the start despite only one practice in the previous two weeks.

Saturday's game won't go down as the prettiest game of the season by any stretch of the imagination, but it may go down as an important one.  The Wild did not play well during the first two periods.  They weren't completely hapless (as they were in Montreal), but they weren't able to mount any offensive attack, instead relying on Backstrom to prop them up until they found their game.  Backstrom, surprisingly, was up to the task.  He stopped 24 of 25 shots through the first two periods.  When Nino Niederreiter tied the game just over 3:00 into the third it was all because Backstrom had stood his ground at the other end of the rink.

The Jets turned the tide back their way just a couple of minutes later when Matt Halischuk scored at 5:35 to give the Jets a 2-1 lead.  The Wild weren't able to mount much of an attack for the majority of the period and, when Marco Scandella took a hooking penalty with four minutes remaining, a Jets victory seemed all but certain.

But then a funny thing happened.  With the Wild on the penalty kill Mikko Koivu gathered the puck.  He and Zach Parise, who've played so well over the last couple of weeks, put the team on their backs yet again, finishing off a two-on-two rush with Parise burying a one-timer while falling down.  Tie game.  Silent MTS Centre.

The Wild and Jets traded opportunities in the overtime period before heading to the shootout.  Backstrom, notoriously bad during shootouts, came shining through, stopping 3 out of 4 Jets attempts before Charlie Coyle won the game on his first career shootout goal.

Wild Player Of The Game:  Niklas Backstrom - As much as I'd like to give this one to Nino Niederreiter (who responded to an in-game benching by scoring a goal while getting under the skin of the Jets), The Scientist was the story of the game.  Backstrom had played 11 minutes in the last two weeks (the amount of time before Nazem Kadri concussed him) and had one practice under his belt.  Not unlike Josh Harding stepping in for Backstrom during last year's playoffs, Backstrom not only stepped in, but elevated his game.  The Wild didn't play their best game, but they played well enough to beat a division rival thanks in no small part to Backstrom's ability to weather an early storm.

The Week Ahead


Monday 11/25 - Wild at St. Louis

As has been noted by just about every Wild blogger there is (all four of us), the Wild have put together solid start to this season primarily by fattening up on the bad teams in the league.  That all changes this week, beginning Monday night when the Wild head to St. Louis to face the Blues.  The Wild and Blues have been trading 2nd & 3rd place in the Central for the last couple of weeks, though the primary difference is that the Blues have a couple of games in hand and have beaten several quality opponents.

This Blues squad is scary good.  In addition to sporting the NHL's leading goal-scorer in Alex Steen they feature a balanced attack (led by captain, Minnesota-native, and dog adoption advocate David Backes), physical defense, and above-average goaltending.  Frankly, they play a rough-and-tumble style that has far more in common with the Eastern Conference than the rest of the Central.  Whether or not the Wild are able to stick to their own plan (speed & possession) or if they get goaded into the Blues physical style will be indicative of just how the Wild stack up against their division rivals.


Wednesday 11/27 - Phoenix at Wild

Much to the surprise of pretty much everybody, not only are the Coyotes still in Phoenix, but they've played their way to a playoff spot in the staggeringly competitive Pacific Division.

The Coyotes may lack star power, but it's important that the Wild don't overlook this one.  By the end of the season it's entirely possible that the Wild & Coyotes will be battling for one of the Western Conference's wild card playoff spots.  I realize it's awfully early to be thinking about four-point swings, but these things count in November just as much as they do come spring.


Friday 11/29 - Colorado at Wild

The day after Thanksgiving brings the surprising Avalanche to St. Paul for the first half of a weekend home-and-home series.  New coach Patrick Roy has, surprisingly, been just the man to assemble the talented pieces of the Avalanche into a cohesive team.  After beginning the season by rocketing to the top of the Central the Avs have come back to Earth a bit.  Much like the Coyotes, it's important the Wild don't underestimate this Avalanche team.  With the top 3 spots in each division guaranteed a playoff spot (and Chicago & St. Louis the presumptive favorites for two of those spots in the Central) it's paramount that the Wild take as many points as possible from the Avs.


Saturday 11/30 - Wild at Colorado

After Friday's game both teams will board flights and head out to Denver for the second half of this weekend series.  While it's sure to be exhausting for the players, it's an incredible amount of fun for us fans.  Any bad blood that arises during Friday's meeting is certain to continue the next night, setting the Wild and Avs, rivals for years in the Northwest Division, up for a new chapter in a long rivalry.

The Big Picture

Having watched the Wild start hot nearly every season I was fully prepared for them to begin struggling on this Canadian road trip.  While the Montreal game left me with that here-we-go-again feeling, my optimism was renewed with comeback victories in Ottawa & Winnipeg.

I've been skeptical that the Wild can actually keep pace with the Blues & Blackhawks, but those two victories lead me to believe that this Wild team is different from previous versions.  I've said that many times before and I've been wrong, but I feel good about this group.  Four tough games over the next seven days will tell us a lot about where this year's version stacks up.

Until next Monday...


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.
For more Newest Industry be sure to give us a follow on Twitter (@NewestIndustry1) to stay up on the work being done by all of our contributors.  More importantly, we have a Facebook page here.  Trivial as it seems stopping by & giving us a "Like" is a free & legitimate way to support the blog.