With time ticking down, Ennis snapped off a wrister from the top of the right circle that Bobrovsky got a piece of before the puck fluttered into the goal.
With zeroes on the clock, this one was reviewed. As it turned out, Bobrovsky's deflection was the only thing that prevented the goal from counting, as the puck was six inches outside the cage (and on it's way in) when 0.1 flipped to 0.0.
Instead of a three-goal second period, Minnesota had to settle for a single-goal frame and tied score headed to the final period.
3. Minnesota came out firing in the second period, tying the game on an early power-play goal.
Trailing by a goal after 20 minutes despite an 11-6 advantage on the shot chart, the Wild piled up the attempts quickly in period two. The puck possession and zone time resulted in a power play when David Savard snatched the stick out of Marcus Foligno's hands right in front of Bobrovsky.
The Wild poured it on during the power play, finally cashing in on Zucker's tally with 12 seconds remaining on the man advantage.