ST. PAUL -- Over the course of an 82-game regular season, and good fortune willing, a Stanley Cup Playoff run, any team will have to overcome its fair share of injuries along the way.
The most frustrating part for the Wild this season has been the sheer number of injuries to core parts of its roster.
Whether it was Zach Parise missing half of the season following a microdiscectomy operation, Mikael Granlund missing time early on because of a groin injury, Charlie Coyle or Nino Niederreiter with their leg injuries, Jonas Brodin because of a broken hand or Jared Spurgeon because of groin and hamstring injuries, Minnesota was forced to play a vast majority of its season without the lineup coach Bruce Boudreau preferred coming out of training camp.
Wild can't let injury frustrations mount
Parise's fractured sternum just the latest in a mountain of injuries to key players
The past couple weeks have only added to that frustration, first with top defenseman Ryan Suter going down with a fractured ankle, a recovery process that will last well into the summer.
On Monday, the team learned of yet another long-term injury to a key player when it discovered Parise had fractured his sternum late in Game 3 against the Winnipeg Jets on Sunday, an injury that will keep him out of the lineup "week-to-week."
"It's bad luck," Boudreau said. "I know every team goes through these things, unfortunately with our team, every player that's got hurt has been a top-6 player or a top-4 defenseman."
The news of Parise's injury was especially deflating, considering the Wild was coming off one of its most impressive wins of the season, a 6-2 victory over the Jets on Sunday, a win that brought the Wild to within 2-1 in its First Round Stanley Cup Playoff series.
Parise had been one of the hottest players in the League, scoring 10 goals in 15 games during the month of March, two more in three regular season games in April and one in each of the first three games of the playoff series against Winnipeg.
Parise's goal in Game 3 gave the Wild a 2-1 lead, one which it never surrendered.
"It seems to kind of never end this year with the injuries. He's a guy you just can't replace," said Wild goaltender Devan Dubnyk. "He does so many things on the ice, even when he's not scoring. Just his tenacity and being hard on pucks and turning pucks over.
"It's disappointing but we've been doing it all year and we've got guys that are in and out of the lineup capable of stepping in and having big performances. We push forward and we're going to need that."
That was certainly the message from Boudreau. The Wild simply can't afford to use its bad luck as an excuse, not with a 3-1 deficit against the Jets staring it in the face.
"I'm sure it was a 24-hour sadness period, but at that point, somebody has gotta suck it up and jump back in," Boudreau said. "We can't feel sorry for ourselves."
Some other tidbits from Boudreau on what was a scheduled day off for the Wild, which practices in St. Paul on Thursday morning before flying to Winnipeg later that afternoon:
• Boudreau was pleased with the NHL's decision to have a hearing for Jets defenseman Josh Morrissey, who cross-checked Wild forward Eric Staal in the side of the neck late in the first period in Game 4.
Morrissey was not assessed a penalty on the play, and on his next shift, helped start the Winnipeg offensive rush that ended up with Mark Scheifele scoring the game-winning goal. Morrissey was awarded an assist on the play.
He also broke up a Nino Niederreiter breakaway later in the game with a nice defensive play.
"It's warranted. I'm not up here trying to be gamesmanship to get the League to call extra stuff. It is what it is though. It was a vicious cross-check to the face," Boudreau said.
• Boudreau wasn't sure what lineup he would go with in Game 5 on Friday night at Bell MTS Place.
Tyler Ennis scratched into the lineup in Game 4 and could be the choice again. Other potential options include recent call-ups Kyle Rau, Justin Kloos or Kurtis Gabriel, among others.
"We'll see. I don't know what the lineup is going to entail, it's a different building. We haven't decided whether we're making changes or not," Boudreau said. "We've liked what people have done that have been recalled in the past. With me anyway, I'm looking at what's the best fit for a game in Winnipeg, and that's what we'll go with."
• Boudreau said he hopes to see more offense from players like Jason Zucker, Nino Niederreiter and Charlie Coyle, especially with Parise sidelined.
The coach was complimentary of both Zucker and Niederreiter, saying those two had perhaps their best games of the series in Game 4.
"We'd certainly like it," Boudreau said. "We can't, at this stage of the game, have any passengers."
Related:
- Wild readies for most difficult task of year as series shifts back to Winnipeg
- Wild recalls six from Iowa
- Parise week-to-week with fractured sternum