All of the sudden, the Wild's tenuous one-goal lead was now a two-goal one.
Despite the fact that he was in pain on the bench, Koivu said Seeler deserved as much credit for that goal as anyone else.
"That's why we scored," Koivu said. "We blocked those shots then we went down and scored. That's the story of that last two minutes there."
Minnesota now heads to the All-Star break alone in third place in the Central Division, three points clear of both Dallas and Colorado. It enters as winners of three-straight games and in four of its past five overall.
And after what could have been a devastating loss to Anaheim last Thursday in St. Paul, the Wild answered with three-straight wins, all against teams currently inside the playoff bubble.
Two of them came on the road.
Gutty. Gutty. And gutty.
"That's what we wanted to do, come out with three good wins," Seeler said. "Especially going into break on a high note and feeling good about ourselves and that's what we did.
"Now, we're going to rest the body and keep it going after break."
Nobody earned that right more than Seeler, who may need a couple ibuprofen and a bag of ice on the flight home to Minnesota.
"All these guys ... I know they're looking forward to break, but we wanted to come out and do our jobs tonight and come out with a win," Seeler said. "We really focused our energies on that. It was a good win."
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Postgame Hat Trick: Wild 5, Avalanche 2