Matt Dumba was outstanding too, scoring the Wild's only goal 12 minutes into the second period, giving Minnesota a brief 1-0 lead.
Dumba was also credited with eight blocked shots (a franchise playoff record) and four shots on goal.
"We're not proving anything to ourselves. We know the level that we can play at," Dumba said. "I think it's more you guys, the media, putting us as underdogs. But you're gonna see a totally different team, even, at home. We're a different beast."
With 10 games in the books between the clubs now in the books, counting regular and postseason, seven have been decided by exactly one goal. Another was a one-goal game until the final six seconds of regulation and Tuesday's was a one-goal contest until the final minute of regulation.
If the games remain tight, and clearly there's no reason to believe they won't considering how evenly matched these clubs appear to be, that's just fine with the Wild.
"I think this type of hockey suits us well," said Wild defenseman Ryan Suter. "I think we're comfortable playing in those tight games, getting pucks deep and playing that low, kind of grind-it-out style."
Nothing through two games has surprised Evason, who said he expected each game of this series to be decided in tight quarters.
The Wild just hopes it can solve Fleury a time or two more per game and hopefully gain a bit of breathing room as the series shifts to friendlier ice at Xcel Energy Center.
"Yeah, 100 percent, we didn't expect one team to blow the other team out," Evason said. "The chances, at least the first game, were very equal, I assume they're equal again in Game 2]. The games are going to be like this. It's awesome, it's great hockey to watch, stressful for coaches to watch behind the bench, but fun as well."
**Related:**
[Postgame Hat Trick: Golden Knights 3, Wild 1