When Matt Cullen and Zach Parise scored goals 2:12 apart early in the third period, giving Minnesota the lead it craved, all that stood between the Wild and a big win in the first game of the series was 16 minutes of more of the same.
Unfortunately for the visitors, it couldn't replicate it.
Patrik Laine scored off a turnover less than a minute later, the Wild went 12 minutes without even a shot on goal and the Jets scored the game winner nearly eight minutes later, holding on for an eventual 3-2 win.
"There were parts where they had the momentum a little bit, and then we answered and had the momentum," said Wild forward Mikko Koivu. "We just couldn't find the rhythm after [the Laine goal], we couldn't get near their net and close to the areas that you usually score the goals. They defended well and we couldn't find the holes."
The most frustrating aspect of the loss was how Minnesota played for a bulk of the game, working its game plan to near perfection, limiting Winnipeg's high-danger chances. Confident in its goaltender, Devan Dubnyk, the Wild was more than willing to allow the Jets quantity, as opposed to quality.
The Jets had a 13-4 edge in shots after one, but few of those chances came from in tight and Minnesota never had to "weather a storm" to start the game.
The Wild may have been the better team in the second, but trailed when Mark Scheifele scored a power-play goal with 2:23 remaining in the period, breaking a scoreless tie.
But after taking the lead, Minnesota couldn't build on it.
"We had stretches where we played alright," Cullen said. "I think we view this as a missed opportunity. I don't think we played as well as we can, I think we showed pieces of our game. But I don't think we played to our level to be honest with you. We have better."
Jordan Greenway made a fantastic pass to Matt Cullen for a snipe from the slot as the Wild tied the game 1:46 into the third.