"These last couple of games, when you're out of it, they're tough games," Suter said after the Wild's 3-0 loss Saturday at Dallas. "The last couple of games, it's just frustrating. You can't believe that the year's over already. You think back to February, I think we won one game the whole month, so if we would have found ways to pull some out early on -- we had some leads and we blew some leads.
"You start thinking back to the games that you blew that you should have won and it might have been a different story."
For Wild coach Bruce Boudreau, it's the first time in his stellar NHL coaching career that a season he began behind a team's bench won't result in a trip to the playoffs.
"It's a long time until next year, and you never want it to be over," Boudreau said. "It's a disappointing moment in your season when you put in eight months and then it comes to an end, especially like it did the last two games not scoring a goal. It's pretty depressing."
Minnesota hasn't missed the postseason much over the years. This year will be the first time since 2012 the Wild will not participate in the playoffs. That six-year streak was tied with Anaheim for the second-longest in the NHL behind Pittsburgh's 12-year streak, which was extended to 13 a few nights ago.
"Very disappointing. I thought even at the deadline there, we made a lot of moves. We brought on a lot of new faces. I still thought we had a chance to work our way into a playoff spot," said Wild forward Eric Staal. "We weren't able to get enough guys going to be able to push for that last spot. That's disappointing, obviously, with two left to play for nothing. We looked like that tonight, and that's not very good."
Wild forward Marcus Foligno got his first taste of postseason hockey last spring after six seasons in Buffalo where he never reached the playoffs.
After a while, the reality of not getting past the regular season can wear on a team. It was one of the reasons Foligno was so excited about a fresh start with the Wild. That's why it's important that Minnesota makes its one-year absence a mirage, not the beginning of a trend.
"We should have an energized team next year," Foligno said. "The best thing to do is to come into training camp next year and demand to be a playoff team right from the get-go. You've gotta right the ship and come back stronger than we did this year."