"I did a lot of swearing at home," Wild coach Bruce Boudreau said as a smile crept across his face. "I just wish they would have done it earlier than instead of giving me hope and waiting till the last minute to tie it up and win it in overtime all the time."
Here's where things stand for the Wild as it prepares to get back into game action:
Minnesota entered the day Friday tied with the Colorado Avalanche and Los Angeles Kings for the second and final wild card position in the Western Conference. The Avs maintain the spot because they have two games in hand on Minnesota and one on L.A., which plays Anaheim late on Friday night.
The Dallas Stars, who occupy the top wild-card position, are three points clear of the Wild, but Minnesota has one game in hand.
The Wild, which had pulled as close as two points of the third position in the Central Division last Sunday, now trails the St. Louis Blues by six points -- but Minnesota has two games in hand.
Minnesota has 36 games remaining, 18 on the road and 18 at home, beginning Saturday against Tampa Bay and Monday, when it hosts the Ottawa Senators.
"You always pay attention, it's important, not that you can control it at all. I think we just have to expect that to happen," said Wild goaltender Devan Dubnyk. "We're going to need to earn our way there and win the games we're gonna have a chance to play and that's all it comes down to. Too many good teams to sit and hope that other teams lose, we just have to get our points when we can."
Of course, this is nothing new. The 10 points separating first place from last in the Central Division is the smallest such gap of any of the four divisions.
"That's kind of the way it's been going. We have been fortunately playing well as well," Dubnyk said. "There's too many games going on with too many good teams. To expect we're going to get help every night, it's just not going to happen."