"You just look at the boxscores and it's a big challenge for us," said Wild defenseman Jared Spurgeon. "We have these couple days of practice to fine tune some things and I think that's what we've been trying to do, something different each day and getting back to the way we were playing at the end of last year."
It's a small three-game sample size, but so far, Chicago's boxscores have been impressive.
Saad has four goals and six points. Patrick Kane has two goals and six points. Ryan Hartman has five assists among six points. Richard Panek has three goals and five points. Jonathan Toews is one of two players with two goals and two assists.
Chicago's 18 goals is second-most in the League behind Toronto (19) and six more than the next best team in the Western Conference. It's plus-12 goal differential is three better than any team in the NHL.
"They're not bad. They've only scored 18 goals in three games," said Wild coach Bruce Boudreau. "They've got a lot of new faces, though. They can all skate, and they've still got some magical players on that team. No matter when you play them, what level of guys that are hurt or whoever, [Blackhawks coach] Joel [Quenneville] pushes the right buttons and they play. They're very difficult to beat."
That offense, especially at United Center, will test the Wild early, a group that has uncharacteristically allowed eight goals through two games after being the sixth stingiest team in the League a year ago.
While the gap in the schedule was perhaps viewed negatively a week ago, it has allowed Minnesota to come home for a couple of days, reevaluate some things and try to tighten up in that end of the rink.
"They've got some offensive power, so that will naturally want to make us want to make sure we're playing tight defensively and check well," said Wild forward Eric Staal. "That's kind of been our staple here for most of last year was strong defensive hockey to lead offense. Sometimes early in the year, it gets like that for a lot of teams. We'll tighten it up, we'll work at here and try to get better for the next game."