"Special teams killed us," said Wild coach Dean Evason. "Five-on-five, we were real good. Real good. In both zones, all three zones, five-on-five. We just didn't play there. We were four-on-four a ton ... We were power play or penalty kill. And not a secret, they have not been good this year. So if we're going to have success, obviously, they have to get better."
Perhaps the best player on the ice for either team was Husso, who finished with 37 saves in his postseason debut, outdueling a future Hall-of-Famer, Marc-Andre Fleury, in the process.
Husso had 57 games of NHL experience total, including the regular season, entering the game, while Fleury's 90 wins in the postseason alone are fourth-most all-time in NHL history.
Fleury was solid too, making 27 saves and another on a penalty shot, to keep the Wild at least in the game through most of two periods.