"It's a great question, because that's what you debate all the time. Do you push a panic button? Is that the perception if you do it, it's like panic. Or are you just doing it to give your team a tweak, a jump start if things aren't going the way you want it?" Evason said. "Things haven't gone the way that we've wanted [in Game 5]. We were 2-2 up to that point. So, will we make some changes? Yeah, for sure. Will we divulge them [on Wednesday]? No.
"We lost the game. We have to make some changes. And hopefully choose the right ones."
Could that mean a change in goal is coming for the first time in this series for the Wild? Cam Talbot has yet to play in any of the first five games, with Marc-Andre Fleury starting each contest so far.
St. Louis swapped goaltenders after back-to-back defeats in Games 2 and 3, inserting 2019 Stanley Cup hero Jordan Binnington into the lineup for Game 4. He's allowed two goals in each of his two games so far and has sparked the Blues' two-game winning streak.
No matter which direction Evason and the coaching staff decides to go, he said they feel comfortable with the choice.
"We trust both our goaltenders. We've seen enough of Marc-Andre Fleury to know, or watched him forever, to know that he's a guy that responds correctly," Evason said. "We also know that Cam Talbot is the ultimate professional. Works his butt off whether he's playing or not playing and would be ready to go tomorrow night as well."
Binnington became the winningest playoff goaltender in Blues history with his win on Tuesday night. He won all 16 of St. Louis' games three years ago en route to the club's first-ever Stanley Cup championship, becoming the first rookie in NHL history to do so.
His two wins this series give him 18 career postseason victories.