Where to begin? Didn't I say that last night?
I could have written 40 inches on this game.
I hate to go after the officiating (but I will), especially in a game the Wild played on its heels basically the final 37 minutes. From the moment Casey Wellman beautifully set up Chuck Kobasew for a 2-0 Wild lead 2:42 into the second period, the Wild looked like a different team.
It stopped attacking, it was often pinned in its own end. At 2-0, I said to the writer across the river, "They're going to blow this game."
Part of the reason I said that is Justin Falk was injured (more on that in a sec), and after playing the night before, we've all seen this storyline before, and recently (the Shane Hnidy injury). The Wild was down to five D for basically 2/3 of this game (4/5 of the Hnidy game), and you could see the fatigue sprinkling in tonight. And since the Wild's offense stems from the blue line, it was so visible this was going to be a problem (plus, offensive defenseman Brent Burns is already out with an injury). The Wild just couldn't get up the ice, or generate an offensive attack the second half of the game after it did enter Columbus' end.
But, and I tried in the paper to be professional and objective and let the Wild do the talking, but this is my blog and I'm allowed more latitude here.
If the league's got any desire of actually fixing these type of mistakes by referees and show them when they've blatantly erred, I'd hope referee Stephane Auger has an email waiting for him Saturday morning from Director of Officiating Terry Gregson with a video clip.
There is no way any rational league executive can look at the replay of Kris Russell's tying goal and say that R.J. Umberger didn't blatantly break Rule 69.1 (interference with a goaltender), which in part reads, "The overriding rationale of this rule is that a goalkeeper should have the ability to move freely within his goal crease without being
hindered by the actions of an attacking player. If an attacking player enters the goal crease and, by his actions, impairs the goalkeeper's ability to defend his goal, and a goal is scored, the goal will be disallowed."