Matt Cullen is 35 and set to begin the last year of a three-year contract that brought him back to the state where he was born and played hockey as a child, teenager and collegian.
But even the Wild veteran's young son, Brooks, knows that season is in peril.
"My 5-year-old asked me, 'Is there going to be lockout, dad?'" Cullen said. "I was like, 'How do you even know what the word is?' It's no fun."
Even the typically optimistic Cullen is reading soggy tea leaves over the chance a new collective bargaining agreement is agreed upon by 11 p.m. Saturday, when the current CBA expires and NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman follows with a second NHL work stoppage in eight years.
"It's a little bit disappointing, but I don't really feel like it's surprising after going through the last one," said Cullen, referring to the lockout that resulted in the extermination of the 2004-05 season. "I don't know how that will be avoided. I don't think that they're close enough right now for anything."
Cullen won't be in New York on Wednesday, but more than 250 NHL players, including new Wild teammates Zach Parise and Ryan Suter, will be for two days of meetings with NHLPA Executive Director Donald Fehr.
On Thursday, the NHL Board of Governors meets in New York. Wild owner Craig Leipold and General Manager Chuck Fletcher plan to attend, and Bettman plans to update the board on collective bargaining. Bettman already has the authority from the board to lock out the players Saturday night if a new CBA can't be reached.
On Tuesday, it was reported that the player's negotiating committee held a 90-minute conference call, and the NHL and NHLPA will meet Wednesday morning. But it was fuzzy if either side planned to make a new proposal.