When Mike Yeo took over Feb. 1, the Blues were down and out fighting for a playoff spot. GM Doug Armstrong, emotional after firing Ken Hitchcock, threw all the pressure back inside the locker room, saying the Blues had a bunch of "independent contractors" in there.
The Blues are now an NHL-best 26-9-2 since, including 19-3-2 in their past 24 games under Yeo.
The former Wild coach got sweet revenge on his former team Saturday when the St. Louis Blues overcame a blown two-goal lead in the third period with a 4-3 overtime win.
In a gesture after the game, GM Chuck Fletcher, who shared some tears and a beer with Yeo after firing him 14 months ago, went to the Blues' room to congratulate Yeo and assistant coach Rick Wilson.
"Very nice," Yeo said. "I've got a lot of time and a lot of respect from everybody here, from top to bottom - players, coaches, management, everything. It's a first-class group and I'm sure that we'll be seeing more of each other down the road."
In a very similar play to the Blues' Game 1 winner where Vladimir Tarasenko skated off the wall and tried to go backhand to forehand before the puck rolled to Joel Edmundson for the winner, this time Vladimir Sobotka, in his sixth game back from the KHL, skated off the wall and set up Magnus Paajarvi for the dagger.
The goal came not long after Zach Parise overskated a Charlie Coyle rebound in the offensive zone.
It was a fitting end in a series where the Wild had long stretches of better play but couldn't either execute or beat Jake Allen.