For some reason the Wild hasn't been successful in the front end of back-to-backs (3-9 before tonight's 1-0 win at Winnipeg; eighth shutout by the Wild to tie a team record), so defenseman Ryan Suter said this was kind of a "trap game" tonight with the hard-working Jets out of the playoff hunt, the Wild so close to clinching a playoff spot and the Boston Bruins, the top team in the NHL, waiting for the Wild in Minnesota for Tuesday night's game.
But the Wild grinded it out. Its execution wasn't good all night long offensively, but man, the Wild worked hard and defended well. Players sure had to with as much time as they spent in their own zone.
"That was the definition of grinding it out," coach Mike Yeo said. "We battled hard. Structure-wise, we were good. Penalty kill was huge (4 for 4). The play of our defensemen in particular, really impressed."
You have to give Yeo and his staff credit (I know, I know, players win games and coaches lose games).
Obviously, the four goalies who have been No. 1 this season for the Wild (Nik Backstrom, Josh Harding, Darcy Kuemper and now Ilya Bryzgalov) deserve credit, but this could have blown up at any time along the way if not for the Wild's impressive defensive structure and Yeo's system.
The Wild's goalies are rarely peppered and when the Wild most needed it, it has gotten back to a defensive structure that has allowed 26 or fewer shots in the past eight games.
"This team right now, we're going good places," said defenseman Jon Blum, who had his best game since his callup. "We're focused on defense first and you can see that. Whenever they get that big chance, Bryz makes that big save for us. We're feeding off that."
"Bryz" tonight made 24 saves for his second consecutive shutout. He'll start against Boston and carry a shutout streak of 142 minutes, 15 seconds into a game against a team that is 13-1-4 in its past 18 on the road and 16-1-2 in the past 19 overall.