TORONTO – Upon his return to his home province, Wild coach Bruce Boudreau fully expected to get some tough love. He was planning to drive to his mother's house Tuesday after a rigorous practice in the Toronto suburb of Etobicoke, one day removed from his team's brutal loss in Boston.
Boudreau figured his mom, Theresa — who has scolded him for swearing and making questionable challenges during televised games — would have something to say about the Wild's current state.
"Spend some quality time, and have her criticize me all night long," the coach joked. "I just wish she wouldn't watch TV."
Before Boudreau put himself on the receiving end of that parental judgment, he doled some out. With back-to-back games at Toronto on Wednesday and at Montreal on Thursday, he skated his players hard in a one-hour practice, trying to refocus a team that cannot seem to concentrate for an entire game.
Two lifeless periods Monday doomed the Wild to a 5-3 defeat at Boston. That earned it a harsh video session to dissect its mistakes, followed by high-tempo, end-to-end drills repeated over and over. The lesson: With three games to go on this road trip, Boudreau will not settle for anything less than unstinting effort, viewing that as the key to smoothing out the Wild's inconsistency.
"I always think of it as parenting, and how I would do it with my own kids," said Boudreau, who grew up in Toronto and played 134 games for the Maple Leafs. "If they weren't doing what you wanted them to, how would you react?
"Somebody said to me [Tuesday], 'You should make it fun again.' And I'm going, 'No. This is not a country club.' The bottom line is, we have to work hard if we want to win — because every night, there are 20 guys that want to beat us. And if we don't outwork them, our talent doesn't mean a thing."
The Wild is mature enough to understand that, and to regret the high cost of not following through. In Tuesday's serious, physically demanding practice, the players did many of the things that were lacking in Monday's game, and in others this season. They skated hard to the net, forechecked vigorously, wrestled for the puck and played diligent defense.