CALGARY, ALBERTA – With its once NHL-best penalty kill having plummeted to 14th in the league, the Wild had a meeting Thursday to "reset" before hitting the Saddledome ice with the intention of patching up the leaks.
In the pre-practice video session, the staff showed players clips of the first 10 games of what they were doing well.
"It's sort of gotten away from us," coach Bruce Boudreau said. "Some guys, over time, if you don't practice it, then you get loose at it."
In the first 10 games, the Wild's kill was 26-for-27 for a league-best 96.3 percent. In the past 12 games, the Wild's kill is 27-for-37, dousing just 72.9 percent of opposing power plays. On the current road trip entering Friday's game vs. the Flames, the St. Louis Blues scored a go-ahead goal in the third period with a power-play goal during a shootout win and the Vancouver Canucks scored two power-play goals less than two minutes apart to turn a 2-0 deficit into a 2-2 tie before beating the Wild 5-4 on Tuesday.
"Our ability to make teams have to dump it and not set up with possession carrying it in is huge," center Eric Staal said. "If you can continually have teams go back and forth going up and down the ice trying to break in, that's a big thing.
"I thought we were really, really good at that the first 10, 11 games using a lot of bodies and rolling over shifts and not letting teams set up. Once teams set up, guys can make plays."
Players say it's as simple as outworking power plays again, having a strong neutral-zone forecheck and clearing pucks 200 feet.
"You have a chance to clear it, it's got to go 200," center Erik Haula said. "Otherwise it's always one out of three at least that end up in the back of the net. You always get that [bad] feeling watching from the bench when you don't get a clear and it stays in the zone."