CHICAGO – Zach Parise is pretty positive about the way the Wild has been playing, but Minnesota's leading scorer is also a realist and always up for a challenge.
"We haven't seen Chicago, St. Louis, Colorado, San Jose. We haven't seen any of those top teams yet, so for us to play these guys and see where we're at, you can't get a better opponent than the Blackhawks," Parise said. "It's still going to be the team to beat in the Western Conference."
Saturday night at the United Center, the Wild opens up an old-fashioned home-and-home series against its new Central Division rival that concludes Monday in St. Paul. It'll be the first time the Wild meets Chicago since it was dispatched in five games by the eventual Stanley Cup champions in the first round of last year's playoffs.
"It doesn't feel like that long ago that we were in their building, they were coming here and we were going head-to-head in the playoffs," Wild coach Mike Yeo said. "Should be emotional games, should be fun games."
Minutes before last year's series-opening game in Chicago, veteran goalie Niklas Backstrom dropped to his knees during warmups. Backstrom had to be helped off the ice and wasn't heard from again, suffering a season-ending sports hernia. Backstrom says "it still hurts" that he couldn't be there for his teammates after the long road to get back in the playoffs.
Coincidentally, Backstrom's first start since straining his right knee Oct. 8 will come Saturday in Chicago because Josh Harding, who took the reins from Backstrom last spring, suffered a "lower-body" strain in Thursday's victory over Carolina.
The good news, Yeo said, is Harding, who has given up eight goals in nine games, was feeling better Friday and isn't expected to be out long.
"He's played a lot of hockey. He's done a great job for us," Yeo said. "It would be foolish to put him into a game if he's not 100 percent. Backs came in and played well, so we'll give Hards a chance to fully rest and fully recover."