Now that's how you make a statement. By showing pride and toughness, and a willingness to not back down from physical challenge.
Backed into a corner, the Wild came out swinging. Not literally, like in the final seconds of Game 2. Wild players displayed a different kind of fortitude Sunday night.
The Wild stood up to the bully with an offensive attack that was potent after being largely dormant the first two games. Six players scored goals as the Wild offered an impressive pushback against the Winnipeg Jets in a 6-2 victory in Game 3 at Xcel Energy Center.
The Wild trails 2-1 in the best-of-seven, but the effort put forth by the home team made it feel like a series now.
"We needed it," Zach Parise said. "That's the way playoffs go. You go from losing two up there, thinking it's the end of the world. Now all of a sudden we've got some life."
Losing the first two games in Winnipeg was not the end of the world, or even unexpected. It was the optics of Game 2's stinker that was sobering.
The Jets pounded away and the Wild offered little resistance. The Wild spent so little time with the puck as the Jets hammered away with body blows that scoring chances felt like a rare phenomenon.
Game 3 represented a 180-degree turn.
"We were just kind of throwing pucks away in Winnipeg," Mikael Granlund said. "We need to play good with the puck."