MILWAUKEE -- Mike Yeo had the perfect job.
As an assistant with the Pittsburgh Penguins for five years, Yeo worked for a franchise with a core of stars that would be perennial Stanley Cup contenders.
Most young coaches would fasten himself to such luxury with Krazy Glue.
But Yeo wanted to be a head coach in the National Hockey League. And there were two problems: Yeo had never been a head coach. And he had never played in the NHL.
A minor-league grinder whose career ended at 26 because of a knee injury, Yeo knew how to achieve his aspiration. He would have to detach himself from Penguins coach Dan Bylsma's side, depart the Sidney Crosby/Evgeni Malkin safety net and return to the American Hockey League to run a bench for himself.
And that's what he does for the Houston Aeros, the Wild's AHL affiliate. And, as such, he figures to get major consideration for the vacant Wild post.
"I'm not Kirk Muller," Yeo said of the Montreal assistant and longtime NHLer who has never been a pro head coach, but is expected to soon land an NHL head-coaching job. "Because he's Kirk Muller, he's given more credibility, and I'm very accepting of that. I don't have the name. I didn't play [19] years in the NHL like Kirk Muller. The last couple years, this was something weighing heavily on my mind."
Yeo had been to the Stanley Cup Finals as Michel Therrien's assistant at Pittsburgh. A year later, he won a Stanley Cup as Bylsma's assistant. At the end of every season, Yeo sat down with Penguins General Manager Ray Shero to discuss his long-term goal. Shero would offer guidance, nearly giving Yeo the Wilkes-Barre job in 2008 when former Wild coach Todd Richards left for San Jose.