LOS ANGELES - James Sheppard is starting to see the light at the end of the tunnel.
Sidelined all year by a broken left kneecap, the 2006 first-round draft pick has been cleared to practice. He boarded the Wild's charter bound for Southern California on Wednesday afternoon to take part in a couple morning skates.
"I was actually kind of stressed because I forgot how to pack," Sheppard said, laughing, after the team's optional practice Wednesday morning. "It's just kind of cool to get out of Minneapolis with a purpose, not just to go home and visit the family, and to do something I love and something I've worked so hard at.
"I'm going to be really excited to have a morning skate in a visitor rink. ... It's a good day."
This doesn't mean Sheppard is anywhere close to playing. It means, as General Manager Chuck Fletcher said, that Sheppard is "simply progressing to the next stage."
Sheppard, 22, is still suspended from the team for his pre-training camp all-terrain vehicle accident and remains on nonroster injured reserve. He would have to be cleared to play by Monday's trade deadline for the Wild to even put him on waivers and send him to Houston.
But that seems a long shot since Sheppard said he still has endurance issues, and there's not a lot of muscle built up yet on his left leg. If he can eventually return, it would help the team's depth. But that likely won't happen while captain Mikko Koivu is sidelined by a broken finger.
"I think that's a little short-term for me," Sheppard said. "I don't think that's realistic and not that I'm not going to set goals, but I'm going to let my body tell me I'm ready."