Mikko Koivu already knows how he'll figure out if he's ready to retire from the NHL.
He just hasn't arrived at the outcome.
"I don't think it's the time to make that call," he said.
After months of uncertainty, Koivu and the Wild are back to finish the season that was put on hold in March by the coronavirus pandemic and they've been preparing for a qualifying-round matchup against Vancouver next month in Edmonton — a second wind for the team and its veteran captain on the last legs of his contract.
But instead of christening this return a farewell tour or a preview of what's to come, Koivu is concentrating on the present and postponing plans for his future to a later date.
"I'm just really trying to enjoy every minute of it on the ice and the preparation part and once we get to Edmonton, to start playing again," Koivu said Thursday on a post-practice video conference call. "I'm trying to take it as a new experience."
It wasn't too long ago that the 37-year-old was still in limbo, with the possibility he had played his last game with the Wild.
The NHL and players union only agreed to resume the season and implement a four-year collective bargaining extension last Friday, an outcome Koivu had been bracing for, but not having concrete answers earlier in the process was difficult.