Monday technically wasn't the opening of training camp, although it sure felt like it.
Wild management was in the stands. Players, wearing authentic sweaters with the Wild logo on the crest rather than "NHLPA," tore up a sheet of ice with a giant Wild emblem painted at center ice.
For 18 Wild players who had been locked out since Sept. 15, the padlock was removed from the front of Xcel Energy Center. It officially was an informal skate. Coaches weren't allowed on the ice. But after the NHL and NHL Players' Association came to a tentative agreement on a new collective bargaining agreement Sunday, players finally got access to team facilities Monday.
"Oh yeah!" center Kyle Brodziak screamed as he walked through the tunnel to the ice. After a 75-minute skate, Brodziak said, "You see the smiles on the boys' faces today. Everyone is pretty excited. It feels good to get back to the rink, hang out with the boys, see the trainers and start to get ready for the real thing.
"We're a group again. The team's back together."
For the first time in their careers, Zach Parise and Ryan Suter, who signed 13-year, $98 million deals with the Wild last July, slipped on the practice jersey of a team that wasn't New Jersey or Nashville, respectively.
"Zach skated by the crease, and I said it looks good on him," goalie Josh Harding said. "The buzz is coming back. It's great to see those guys on the ice with us."
Of his first twirl in a Wild sweater, Parise said, "It was great. It was fantastic."