BOSTON – Fluky goals, gift-wrapped pucks from opponents, perfectly placed rebounds.
When you're a team as deep as the Boston Bruins, and when you're running as hot as they are, things just come easy sometimes.
In front of a sea of green fans on the holiest of Boston holidays — St. Patrick's Day — the Wild hoped to get a little luck from the Irish and extinguish the hottest team in the NHL's winning streak.
No dice as the Bruins, maybe the front-runner to come out of the East this springtime, made it nine in a row by beating the Wild 4-1.
"They were real consistent in how they played," defenseman Keith Ballard said. "They have a good balance to their lineup."
The Wild doesn't. The Eastern Conference's best offensive and defensive team got goals from three lines (two from Wild slayer Jarome Iginla) and kept Minnesota, the prototypical one-line team, to only a late second-period goal by Jason Pominville.
It was Pominville 26th goal and fourth in five games. The Zach Parise-Mikael Granlund- Pominville line has scored 14 goals in the past 13 games.
The rest of the team has 17.