Nathan MacKinnon was in his bedroom — well, Jean-Sebastien Giguere's basement, where the Colorado Avalanche teenager has been living all season — when the Avalanche backup goaltender and 2003 Conn Smythe Trophy winner called MacKinnon upstairs for dinner.
It was Wednesday night, one day before the Avs were set to open the Western Conference quarterfinals against the Wild, and Giguere and MacKinnon dined while watching Game 1 of the Pittsburgh-Columbus and Montreal-Tampa Bay series.
"We watched hockey and Giggy gave me some good advice, like keeping it simple early on … and patience," MacKinnon said.
MacKinnon is only 18, so unsurprisingly, he doesn't listen to elders. So far, Mac- Kinnon has been anything but patient, and the Wild sure wishes the kid would keep it simple.
MacKinnon, the Calder Trophy front-runner, has scorched the Wild in Games 1 and 2, scoring a goal, assisting on six, being plus-5 and taking seven shots. The seven points tie the record for most points in the first two playoff games of an NHL career.
As the first-round matchup switches to St. Paul on Monday night, MacKinnon is the biggest reason the Wild trails 2-0 in a series that is in danger of ending quickly if the team doesn't figure out a way to neutralize "Nate The Great."
"He's got a mixed bag of tricks," Giguere said of the budding superstar who already is one of the NHL's most electrifying players. "Tremendous speed. Already one of the fastest players in the league. Tremendous vision and passing ability. Quick release, very accurate shot. Size. But most of all, he's a competitor. Push him, he's going to push back."
MacKinnon proved that in Saturday's 4-2 victory over Minnesota. He zipped through the Wild neutral zone like a bull charging past a matador en route to Colorado's first three goals. He turned Jared Spurgeon inside-out on his way to his first career playoff goal, then sailed a beauty toward Ilya Bryzgalov's blocker side. On Gabriel Landeskog's two goals, MacKinnon backed the Wild off with his lightning-fast skating, then put pucks right on teammates' sticks. And on Paul Stastny's empty-net goal, MacKinnon outmuscled and dragged Jonas Brodin as if the defenseman weighed 50 pounds.