Talk about a mixed bag. On the one hand, the Wild lost Charlie Coyle, Nino Niederreiter and Marcus Foligno to injury Thursday in Chicago, adding to a list that already included Zach Parise and Mikael Granlund. On the other, the Wild—even with that diminished roster—beat Chicago 5-2. At United Center. After the Blackhawks scored 21 goals and went 3-0-1 in their first four games.
No word yet on exactly what the injuries are, but coach Bruce Boudreau anticipates Coyle and Niederreiter won't play in Saturday's home opener. Neither will Parise or Granlund, and Foligno is uncertain. Boudreau isn't sure what's going to happen with the roster, either; the Wild's salary-cap crunch prevented it from calling up a forward to fill the hole opened when Granlund was hurt a week ago.
"I don't know,'' Boudreau said, regarding the cap situation. "That's a question I think (assistant GM Shep Harder) has to answer as far as anything else, depending on the severity of the injuries.''
Coyle was nailed in the back of the leg by a Jared Spurgeon shot while standing in the slot with 12:34 left in the game. Niederreiter limped off just before that, after Tanner Kero drove him into the boards and fell on his leg.
Foligno was hurt during a second-period fight with John Hayden. Foligno ripped Hayden's helmet off, and Hayden responded with a giant haymaker to Foligno's left cheekbone.
Despite all that, the Wild still managed to beat a very good Chicago team. It played with intelligence, discipline and tenacity, mending the defensive problems it showed in its first two games and following the game plan on offense. The aim was to get pucks deep right from the start, get the forecheck going and match the Blackhawks' energy and muscle.
The Wild did that in a splendid first period, then survived a lapse in the second. With both Devan Dubnyk and Corey Crawford playing very well in the nets, the Wild got trapped on a long shift, with several players on the ice for more than three minutes. Dubnyk stopped six shots in that span, and Spurgeon saved another just before that. The Wild also killed a penalty for too many men, then got the game's first goal when Coyle intercepted a Chicago pass and fed Eric Staal.
Some other postgame nuggets: