The NHL All-Star break featured sand and sun for some Wild players, wine country or casino visits for others ... and that was apparent for the first few minutes of the team's practice on Monday.
"It's weird getting on the ice after being five days completely off," forward Cal Clutterbuck said. "You feel like you're a first-timer again."
But the energy and the execution quickly returned during a crisp, up-tempo practice in anticipation of the soaring Nashville Predators coming to town Tuesday. The Wild hopes to build off the momentum it created with a modest two-game winning streak that put the team just barely inside the playoff bubble before the break.
"Reenergize the body and the mind, and I think the guys are pretty excited to get back," center Kyle Brodziak said. "This is crunch time starting now. You could feel it on the ice. We know that right now is the playoff push."
The Wild lost 15 of 17 prior to beating Dallas and Colorado. In the two victories, the Wild returned to being a good-defending, hard-working, hard-to-play-against team.
That's what coach Mike Yeo did his darnedest to reinforce Monday.
Back when the Wild reeled off 17 victories in 21 games (could that be dubbed the "good ol' days?"), it had a certain recipe for victory. It rarely abandoned its aggressive system, which meant players waited for the other team to crack.
And that's why the Wild won so many games (15) when surrendering the first goal. That's why the Wild controlled so many third periods. That's why the Wild won so many one-goal games (14-4-7).