MONTREAL – Even though Bruce Boudreau has implied that Devan Dubnyk's all-world play this season has been too under the radar, he wasn't about to throw gas on the billed Dubnyk vs. Carey Price show Thursday night.
"Carey Price is the gold standard and always will be probably until he retires," the Wild coach said earlier Thursday.
While Boudreau wanted no part of the "who has been the best goalie in the NHL" chatter, he was all for using the Montreal Canadiens as a "measuring stick."
The Canadiens were the best home team in the NHL and usually lock it down when scoring first, so he wanted to see if his red-hot squad was up for the test. Well, A's all around as the Wild twice rallied from one-goal deficits to beat the Habs 4-2 at the Bell Centre.
"They've got a great record, they've got a great record at home, they've got a good team. And we've got a good team, too," veteran Eric Staal said. "It was tight. There wasn't a lot of room. You had to fight for every inch."
Staal scored his first shorthanded goal in four seasons 3 minutes, 8 seconds into the third period to break a 2-2 deadlock. The Wild, one game after killing four third-period power plays to beat Colorado, then killed three in the third this time around to extend its win streak to nine games and its point streak to 10 (9-0-1). Both tied franchise records, the win streak being the longest since 2007.
"Tying is like kissing your sister," said Boudreau, who has had five win streaks of nine or more games in his career. "Getting it is the nice thing. Our job's not done. We're going to try out butts off [Friday against the Rangers]."
After a scoreless first period in which Dubnyk and Price were living up to the hype, the Wild rallied twice during a four-goal second period with goals by Jordan Schroeder, in the lineup only because Zach Parise was ill, and Jared Spurgeon.