Eric Staal wasn't interested in talking about justice Thursday. The Wild center had no opinion on whether a one-game suspension was appropriate punishment for Winnipeg defenseman Josh Morrissey, who laid a nasty cross-check on Staal's neck in Game 4 of the teams' first-round playoff series.
The NHL announced the suspension Wednesday, knocking Morrissey out of Friday's Game 5 at Bell MTS Place. With the Wild facing a 3-1 hole in the series, Staal considered it a waste of time to look back on an incident that happened in the first period of his team's 2-0 loss Tuesday.
"It doesn't matter," Staal said after Thursday's practice at Xcel Energy Center. "Regardless of what [the NHL] decided, it wouldn't have made a difference. I'm worried about trying to help our team win the game up there and take [the series] home. That's all I'm focused on."
Though a single-game suspension might not sound harsh, it does create significant hardship for the Jets. They already have three defensemen out because of injuries, and Tyler Myers (lower body), Toby Enstrom (ankle) and Dmitry Kulikov (back) are not expected to be available for Game 5.
Rookie Tucker Poolman played his first postseason game Tuesday, stepping in for Myers. Another rookie, Sami Niku, might get into the lineup Friday.
The Jets' depth has helped them withstand multiple injuries this season, and coach Paul Maurice said "it doesn't cause a ripple" when players are sidelined. That doesn't mean they won't miss Morrissey.
"We're disappointed that he's out," Maurice said. "Josh has played two years in the league, and he's had two cross-checking penalties, one of them coincidental. So it's not his game. But it's dealt with and over."
Moving parts
With the Wild on the brink of elimination, coach Bruce Boudreau altered his lines in Thursday's practice to try and generate more offensive punch.