The Minnesota Wild fired Mike Yeo on Feb. 13, 2016. On Saturday, 434 days after the firing, the Yeo-coached St. Louis Blues completed a five-game elimination of what was alleged to be the best team in the Wild's 16-season history.
This is one of the most-embarrassing events in the half-century since Minnesota became a full-service major league sports market with the arrival of the North Stars (and the ABA) in 1967.
An organization quits on a coach, after the veteran stars of the team decide to quit on him, and then he comes back with an underdog team and takes you out in the first round … in FIVE, and with a 3-0 record in your arena.
"Oh, well,'' the lemmings on the season-ticket list say, ''when do you want our next payment for 2017-18, and when do the new jerseys go on sale?''
Out in Woodbury, the center of Wild fever, it wasn't the fault of the players or the coach, Sir Topham Boudreau. They just ran into a hot goalie.
That's the one I find hilarious. The New York Rangers figured out a way to beat Montreal's Carey Price, the best goalie in the world, in six games, but Jake Allen was a mystery too great for the Wild to solve.
Here's an idea that might have worked, fellas: Stop hitting him with the puck.
The reaction to this five-game debacle was rewarding in a way for me as a hockey observer. For decades, I've been downplaying hockey with this claim: