With the Wild trailing by one with a little less than two minutes left in last Tuesday's game in Detroit, assistant coach Rick Wilson called out Justin Falk's name.
Even the rookie defenseman was stunned at the instruction to take the ice with the Wild pressing for the tying goal.
"I kind of looked at the clock and did some math in my head," Falk said. "I was thinking, 'Geez, the goalie should be pulled probably halfway through my shift here, so I didn't know what the deal was."
As Falk deduced, Josh Harding soon headed to the bench for an extra attacker. But Wilson would look like a genius.
Falk, a veteran of 29 NHL games at that point, gathered Devin Setoguchi's chip up the wall and threw a puck on net that Mikko Koivu tipped to force overtime and an eventual Wild victory -- the second in its current four-game win streak.
In a lot of ways Wilson's decision to trust Falk in such a situation was emblematic of what has transpired with the Wild in the first four weeks.
In training camp, the Wild's blue line was projected to be the team's weakest link. Only three defensemen -- Marek Zidlicky, Nick Schultz and Greg Zanon -- were returning with more than 65 games of NHL experience.
What wasn't taken into account was the experience gained last season in Houston by rookie defensemen Falk, Marco Scandella and Jared Spurgeon.