High-energy, up-tempo, fast.
That had been the Wild's identity the season's first 10 games, but Tuesday night, the high-powered Pittsburgh Penguins made the Wild look sluggish, sloppy and slow during the first two periods of a 4-1 Minnesota loss at Xcel Energy Center.
The troubles were evident early. In the first 2 ½ minutes, the Wild committed several turnovers and iced the puck three times. It was a sign of things to come. The Wild executed poorly for 40 minutes and for the first time this season couldn't play "fast hockey" because of difficulty getting through the neutral zone.
"There was definitely a lot of frustration," said Nino Niederreiter, who in the second period cracked his stick over the bench and slammed the door in anger after fouling up two offensive rushes.
"It just seemed really tough to try to build any kind of momentum," coach Mike Yeo added.
What's worse, the Wild, already without injured Jared Spurgeon and Matt Cooke, played the third period without leading scorer Zach Parise because of an upper-body injury. Yeo didn't reveal the seriousness or indicate if Parise would be able to accompany the team to Ottawa for the start of a road trip Wednesday.
Asked if it's serious, Yeo said, "I sure hope not," adding he hoped to provide an update Wednesday.
In the meantime, the Wild was handed its first home loss by an Eastern Conference contender that had scored 18 unanswered goals in 205-plus minutes before Niederreiter's shorthanded breakaway goal — the first shortie of his career — in the third period.