Welcome to the Monday edition of The Cooler, where it's important to keep the narrative up-to-date. Let's get to it:
*Wild general manager Paul Fenton made three significant midseason trades, including two as the deadline approached last week. Since the first of those deadline deals, one that sent Charlie Coyle to the Bruins for Ryan Donato, the Wild is on a six-game points streak — including five wins in a row snapped only by an entertaining shootout loss to the Predators on Sunday.
The popular narrative when there is a different result after a change is that the thing or things that are new are the reason for the change.
And listen: Donato has been very good, while Kevin Fiala — obtained for Mikael Granlund a week ago — has shown promise as well. It would be foolish to underestimate their impact on the Wild's overall speed and structure — not to mention the harder to quantify impact that trades have on a team's chemistry. If the Wild was getting stale, which I think most of us would agree is true, a shakeup can trigger a different level of effort.
All that said: Whatever you think of the impact of the new players, and however you want to attribute chemistry to the play of individuals, the thing that is above all else fueling this Wild resurgence is easy.
It's goaltending.
Devan Dubnyk was in the midst of a bad run until right before Donato arrived, and overall his season was not good at that point.
At that time, among goalies with at least 1,000 minutes played this season, Dubnyk ranked No. 30 in the NHL in goals saved above average — a stat from Natural Stat Trick that measures goalies against an average goalie. And he was No. 42 in high danger save percentage — stopping 78.8 percent of shots from high-danger areas on the ice.