At one point Sunday night, one of the referees asked Wild defenseman Ryan Suter if the shot clock was right.
"Sometimes you're in the heat of the moment, you don't notice," Suter said. "I was shocked."
The San Jose Sharks peppered Wild goaltender Josh Harding with 38 shots, the most shots the Wild has allowed at home this season.
Conversely, the Wild sprayed 13 shots on Harding's San Jose counterpart, the fewest the Wild has registered home or away this season.
Yet at the end of the night, the scoreboard read Wild 3, Sharks 1, and the Wild wasn't apologizing.
"I thought we did a good job," Suter said. "They didn't have a lot of quality shots."
"We kept them to the outside," concurred captain Mikko Koivu. "To be honest, I didn't feel like we had 13 shots. I thought we had more."
The Wild made the most of them with Zach Parise and Koivu scoring second-period goals and Parise potting an empty-netter on one of the Wild's two third-period shots.