As the Wild and Blues began their playoff series on Wednesday night, Minnesotans wanted to take encouragement in owning the higher seed and the better team, but there was a sense of underlying unease.
There was the feeling that a first-round playoff loss to a coach the Wild had fired 14 months earlier would represent the quintessential Minnesota sports experience.
After Game 1, the unease was justified. The Wild has reason to worry. The Blues won 2-1 in overtime at Xcel Energy Center early Thursday morning, as the Wild got shut down by Jake Allen and Zach Parise.
Allen made 51 saves. Parise inadvertently kept the Wild's best chance out of the goal in the third period when his stick stopped a sliding puck on the goal line. The Wild outshot St. Louis a ridiculous 52-26 but misfired on its best chances.
Allen stopped more shots than James Caan in "The Godfather."
The Wild will head back to the X for practice Thursday wondering how it could dominate play and yet lose, and to what extent it may have dominated if a handful of key players had played the way Jared Spurgeon and Jason Zucker did.
Charlie Coyle was either shooting the puck into Allen's chest or glove, or watching his stick splinter on what could have been the winning goal. Christian Folin looked overmatched and Nino Niederreiter and Matt Dumba were ineffective.
The Wild played almost four periods and managed only one goal — when it sent its goalie to the bench for an extra attacker. It was a beautiful goal, a tic-tac-toe from Mikael Granlund to Mikko Koivu to Zach Parise, but when the Wild was even strength most of its shots seemed designed only to maximize frustration.
The Wild entered the series with the better goalie, but St. Louis brought the hotter goalie.