After another home loss -- the Wild's fifth consecutive -- that came after his team's third-period collapse, coach Mike Yeo had trouble finding words to explain how he felt.
Frustrating? It was beyond that.
Allowing the Carolina Hurricanes to score the final four goals in a 5-3 loss? Wasting nearly two periods of good hockey with a third period that evoked boos from the green-clad fans?
"I don't care who we have out of the lineup, we cannot accept this," Yeo said. "We're in hell. It's not fun. And, if you don't accept it, the next day you come back and bring a little more."
Cynics would point out that the Wild, which dropped to 15-15-4 at Xcel Energy Center, did itself a favor Saturday. After all, the game matched the Wild and Hurricanes, teams that were fifth from the bottom and sixth from the bottom in the NHL standings entering Saturday. Considering that only the bottom five teams have a chance at the top overall pick in the draft lottery, this loss could prove vital this summer.
But the coaches and players who are living through this aren't thinking about that right now. They can't.
"It's about winning games," said center Kyle Brodziak, who had a three-point game. He set career highs in goals (18) and points (37). But afterward he didn't want to hear about it.
"We have to find ways to win games," he said. "Everyone in here is sick of losing. It's not a fun feeling, getting booed in your own rink. We know we deserve it, and we've got to find a way to give the fans something to cheer about, something to make ourselves proud."