The news hit with a somber jolt. The Wild, in midgame, announced that first-round draft pick Marco Rossi had returned home to Austria to recover after experiencing complications from COVID-19.
This wasn't some random transaction notice. Not a knee sprain, nor a player being suspended. This was a 19-year-old professional athlete being shut down from activity after a physical flagged something wrong a few months after he was diagnosed with the virus and had seemingly recovered.
Scary stuff.
The reaction in sports is often robotic when a player suffers an injury that will sideline him or her for an extended period. Tough break, good luck in rehab, see you next season, next player up.
This is not that. This can't be that.
That message reverberated again Wednesday with news that five more Wild players were added to the league's COVID protocol list, prompting the team to pause competition until next week.
The Wild played Tuesday and then shut down 24 hours later. An outbreak can happen that quickly. The health of those involved becomes the immediate focus.
Thankfully, the news on Rossi's prognosis sounds encouraging. His agent, Serge Payer, confirmed in a phone conversation this week that Rossi is supposed to rest for six weeks but that he's confident the young center's career will continue as planned after this delay.