The Wild is familiar with this "2-0 hole" thing in the playoffs.
This is the fourth time in five years the Wild has put itself into a series abyss and third consecutive year against the Chicago Blackhawks. Down 2-0 twice last postseason, the Wild won Games 3 and 4 at home, going on to victory in the Colorado series.
So all hope isn't lost. But this year was expected to be different, the year the much-improved Wild would be able to force at least a split in Chicago.
So far, nothing has changed. The Blackhawks' lengthy roster of lethal finishers has yet again broken the Wild's will with quick-strike conversions seemingly any time a Wild player goofs up.
The Wild's disappointment was palpable Monday. Hoping to get its act together in Game 3 on Tuesday at Xcel Energy Center, the Wild used Monday as a day to recover mentally and learn from the plethora of glaring, uncharacteristic mistakes it committed during two games in Chicago.
"I think no one was too thrilled about coming here today, but we knew it would be good to look at our mistakes and kind of regroup from that," veteran Thomas Vanek said. "We're down 0-2, but we're down 0-2 because we didn't play well. We played our game for two periods out of the six."
So Monday, coach Mike Yeo dimmed the lights and took his team to the movies, minus the popcorn. In lieu of going on the ice, the Wild held a long video session in which Yeo showed multiple examples of Sunday lowlights from the 4-1 loss.
"It's one thing to say it, but we needed to see it," Yeo said. "The approach that we took right from the drop of the puck was not the right one. We looked at why and tried to figure out why and now is the how."