Turns out Jarome Iginla's demise was misreported. The former Calgary Flames heart and soul was supposed to be all but finished, his illustrious career tiptoeing to a conclusion because of legs and hands that were showing signs of slowing.
But as a smiling Iginla told me hours before his habitual roasting of the Wild last Monday, "I never thought I was done."
Iginla, 36, signed with the Boston Bruins last summer, an unexpected union because Iginla turned down a trade to Boston last season and chose to go to Pittsburgh instead. The Bruins got the last laugh, sweeping the Penguins in the Eastern Conference finals and then getting their man anyway in free agency.
The Bruins, riding a 12-game winning streak and a 20-2-3 run in their past 25, are the best team in the East and one of the deepest, most balanced teams in the NHL. Like a perfectly tailored suit, Iginla has fit impeccably.
Playing on a line with Milan Lucic and David Krejci, Iginla leads the Bruins with 28 goals and is a plus-32. Last week, his winning goal against Minnesota was part of a string of three in four games.
Iginla, the all-time leading scorer against the Wild, is third among active players with 558 goals and fourth with 1,164 points.
"It's been a really fun year," Iginla said. "All the way from the start of training camp, it's been a new experience. Different pressures, it's been very enjoyable to be winning as a team, to be battling for the top of the conference for pretty much the whole year.
"I know the feeling on the other side when you're battling for a playoff spot and every game is do or die, or a four-point game. It's a nice change to have a different pressure, to try to better our own game as opposed to having to watch other teams. I know how that feels. This is more fun."