It's almost as if Nino Niederreiter loves his face being used as a punching bag.
There's no statistical category for it, but if you've watched the Wild through the first 35 games of this season, the young forward clearly leads the team in goalmouth scrums.
Niederreiter frequently drives the net, gets into the opposing goaltenders' workspace and tries to make their life difficult, whether it be by driving with the puck or going there to establish position, create screens and look for deflections.
That's exactly how "El Niño" scored the tying goal in the Wild's 2-1 shootout victory over Colorado on Saturday. He won a puck battle along the boards, made a beeline for the blue crease, parked himself in front of Semyon Varlamov and deflected Ryan Suter's shot in the final minutes to force overtime.
Niederreiter, 21, drives opposing defensemen and forwards batty and often is double- or triple-teamed after whistles with punches and face-washes and hogties and cross-checks.
"It's something that everyone on our team loves about him and respects about him," center Kyle Brodziak said. "He goes to the net hard and with a purpose, and if he's going to get pushed, he's not taking it. He's going to push a guy back.
"He makes the other defensemen mad at him, and the purpose is to get them off their game or draw a penalty. It's awesome to see. Everyone notices it, and it's something we love about him."
Part of his game
Pushing, shoving and being smacked in the face is not fun, but it's almost as if it's Niederreiter's own brand of smelling salt. You can see it in his face. These post-whistle scrums wake him up and get him engaged in the action.