Too bad the Wild can't get the Buffalo Sabres on the schedule more often. They're starting to become the cure to all the Wild's ills.
Perhaps they even have a magical antidote for the mumps virus that may be creeping through the Wild locker room and may have infected sidelined defensemen Jonas Brodin and Marco Scandella.
Remember last winter when the Sabres came to St. Paul with Minnesota mired in a six-game losing streak and Mike Yeo's job hanging by a skate lace? The Wild trounced them that night, and behind Nino Niederreiter's first career hat trick Thursday night, the Wild again used and abused the NHL's worst team to end a four-game losing streak with 6-3 victory.
Many may slight the win because it was against the hapless Sabres, who are 3-13-2 and have allowed six goals in each of their past three games, but Ryan Carter, who was part of a six-point night for the Wild's fourth line, said: "It's huge for us. I don't care what their record is. That's the kind of game I think we needed."
In a game in which the Wild was missing two top-four defensemen and Zach Parise for a fourth consecutive game, the Wild skated through a Sabres squad in full-fledged draft-Connor-McDavid-or-Jack-Eichel mode.
"It's kind of sad to watch team after team after team go through us in the defensive zone like we don't know what we're doing," Sabres coach Ted Nolan said. "We have so many guys puck-staring, watching the puck and not being aware of what's behind them. We're at the National Hockey League level."
In a crazy opening period that included the second-fastest three-goal outburst by two teams in NHL history (17 seconds), the Wild fired a franchise-record 20 shots at Jh'onas Enroth and rebounded from a 1-0 deficit 63 seconds in and Darcy Kuemper being chased after giving up two goals on two shots.
"In a weird way that's kind of what our team needed," Carter said. "We've been struggling a little bit mentally to find that toughness."