The Wild saw the 2019-20 schedule shut down on March 12 and returned to the ice for a second, brief training camp on July 13. The team will arrive in Edmonton next Sunday, play an exhibition game vs. Colorado on July 29 and start a best-of-five qualifying series against Vancouver on Aug. 2.
Very strange way to wrap up the Wild's 20th year and 19th season as Minnesota's second NHL representative.
Now that we've agreed on that, it can be added our skaters will be sequestered in Canada with fine accommodations, hearty meals and, in all probability, several beer choices when back at the hotel following a few hours on the ice, game or practice.
In other words, if the coronavirus can be kept away, the Wild athletes will have it much more comfortable as they embark on this great experiment than did the North Stars, as they were launching Minnesota into the NHL as an expansion team 53 years ago.
Wren (The Bird) Blair was hired as general manager and coach of the North Stars a year before they started play on Oct. 11, 1967 at St. Louis. Everything was being done on the fly, and Blair was able to convince his bosses that the Haliburton Hockey Haven in Ontario's cottage country would be a perfect location for a secluded training camp.
As luck would have it, Blair was the co-owner of the Hockey Haven along with Jim Gregory. They had opened this summer camp for youthful hockey players in 1965. Wren was able to negotiate a deal with himself for the North Stars to use the facility in September, after said youth were back in school.
The North Stars used Blair's camp and trained in Haliburton from 1967-1969.
"We were in a barrack with 30 cots made for kids — 3 feet wide, 5 feet long," said Tom Reid, North Stars defenseman turned Wild radio analyst. "We were adult hockey players. We couldn't fit. Most of us slept on the floor.