It didn't take long for Zach Parise to realize he was a locked-out player Monday. The out-of-work Wild forward had to rush home because he forgot his skates.
Because he is not permitted to take advantage of team services like those of Wild equipment manager Tony DaCosta or team facilities like Xcel Energy Center during the NHL lockout, Parise took his skates home to sharpen over the weekend.
Monday morning, Parise arrived back at a St. Louis Park ice rink to skate with 40 of his fellow locked-out colleagues.
"I saw [locked-out Wild winger] Devin Setoguchi in the parking lot and he goes, 'Hey, what kind of skates do you wear?' " Parise said. "I was like, 'Son of a gun.' "
If there is a good thing about being locked out in Minnesota, it's the fact that several NHLers are based here.
So Monday, and for the foreseeable future, nearly 20 Wild players, including Mikko Koivu, Niklas Backstrom, Tom Gilbert, Jared Spurgeon and newcomer Torrey Mitchell, strapped on the skates with NHLers such as Dustin Byfuglien, Paul Martin, Keith Ballard, Alex Goligoski and Kyle Okposo.
What's it like being a locked-out NHLer?
"Bizarre. It's pretty brutal," Wild center Kyle Brodziak said. "Usually around this time you're starting to crank it up for the season and you get that feeling of playing competitive hockey again.