I'm looking forward to Sunday because I'll actually get to sit down and watch Saturday's game against the Colorado Avalanche over again – or for the first time.
All I know, every time I took a break from writing my file-at-the-gun metro-edition article (that actually needed to be in before the game ended, like when the Wild trailed 2-0!), I looked to my right and the Wild was in the offensive zone.
It seemed to me almost every waking moment the Wild got pucks deep and went to work on Colorado in the offensive zone. But this is the Wild. Scoring goals never comes easy, and tonight, it took Matt Cooke's goal with 3:27 left and Mikko Koivu's dramatic tying goal with 4.3 seconds left to force overtime.
The Wild didn't score in the shootout and fell 3-2, but the way the Wild has been losing and most notably the way its game has fallen apart, this could be a huge point and stepping stone in the right direction.
"We've been pressing offensively," Kyle Brodziak said. "It was a good job by everybody of not getting frustrated, not getting caught up in negative thinking. We just kept on playing. It was nice to get rewarded for that. We have to keep doing that, coming out and playing aggressive and being hungry."
That sentiment was the common theme afterward and I'm still trying to wrap my head around what exactly happened here tonight.
The hockey cliché (and if you've been a Wild fan since its inception, you know it by heart), "If we keep playing like that, the goals will come and we'll win more games than we lose," was uttered more than a few times tonight. The reality is, the Wild got to the hard areas, outchanced the Avs 2 to 1, outshot them 37-25 and would have won this game if not for Semyon Varlamov.
Now again, I know the cynics out there will all say the Wild makes every goalie look like the second coming of Patrick Roy, but the reality is even when the Wild fell behind 2-0 tonight, it was all over Colorado for seven or eight shifts in a row. Then one Marco Scandella whiff, and Nathan MacKinnon made the Wild pay.