The Wild, 10-1-2 in its past 13 on the road and winners of six straight on the road, a team that hasn't lost consecutive games since Jan. 19-20, will have a bigtime test Saturday night in St. Louis.
The Scottrade Center has been a house of horrors. Minnesota is 2-7-2 in its past 11 there (shootout wins) and hasn't won in regulation there since Oct. 20, 2007 (13 visits ago).
As Ryan Suter said after this 2-1 loss to Anaheim tonight, the Wild can't afford to lose two straight this time of year.
Devyn Dubnyk said he'll be ready to start. Coach Mike Yeo wasn't divulging his preliminary thoughts, and I'd be very surprised if Darcy Kuemper gets the start. Wild's only two up on L.A. and three up on ninth-place Winnipeg.
With 14 games left, the Wild's not in a position right now to be throwing in a goalie that hasn't started since Jan. 6. But that's just my opinion. I could be wrong.
Frustrating game tonight at Xcel Energy Center as Minnesota suffered a sixth straight one-goal defeat to the Ducks on home ice and is now 1-8-1 in its past 10 against Anaheim.
The Wild had plenty of chances to win. It outshot Anaheim 33-24 and out-attempted the Ducks 57-41, including 15 shots that missed the net and nine that were blocked. And that doesn't include the so many chances that either slid off sticks or were swung and missed.
The turning point of the game came 2:14 after Zach Parise's power-play goal tied the score at 1-1 in the second period. On a 4-on-4, Matt Dumba, who has been so good lately, backhanded a pass into the slot rather than chipping it up the boards or doing something safer with it. Ryan Kesler, who had two assists tonight, deflected it to Simon Despres, and the defenseman wristed it on net for a Jakob Silfverberg deflection and go-ahead goal, the eventual winner.