Mike Yeo talks about the "process" all the time.
It is one of his coach-isms -- a word players also repeat like it's the Wild's mantra. Eight games into Yeo's tenure, the coach has made it abundantly clear it is impossible to simply snap his fingers and catapult the Wild to where he eventually wants it to be.
There is a "process" to getting there, steps that must be taken, and the big thing that can help accelerate the "process" is playing close, pressure-packed games when things are always on the line.
Well, as Dany Heatley says, "It seems like every game's been a one-goal game."
The 3-2-3 Wild has played six of them, going 2-1-3 in such situations. It has played in five overtime/shootout games in the past six (2-3).
"This is perfect. This is what you need," Yeo said after Saturday's 3-2 overtime loss to the Canucks. "You need games where the pressure's on the line and you have to be able to continue to focus and go out and execute and keep your composure.
"There are going to be moments in every game, it doesn't matter who you are, every team, you're going to have times where things are less than perfect out there. But how do you get back to your game? How do you respond from that? Do you let it get you so rattled that you get put on your heels, or does the next line go out and do things the right way?"
That's why in the third period Saturday, Yeo kept throwing the third line of rookie Brett Bulmer, veteran Kyle Brodziak and rookie Nick Johnson over the boards. The trio played more late 5-on-5 shifts than the second line of Pierre-Marc Bouchard, Matt Cullen and Cal Clutterbuck.