Mike Yeo warned "you can lose it as quickly as you can gain it."
The Wild coach sounded the alarm bells all week. He knew it would be a challenge to rediscover momentum that would naturally cease during an oddly-timed four-day break after huge back-to-back, back-to-back victories.
The Wild showed no quit Thursday night against the New York Rangers. But it was doomed by periodic spurts of sloppiness and lost 3-2 to the Eastern Conference's top and maybe deepest team, which clinched the Metropolitan Division and won its league-high and franchise-record 26th road game.
"They're a good team," Zach Parise said of a Rangers squad that is balanced with speed, size, a tremendous blue line and a future Hall of Fame goaltender. "Let's give them a little credit. It's not just that we had a slow start."
The Wild wasn't sharp in the first period though, especially uncharacteristically in the defensive zone, and fell two goals behind. The Wild wasn't disciplined in the second period, being forced to kill five minors, albeit successfully, in the last 11 minutes of the period. And in the third period, after working so exhaustively to rally back and tie the score at 2-2 on Thomas Vanek's 21st goal and eighth in the past 12 games, the Wild surrendered the eventual winning goal to J.T. Miller one shift and 55 seconds later.
Shifts right after goals for and against are always crucial.
"That hasn't happened to us at all really," goalie Devan Dubnyk said of the bad shift after Vanek's goal.
In a playoff-type atmosphere, the Wild felt it slowly took over the game after the first period, especially 5-on-5. The penalty kill gave the Wild an incredible chance in the second to win, but in the end, Yeo was worried it would be hard for the Wild, which had won five in a row, to recreate the desperation level it had before the hiatus. It proved true.