Mike Yeo had a choice to make on Feb. 12.
The Wild had just played its third game in four nights in its third different time zone -- and second in 24 hours -- at Vancouver. On Feb. 14, the Wild had a home game against Colorado.
What to do?
1) Fly home immediately after the Canucks game -- which would have included a long bus ride to the airport, having to clear customs and departing after midnight Pacific time -- and land at 5:30 in the morning Central time. 2) Get a decent night's rest in a Vancouver hotel before a morning flight home for essentially a wasted day of travel on Feb. 13 by landing in midafternoon.
Either way, there was no way the Wild coach could have called a practice for his team.
Yeo took Option 2.
Neither choice was going to be a good recipe for good legs on Feb. 14 against the Avalanche, so as disappointed as Yeo was with the 4-3 shootout loss to Colorado, maybe getting a point should be considered a coup.
This is why the Wild needs realignment. Being in the Northwest Division has been a competitive disadvantage to the Wild for far too long.