The Wild enters the playoffs Tuesday night as a decided underdog, a long shot to upset the uber-skilled Chicago Blackhawks. Many in the hockey world are predicting a nice, clean tuneup for the NHL's best team.
"That's beautiful," Wild owner Craig Leipold said. "Are you kidding me? There's no pressure on us. Everybody thinks it's going to be a short series. Well you know something, those guys on the ice, they like this position."
Of course, what is Leipold supposed to say? That his high-priced team put itself in the worst possible situation after floundering the final month of the regular season?
That's the Wild's reality though. The team drew this dance card by virtue of waiting until the final day of the regular season to secure a playoff berth. Rather than jockeying for better seeding, the Wild spent the past few weeks hanging on for dear life.
"We made it harder on ourselves to get here," defenseman Ryan Suter said. "We expected to get to the playoffs. Once you're in the playoffs, you can't be satisfied. There's a lot of teams that make the playoffs. It's the special teams that can go far and get a good run."
That's the mindset Wild players should embrace now. They can't undo April. Their season ultimately will be defined by what happens next.
Any postseason qualifies as an important accomplishment — especially for an organization that has experienced it only four times overall and none since 2008 — but this should not be viewed as the finish line. For this team, reaching the playoffs was merely the minimum expectation.
"I don't think you're going to find a lot of guys who are relaxing now and exhaling and just being satisfied that we're here," Zach Parise said. "We're not just happy that we made it."