DENVER – If playoff seedings matter, the Wild technically begins its first-round series against the Colorado Avalanche as an underdog.
If common sense is applied, the Wild absolutely has a good chance to win the series and advance to the next round.
Why? Because success in the NHL playoffs often is determined by matchups, a team's health, its frame of mind and a peculiar thing called puck luck. A team's seeding sometimes becomes irrelevant.
The Wild enters as the No. 7 seed and confident in its circumstance. The Wild earned the No. 8 seed last season and had little chance of defeating Chicago in a best-of-seven series.
That's a difference of only one seeding slot. In reality, those two situations feel a universe apart.
"We're right where we want to be," Wild captain Mikko Koivu said.
The Wild found itself in the exact opposite spot last season. The team coughed and wheezed to the finish line, finally securing a playoff berth on the final day of the regular season.
That team wasn't primed for the playoffs, and certainly not equipped to handle the mighty Blackhawks. The Wild was beat up physically, fragile mentally and limped into the postseason. Seeding mattered that time, though it's hard to imagine the Wild having success against any team in that condition.