In sports, the goal is always moving. The Minnesota Wild and the team's fans have been craving a playoff team, a home playoff game, for five years. Today their wishes will mingle with their fears.
The Wild will, finally, host a playoff game at the beautiful arena in downtown St. Paul. Fans will celebrate on 7th Street before the game. If their team loses on Sunday afternoon, they may mourn the season in the same establishments after the game.
The reward for signing Zach Parise and Ryan Suter, for bringing up the talented kids and heightening expectations, turned out to be what on Friday night felt like a punishment: facing the best team in hockey. The Chicago Blackhawks arrive in St. Paul as locusts at a picnic, heavy favorites one victory away from turning the remainder of the series into a formality.
If is it possible for a series to devolve within two games, this one has. The Wild surprised the Blackhawks with a feisty first period in Game 1, taking an early lead and stretching the game deep into the first overtime.
Game 2 made that seem more like a missed opportunity than an omen, as Chicago overwhelmed the Wild, winning 5-2.
Now the Wild will rely on the comforts of the Xcel Energy Center, although the players know that citing home-ice advantage is more an expression of hope than fact.
They won one of their last seven home games. In their last game at the X, they lost 6-1 to the Edmonton Oilers, a result that threatened to knock them out of the playoffs. They were booed off the ice often in the past month, and jeered whenever their power play failed.
Parise mentioned how "fun'' it was to play at the raucous United Center. Only he knows if that was a poke-check at the locals.