There's a process to winning hockey games, and Mike Yeo's credo through the first four games of these playoffs has been to remind his Wild that you can't win a hockey game in the first five or 10 minutes.
True, but Wednesday night the Wild showed you can certainly lose one.
The Wild came out flat, didn't contest shots, was soft along the walls, was terrible in the neutral zone and got unusually poor goaltending as the St. Louis Blues rebounded from a Game 3 loss by trouncing the Wild 6-1 in Minnesota's barn.
One game after becoming the first NHL team to shut out an opponent this postseason, the Wild allowed the most goals it ever has in 52 all-time playoff games as the Blues evened the best-of-seven series at two wins apiece with Game 5 in St. Louis on Friday night.
"We were just brutal," Zach Parise said. "We went from feeling awesome about ourselves, feeling like we can't be beat after last game, and then you get a little dose of reality, a little slap in the face."
Devan Dubnyk, so good for the Wild since arriving Jan. 14 from Arizona, gave up a season-high six goals on 17 shots before coach Mike Yeo finally gave him the mercy hook with 3 minutes, 10 seconds left in the second period.
By the time Darcy Kuemper arrived for mop-up duty, fans were snarly. They mock-cheered when he made his first save, applauded the public address of the final minute of the second period and sent the Wild to the locker room for the second intermission with a chorus of boos.
"We weren't on it from the start, and it got worse as it went on," Yeo said.