There was a point earlier this Iowa Wild season where every time Mike Reilly dipped a toe onto the ice, it felt as if he was being scored upon.
If the plus-minus category on the American Hockey League statistics page was a golf tournament, Reilly was running away from the field. Unfortunately for Reilly, it's not, and that increasing minus — one that hit minus-29 at one point and still stands at a league-worst minus-25 — started to shatter his confidence.
"I'd get out there at the end of a 5-3 game and suddenly there'd be an empty-netter and I'd be like, 'Come on,' " said Reilly, who has played 19 games for the Wild. "It definitely was frustrating and starting to eat at me. A lot of it was on me, but there were a lot of tough breaks, too, and I couldn't really control it."
In early December, the Wild called Reilly up for a week. He didn't play. The purpose was to get the 22-year-old out of the toxic situation that was Iowa, at the time the worst team in the AHL (it now has the second-fewest points, but is 15-11-2 since Dec. 26) and coming off a winless November. He worked with assistant coach Rick Wilson and watched games from the press box with assistant coach Darryl Sydor.
Reilly returned to Des Moines with a clearer head, and his game gradually improved to the point where one day he walked up to then-Iowa head coach John Torchetti, now the Wild's interim coach.
"He goes, 'Geez, I'm really starting to get this,' and I said, 'Isn't it fun?' " Torchetti said.
Coming from the bigger ice sheet at Mariucci Arena, the former Gophers defenseman had a big adjustment his first couple of months of pro hockey, Torchetti said. The 2015 Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year and Hobey Baker Award finalist, Reilly is known as an offensive dynamo.
"He had the green light to just go in college, and he was used to playing wide," Torchetti said. "We're cutting the ice in half, boxing out and there's just more tangibles where his skill and everything may have gotten him here, but now the other parts of his game needed to be refined like any other young defenseman."