CHICAGO – Suddenly, the pressure has shifted squarely onto the defending champs, after consecutive home wins for the Wild evened the best-of-seven Western Conference semifinals with the Chicago Blackhawks at two victories apiece.
But the Wild doesn't want to take anything for granted when it visits the United Center on Sunday night. Coach Mike Yeo spent Saturday reminding his players to use their first-round experience against the Colorado Avalanche as a lesson.
Just like it did against the Blackhawks, the Wild, down 2-0, returned home for two big victories over the Avalanche. But the Wild took its foot off the gas during an overtime loss at Colorado in Game 5, meaning the Wild had to win Game 6 at home and Game 7 in Denver to advance.
The Wild, looking to stun the hockey world by knocking out the champs, can make life a whole lot easier on itself this time around with a series-altering road victory Sunday.
"You just have to be so careful that you don't let yourself feel too good," Yeo said Saturday. "You can't let your guard down. This is the same team we're playing that won the Stanley Cup last year. This is the same team that in Games 1 and 2 had us frustrated and had us looking like we were in a pretty deep hole, so we have make sure that we respect what we've got going on, what we're doing, but at the same time, the opponent that we're playing."
The Blackhawks, though, showed plenty of signs Friday night of a team that was supremely frustrated by the Wild. Players wore it on their faces during the game and afterward.
Offensively, the Wild sustained pressure all night in the offensive zone. Goals by Justin Fontaine and Jason Pominville came off terrific forechecks. The winning goal off Nino Niederreiter's snipe came after the Wild easily got through the neutral zone thanks to Jared Spurgeon's heads-up stretch pass and Charlie Coyle's cunning touch pass.
Defensively, the Wild executed the same tight, stingy play that led to Game 3's 4-0 victory. The Wild played as a five-man unit, supported the puck and was always right on top of a Blackhawks player.