In Game 3 of the West Division first-round playoff series, Joel Eriksson Ek saw his first-period goal against the Vegas Golden Knights — a goal that would have given the Wild a 3-0 lead — overturned by a successful video challenge by coach Peter DeBoer, who argued that Minnesota was offside on the play. Vegas would go on to win 5-2 at Xcel Energy Center.
Two nights later, Eriksson Ek scored again, only to have it erased by another video challenge by the Golden Knights, this one protesting that Wild forward Marcus Foligno was interfering with goalie Marc-Andre Fleury's ability to play the puck. Vegas would win Game 4 4-0 in St. Paul and take a 3-1 series lead.
On Wednesday night in Game 6, the Xcel Energy Center faithful were waiting for what they believed was payback, and they got their wish in the third period of the Wild's 3-0 victory.
With the Wild leading a tight, defensive game 1-0 on Ryan Hartman's goal at 4:21 of the third, the Golden Knights were pressing for the tying goal. Top-line center Chandler Stephenson wired a shot through Wild defenseman Matt Dumba, Vegas winger Alex Tuch and Minnesota goalie Cam Talbot to apparently tie the score at 8:55.
On-ice officials, however, conferred and ruled that Tuch was in the crease and interfered with Talbot's ability to play the puck. DeBoer challenged, but it was denied, with officials ruling: "Vegas' Alex Tuch impaired Cam Talbot's ability to play his position in the crease prior to Chandler Stephenson's goal."
The crowd of 4,500 — limited by COVID-19 restrictions — roared in approval, sensing that the Wild was on its way to forcing Game 7 on Friday night in Las Vegas.
"You're splitting hairs, and those have gone our way before," DeBoer said, explaining his reasoning for challenging the play. "We felt it was worth the challenge that point in the game. Our penalty kill has been excellent all year."
Golden Knights captain Mark Stone was on the ice for the play and agreed with his coach's decision.