CHICAGO – Those July 4 fireworks that shook the Twin Cities seem an eternity ago.
Expectations were gigantic on that balmy summer day when the Wild persuaded Zach Parise and Ryan Suter to spurn other suitors and sign with Minnesota.
That was the boom. On Thursday night at the United Center, the Wild's season ended with a poof.
The Wild's first postseason in five years was over in five games after the Chicago Blackhawks, the best team in hockey during the regular season, advanced to the Western Conference semifinals with a 5-1 victory.
"Just the lack of finish killed us," said Parise, who scored once in five games and was minus-7. "That's the bottom line. You have to look at yourself first. You look back at some of the opportunities throughout the series that I had and didn't put them in. That's going to haunt you the whole summer."
After earning the final playoff spot in the West on the final night of the regular season, the Wild managed only seven goals in the series, and its power play went 0-for-17. Captain Mikko Koivu did not have a single point, and was a minus-6.
Wild coach Mike Yeo could be on the hot seat after his team's late-season slump and early playoff exit. Veteran coaches Lindy Ruff and Dave Tippett are conspicuously available. Ruff, the longtime Buffalo Sabres coach who was an assistant coach in Florida when General Manager Chuck Fletcher was assistant GM, was fired during the regular season. Tippett's contract expires in Phoenix on June 30 and the Coyotes' future is uncertain.
"I don't know. I can't answer that," Yeo said when asked if he was worried about his job. "If you want to look at it objectively, statistically … properly, there's been a lot of improvement in our organization, and I feel that we're going in the right direction."