When Jared Spurgeon scored the tying goal in the second period of Saturday's shootout loss to the St. Louis Blues, it's amazing the Wild didn't fish the puck out of the net like it was some sort of milestone.
First off, it was a power-play goal, something that doesn't occur every day (or every week) from the Wild. But even more uncommon? It was a goal from a Wild defenseman.
Most figured the Wild's blue line wouldn't generate as much offense after Brent Burns was traded to San Jose last June, but it's hard to imagine anybody figured the Wild would be this anemic offensively from the back end.
The Wild has the lowest-scoring blue-line corps in the NHL.
Consider this: Spurgeon's goal was his first since Nov. 13 and was the Wild's first from a defenseman since Marco Scandella scored Dec. 8. One would think even an accident would happen every now and then and a shot from a Wild defenseman would deflect in off something.
Scandella's now in Houston, meaning on the Wild's current roster, it has only gotten four goals from Wild defensemen (Spurgeon three, Greg Zanon one and an astonishing zero from offensive defenseman Marek Zidlicky).
"Yeah, it is a problem," said assistant coach Darryl Sydor, a former longtime NHL defenseman. "You look at the elite teams, they get production from their back end and we need that. It's important. It's one thing we're really trying to work on through practice.
"Some of the drills [coach Mike Yeo] does is activating the D-men and not just trying to defend. The hardest thing for anybody to defend is when you have activating D-men."