Marc-Andre Fleury's championship pedigree is why the Wild started the future Hall of Famer over Cam Talbot for the first five games of the team's playoff series vs. St. Louis.
"All things equal, Marc-Andre Fleury had three Stanley Cups," coach Dean Evason said Tuesday during a season-ending news conference at Xcel Energy Center. "That tipped the scale."
The coaching staff and management made the choice, said Evason, who also explained what he meant when he called picking between the two goaltenders an "easy" decision.
"It was an easy decision because either way, we were very confident, extremely confident, whichever way that we were going to go," Evason said. "Both goaltenders obviously played so well. We had a very, very difficult decision, but we felt it was easy because it was going to be a good one and we still feel it was a good one."
After Fleury was in net for Games 1-5 while the Wild fell behind 3-2 in the best of seven, Talbot took over in Game 6 for his first action in two weeks and the Wild stumbled 5-1 to get eliminated.
Since then, Evason and his staff have dissected what happened and they noticed the team's inability to respond to adversity in two situations: the third period in Game 5 when the Wild went from being tied to giving up three goals for a 5-2 loss and the second period in Game 6 when a one-goal deficit swelled to four en route to a 5-1 debacle.
"It was uncharacteristic," Evason said. "The players acknowledged it [Monday] with the one-on-one meetings. We acknowledged it as a coaching staff, and we have to get better. Simple as that."
Special attention
Evason said the Wild will "switch some stuff up" when it comes to special teams.