I always say the most interesting team to cover is one in crisis mode, and the Wild, with 13 losses in the past 20 games and eight in the past 10, has officially hit that juncture of the season.
Last year's annual winter crisis magically turned around when the calendar turned from 2013 to 2014. This year's crisis is only deepening with the calendar turn. After beating Toronto last Friday, the Wild responded by getting humiliated in Dallas and then losing last night's game against the San Jose Sharks in overtime despite a better effort.
Coach Mike Yeo wanted the Wild to respond to the loss though with a great practice in preparation for Thursday's game against the Chicago Blackhawks, the team that has ousted the Wild in the past two postseasons.
Instead, Yeo stopped practice early on, uncharacteristically pulled the team to the far end of the rink away from the ink-stained wretches and lit into his group demanding more effort and execution.
The yuck continued. Moments after captain Mikko Koivu was bumped to the ice and had trouble getting to the feet, the Wild captain, whom I've noticed off the rink has been playing through a lower-body injury the past week, slowly got up, skated to the bench, cracked his stick against the glass, then chopped it in half as he marched down the runway angrily.
Yeo immediately had the players line the width of the ice on the penalty-box side and skated them so hard without pucks, I heard Herb Brooks in my head yelling, "Again."
Then, the fun began. Yeo gathered the team around him by the referee's crease, slammed his stick on the ice and unleashed a fury during an expletive-laced tirade that had to do with how bad the team is playing and then they have the audacity to show up and "practice like this!" He lit into them for about 60 seconds, screaming his head off.
He then took an about-face, had a couple words with assistant coach Andrew Brunette, skated toward the visiting bench, slammed his own stick hard against the glass, skated toward the Wild bench and stormed off the ice. At that point, assistant GM Brent Flahr and director of hockey administration, who were watching from the stands, left, too. GM Chuck Fletcher was not at practice, nor was owner Craig Leipold, who planned to attend but didn't.