Wild coach Bruce Boudreau started to see red flags in the second period.
His team began to turn the puck over, again and again.
"That gave them a little life going into the third," Boudreau said.
Mix that momentum with the Kings' track record – they had the league's best goal differential in the third entering the game at plus-23 – and it created a disastrous combination for the Wild, as the Kings scored four straight to pull away for a 5-2 comeback win Tuesday at Staples Center.
"When we get the lead, I don't know if we just sit back or we just kind of focus solely defensively," center Charlie Coyle said. "I don't know. We have to find a way to keep pushing and playing our game, not let them come at us and sit back and wait for something to happen and just survive. We have to keep our foot on the pedal there, and I don't think we did that."
A poor pinch by defenseman Matt Dumba started the scoring outburst for the Kings, as they capitalized on a two-on-one rush with winger Marian Gaborik finishing off a pass from captain Anze Kopitar to tie it at 2.
"It was a bad play," Boudreau said. "He makes the play, and we're talking about just shooting the puck at the net and being simple. We try to make a sauce pass, and it doesn't work. Then coming back, instead of just coming back to the position, the defenseman goes to hit a guy and it's a two-on-one and probably a two-on-one against the two worst guys on the team to leave a two-on-one to."
It was an unfortunate start to the Wild's three-game road trip through California because much of the first two periods was textbook road hockey.