Marco Scandella never did get a definitive diagnosis. The Wild defenseman believed he had the mumps — judging from his swollen face and his utter exhaustion over the past several days — but awoke Sunday feeling renewed.
After testing his stamina with a morning skate, Scandella made a surprise return to the Wild lineup after missing two games because of his illness. The real surprise came several hours later, when his blast from the center point gave his team a 4-3 overtime victory over Winnipeg at Xcel Energy Center. On an afternoon when much of the attention centered on Zach Parise's comeback, Scandella scored the most important goal of a game that nearly slipped away.
Parise, who sat out five games because of a concussion, scored twice in the first period as the Wild built a 3-0 lead. The Jets tied it with three goals in a span of 4 minutes, 52 seconds in the third period before Scandella beat goalie Michael Hutchinson only 61 seconds into overtime.
The Wild ran its home record to 7-1 by killing all eight of Winnipeg's power-play opportunities and keeping its wits during a fierce Jets rally. The return of two of its most reliable players helped immeasurably, too, in all facets of its game.
"[The illness] was really depleting," said Scandella, who scored his second game-winning goal this season. "You feel tired all day. That's how I knew I was ready to come back. I wasn't feeling as tired.
"This morning was the first time I skated in five days. I felt pretty good. I was a little bit down from beating the virus, but once you're in the game, you don't think about that."
Scandella logged 24:58 of ice time — behind only Ryan Suter and Jared Spurgeon — and scored his first career overtime goal. Parise, playing for the first time since Nov. 4, scored twice on four shots and added four hits, a blocked shot and a large dose of leadership.
He wasn't particularly happy with the Wild's inability to hold a lead he helped construct. Coach Mike Yeo chalked that up in part to the large amount of penalties, which disrupted the Wild's rhythm and flow against a strong defensive team.