Mikael Granlund isn't a one-trick pony. The Wild playmaking center doesn't just score magnificent, overtime-winning goals.
That's why Wild coach Mike Yeo threw Game 3's hero onto the ice with a minute left Thursday night with the Wild frantically trying to kill off a 6-on-4 Colorado Avalanche power play.
Granlund, who already had assisted on a goal, drawn three penalties and won 67 percent of his faceoffs in Game 4, capped everything by throwing his body into three Erik Johnson bullets. The last of Granlund's gutsy blocked shots came with four seconds left and helped the Wild pull off a 2-1 victory to send the Western Conference quarterfinals back to Denver knotted at two games apiece.
"You try to do all you can for the win," said Granlund, who blocked one of the three shots without his stick. "Every guy in this locker room would do that. It's all about desperation."
In dominant fashion, the Wild responded to the Avalanche winning Games 1 and 2 at home by pulling off a home sweep of its own.
"It's kind of like tennis to hold your serve here," said center Erik Haula, a key reason the Wild went 4-for-4 on the penalty kill and held young star Nathan MacKinnon to no shots. "We were able to do that, and now hopefully we get a chance to break theirs."
With the series suddenly a best-of-three with Game 5 and potentially Game 7 in Denver, Zach Parise said, "One way or another, if we want to win this series, we've got to win a road game."
For the second consecutive game at an electric Xcel Energy Center, the Wild tilted the ice for nearly 60 minutes Semyon Varlamov's way. For the second consecutive game, Varlamov — and Varlamov alone — prevented the Avalanche from being routed.