A devastating loss in Game 1. A joyful victory in Game 3.
The Wild has experienced the highs and lows of playoff hockey early in its series with the Colorado Avalanche, so coach Mike Yeo did his best before Wednesday's practice to even emotions before Thursday's crucial meeting.
"Listen up," the Wild coach said as players huddled around him. "Game 3 is over. Let's have a good, structured practice."
With a victory the Wild can even the best-of-seven series and turn it into a best-of-three. A loss, and the Avalanche can close things out at home Saturday night.
The Wild dominated virtually every facet of Monday's game and won it on Mikael Granlund's overtime goal and Darcy Kuemper's shutout. The Wild is well aware how desperate the Avalanche will be Thursday to respond.
"It's not like we're ahead in the series here," Yeo said. "We're down, and I think we recognize that they're going to come in with a real strong effort. I think that they recognize the importance of the next game. … And I think we should, too.
"We would love the opportunity to go back to Colorado with some momentum, we'd love the opportunity to go back to Colorado and hopefully they're feeling a bit of pressure."
In last year's playoffs, the Wild, down 2-0 in its series against the Chicago Blackhawks, also dominated Game 3 and also needed an overtime goal by Jason Zucker to win it. But in Game 4, the Wild erased all the good vibes by going 0-for-6 on power plays and losing 3-0. The team returned to Chicago and was abruptly blown out in Game 5 and eliminated.