GLENDALE, ARIZ. – The Wild, winners of three of its past 12 games and suddenly on fragile footing, enjoyed a day in the 80-degree Valley of the Sun on Friday.
"Coach has been great getting us away from the rink so we can recharge," defenseman Ryan Suter said after Thursday's 5-1 beating in St. Louis. "I almost say we should go practice to try to get feeling good about yourself.
"When you're so inconsistent right now, it's tough to get momentum and feel good about yourself."
The Wild had a collective bargaining agreement- mandated day off, so coach Mike Yeo scheduled the relaxing off day weeks in advance. Players lounged by the hotel pool and played pingpong in the courtyard. They were seeking to clear their minds heading into Saturday's vitally important clash against the Phoenix Coyotes, who are one point behind in the Western Conference playoff race.
"If we play like [Thursday], we're not going to be around too long," Suter said. "We better figure it out fast and come out ready to play."
The Wild, after a 9-2-2 run before the trade deadline, has taken a turn for the worse in every facet. In 12 games since March 5, the Wild has given up three goals or more nine times. Its goaltending has been unstable. Suter called special teams "terrible," as the Wild is 14.6 percent on power plays and 64.6 percent on the penalty kill.
And the Wild has averaged 2½ goals per game, although that's actually a slight improvement for the NHL's 27th-ranked offense.
So, it's not a shock the Wild is 3-5-4 in those 12 games.