The Wild stands on the brink of history. Not the most impressive history, but it's the only kind this franchise has.
If the Wild wins Sunday, Yeo's Bros. will have produced the second-most impressive postseason in the brief history of jerseys that look like Christmas trees and mascots of undistinguishable lineage.
Everyone has to start somewhere. The Montreal Canadiens had to win their first title before they could win a 24th, and who cares if it was over the Portland Rosebuds in 1916.
In 2003, the most memorable aspect of the Wild franchise might have been Jacques Lemaire's accent and malapropisms. Somehow, current Wild coaches Andrew Brunette and Darby Hendrickson and a baby-faced Marian Gaborik won two playoff series before being stopped by the Gumby-like gymnastics of Jean-Sebastien Giguere in the Western Conference finals. Forensic anthropologists still are trying to figure out how the Wild made it that far.
Other than during that run, the Wild hadn't won another postseason series until last year, when Nino Niederreiter's laser in overtime beat the Colorado Avalanche in Game 7.
If the Wild beats St. Louis Sunday, it will advance to the second round of the playoffs for the third time in franchise history. For the first time, it would advance in consecutive years. And this series victory would trump last year's.
Last year, the Wild faced a Colorado team featuring a tremendous young goal-scorer in Nathan MacKinnon and a hot goalie in Semyon Varlamov. Otherwise, we now know that the Avalanche was a fatally flawed team. It's surprising, knowing what we know now, that the Wild didn't beat the Avalanche more easily.
Colorado plays a flawed defensive style, is highly dependent on its first line, and faltered this season, finishing last in the Central Division.