With both teams winning on the road so far in their best-of-seven series, home-ice advantage hasn't been a deciding factor between the Wild and Blues, who have each won two games.
But if that changes, the Wild is in position to be the beneficiary since Game 5 on Tuesday is at Xcel Energy Center and same with Game 7 on Saturday if necessary.
"We're confident in that," defenseman Matt Dumba said. "But we know we have to work it into existence. We're always happy to go home and be in front of our fans. Hopefully build some good momentum here in Game 5 and close that game out."
After dropping the Round 1 opener 4-0 in St. Paul, the Wild bounced back 6-2 in Game 2 with a new lineup that saw Alex Goligoski step in on defense for Dmitry Kulikov.
Coach Dean Evason didn't reveal on Monday whether the Wild will make another adjustment after its latest setback, a 5-2 letdown in Game 4, but he said the team has debated it.
"That's been a key for us all year is our depth," Evason said. "If we were to make a decision to take somebody out and put somebody in, it wasn't necessarily if they played bad but to get some fresh legs in.
"There's that balance, right? Do you disrupt? Are you pushing the panic button making a change? Are you doing it for the right reasons? We go through all of that. Hopefully [Tuesday] night we make the right decision."
Smooth start
St. Louis goalie Jordan Binnington learned Saturday he would start Sunday in Game 4 and despite a lengthy layoff — he hadn't played since April 26 vs. Colorado — Binnington made a smooth arrival into the series with a 28-save performance.