The Wild might need another lockout so fans can hear how good the team has a chance to be again.
Sinking alarmingly fast and with tension high after offseason expectations soared, the Wild -- a team that had every reason to be desperate Thursday night -- showed a lack of fire in the early part of a 4-1 loss to the detested Vancouver Canucks.
A smattering of boos after the Wild trailed 2-0 following a listless first period turned into a piercing chorus once the Canucks' lead stretched to 4-zip after two.
"It's not fun to have a game like that on home ice," coach Mike Yeo said.
The Wild did show some life in the second period. It even generated sustained shift-and-shift pressure for a change. But the offensively challenged team, one Yeo called "mentally fragile," couldn't score despite trying its mightiest during two power plays.
That popped the Wild's balloon. The Canucks struck two more times quickly late in the second, and the Wild (4-5-1) lost for a third consecutive game.
The Wild has scored 21 goals in 10 games despite the acquisitions of Zach Parise and Ryan Suter. "We just didn't show up. Pretty simple," Parise said.
Parise said he didn't know why, and Suter said an energized start "was the whole talk before. Yeosie, everybody, we were all saying, 'It's a playoff game, we've got to come out [hard].' And we came out dead. There's no excuse for that."