It's unlikely the Wild could rig the scoreboard to read a deficit at puck drop, but that's the exact scenario that seems to elicit its best hockey.
After falling into an early hole spurred on by a pair of unlucky bounces off defenseman Gustav Olofsson, the Wild didn't seriously start to cash in on the pressure it had been applying until the third period. That helped the team bank a point but not two, as the Devils outlasted the Wild 4-3 in overtime Monday at Xcel Energy Center.
"I feel like we always need to come from behind and all of a sudden we start getting angry, start getting emotions," winger Nino Niederreiter said. "Obviously, the crowd starts getting into it and all of a sudden we get fired up. I think that's something we've got to find in our room to get the emotions going and just be positive with one another, and everyone has to pull the same string."
Although the scoreboard told a different story, the Wild were seemingly in control through the first half of the game. The Devils struggled to maintain possession in the offensive zone, and much of the play was concentrated in New Jersey's end.
But not until the Wild found itself down 3-1 in the third period did it finally start to play with the gusto that merits results.
"I feel every time we get our forecheck really going, we're throwing pucks to the net, we get the crowd into that game and it gives us some energy," winger Mikael Granlund said. "I feel like we've been able to do that in third periods, and you can hear it from the building. It's pretty awesome out there. So we need to try to do that right from the beginning."
Consistency is key.
Not only can that help the team's competitiveness from period to period, but it's also a necessary ingredient to string together wins.