ANAHEIM, CALIF. – Thirty-two games into the season, we know the Wild is a hard opponent to face on home ice. It's been an opposite tale when the Wild leaves the comfy confines of Xcel Energy Center, however.
"We haven't been that good on the road," said defenseman Ryan Suter, who like free-agent sidekick Zach Parise is always good for an honest assessment. "We've been pretty solid at home. We have to find a way to get better on the road because good teams win on the road."
The Wild will have ample opportunity now. Seven of the Wild's next eight games come on the road, where the Wild averages 1.85 goals per game (third-lowest in the NHL) and give up one goal per game more than it does at home (1.77 vs. 2.78).
The Wild better buckle up this three-game road trip because it faces quite the test: back-to-back games at Anaheim and San Jose before concluding in Denver.
The Ducks are the only NHL team without a regulation home loss (11-0-2) and the Sharks have lost once in regulation at home and are 7-1 in their past eight home games against Minnesota. Both teams are north of the Wild in the standings. The Avs were one point behind the Wild before playing Phoenix on Tuesday, but they had played four fewer games.
The Wild, which ranked sixth in the West and ninth in the NHL before Tuesday's NHL action, is 13-3-2 at home. It is only 5-6-3 on the road — the only team in the NHL's top 13 with a below-.500 road record.
"Personally, I think we're built for the road," left wing Matt Cooke said. "We don't want to go out and make everything look pretty. We're a team that's going to go out and play responsible and take care of our own end and capitalize on our opportunities. That should suit us well on the road."
The Wild's focus Wednesday will be on somehow conquering the Honda Center, home of the Ducks, who possess the NHL's most lethal first line. The Dustin Penner-Ryan Getzlaf-Corey Perry line has combined for 45 goals, more than any other NHL line.