DETROIT – "Buzzkill" in Motown.
That's the way Zach Parise described the feeling after Tuesday night's 5-4 shootout loss to the Red Wings. Despite the Wild executing a three-goal, third-period comeback against one of the NHL's best defensive teams, despite Parise delivering the type of relentless overtime-forcing goal that epitomizes him as a player, the Wild couldn't grab that crucial extra point at Joe Louis Arena.
"There was still another point available for us that we didn't get," Parise said after the Wild's final game before All-Star Weekend. "That's disappointing because we're not in a position right now to be losing them."
The Wild also is in a position where it must grasp any positive it can at this point, coach Mike Yeo inferred. And after a miserable 2-7-4 stretch, the Wild hopes grabbing five out of eight points before the break can be a launching point next week when the schedule resumes in Western Canada.
"Do I wish we got the second point? Of course I do," Yeo said. "But we also could have easily had zero points the way that game had gone. That could end up being a huge point for us, who knows? Bottom line is if we keep bringing that same kind of character and focus and more than anything else, that kind of play, we'll get rewarded."
It was one of the wackiest games of the Wild season. "We're down 4-1, but that wasn't a 4-1-type game," Yeo said.
He wasn't kidding. The Wild, which outshot Detroit 38-24, gave up 13 shots through two periods and pulled Devan Dubnyk, making his fourth start in a row since arriving from Arizona, when he gave up his fourth goal on 10 shots at the 27:25 mark. In came Darcy Kuemper for his first outing since Jan. 7.
But Yeo said, "That's not on Duby."