A critical stretch for the Wild also will be a crucial time for General Manager Chuck Fletcher to evaluate the team.
With long-term injuries to left wingers Jason Zucker, Matt Cooke and Ryan Carter testing the Wild's depth, coach Mike Yeo will have to juggle his lineup to put the right pieces in place.
And, Fletcher said, players such as Nino Niederreiter, Charlie Coyle, Erik Haula and Justin Fontaine will have to "step up" and assume more important roles.
An 8-1-2 streak put the Wild back into playoff contention, but if Fletcher discovers the team doesn't have all the necessary components, he might look to the outside by the March 2 trade deadline.
The Wild revealed Tuesday that Zucker will have season-ending surgery Thursday to repair a broken collarbone and that Carter will join Cooke on the shelf until at least mid-March. About an hour after that announcement, Fletcher tried to answer whether the onslaught of injuries will force him into making a trade.
"I don't know how many proven goal scorers are on the market right now," Fletcher said. "You're always looking. I'm always on the phone talking to other managers, and I have a pretty good sense of what's available in the marketplace. If there's a deal that can help us, we'll always look to make that deal.
"By the same token, every time you have an injury, you can't just rush to the market and fill it via trade."
The Winnipeg Jets, who beat the Wild 2-1 in overtime Tuesday night to move seven points ahead of Minnesota in the playoff race, are in a rush. Winnipeg swung a blockbuster trade Wednesday, getting giant defenseman Tyler Myers and skilled winger Drew Stafford in a deal that sent injured rising star Evander Kane to Buffalo as the Sabres continue their quest to get the top choice in the NHL draft.