TAMPA, FLA. - The Tampa Bay Lightning has Steven Stamkos. The Wild does not.
That was corroborated in a painful way Saturday night when the Wild held the NHL's best offense to two goals but couldn't stop the NHL's most lethal sniper from turning a game around with a second-period power-play goal en route to an eventual 2-1 win.
The Wild's power play, which has been rubbish all season, went 0-for- 3, fell to 6-for-62 this season and 1-for-38 on the road, including a big time fail in the final 77 seconds when the team's go-to players, yet again, failed to score on a 6-on-4.
Even Zach Parise called it "repetitive."
Coach Mike Yeo put the game in the hands of playmaker Mikael Granlund and veterans Parise (fourth in the NHL last year with 14 power-play goals), Mikko Koivu (franchise-leader 165 power-play points), Thomas Vanek (114 power-play goals), Jason Pominville (223 career goals) and Ryan Suter.
The six players registered one shot. Two pucks trickled by the post and there was an abundance of passing.
Of the six players, Yeo put out there, the only one who has even scored a power-play goal this season is Vanek. Left on the bench was leading goal scorer Nino Niederreiter, who has scored four of his nine goals on the power play, and defensemen Marco Scandella and Jared Spurgeon, who have played well lately and have shooting mentalities.
"There's a lot of guys that are there based on what they've done in the past, and every coach is going to operate like that," Yeo said. "But it comes to the point that what you've done also involves this season, too.