In Kamloops, British Columbia, during his junior career, his nickname was "Giraffe," not only because he stands 6-5, "but because I have a long torso," Devan Dubnyk said, laughing, after backstopping the Wild to its first two-game winning streak in two months Saturday night, a 3-1 triumph over the Arizona Coyotes, the team for which he played three days earlier.
Dubnyk loves giraffes so much, Swedish artist David Gunnarsson comes up with unique giraffe designs for all of his masks.
Before Saturday's Hockey Day Minnesota finale, Dubnyk walked into the Wild locker room at Xcel Energy Center and found that his old Coyotes mask — the one he wore in Buffalo two days before during the Wild's biggest blowout win in history (7-zip) — had a vinyl Wild logo wrap over the paint job. Still left on the back, though, was a picture of his son, Nathaniel Cruise Dubnyk, with the birth date "8-12-13" and the word "Mom."
"It's pretty cool," Dubnyk said of the speedy work done by DePaul Lettering's Paul Deutsch, the same guy who was once the Wild's emergency goalie in a pinch at age 51. "I've never seen that before on a mask. The plain white one goalies wear after getting traded makes you look like an outcast.
"This made me feel like home."
If Dubnyk keeps playing like he has in two games in a Wild sweater, Minnesota might stay his home. It's early, but the goalie who coincidentally and "weirdly" stayed at the same hotel Friday night as his old Coyotes teammates, who dined with them and weirdly walked to the game with them, beat his buddies with 25 saves.
He stayed poised, he said, by drawing off an early-season experience of playing his old Oilers for the first time.
"I just try to make the picture small and not worry too much about the situation and just concentrate on the game," he said.