One day after video of Mike Yeo's practice blowup ended up on "SportsCenter," Deadspin and other media platforms, the Wild followed the lackadaisical, sloppy, depressed practice with a lively, fast, pressure-filled effort against the Chicago Blackhawks.
And, it still wasn't good enough.
Corey Crawford gave the Blackhawks the type of goaltending performance the Wild has rarely gotten this season. In a one-sided game from a scoring chance standpoint, the Wild constantly was stymied by Chicago's No. 1 netminder during a 4-2 loss Thursday at Xcel Energy Center.
The Wild outshot Chicago 44-20, but Crawford made 42 saves — 35 in the final 40 minutes when the Wild outshot the Blackhawks 37-10. On the other end? When Bryan Bickell gave the Blackhawks their second two-goal lead of the game with the eventual winner early in the third, Niklas Backstrom had stopped 13 of 16 shots.
That's par for the course this season. The Wild has allowed a league-low 26.8 shots per game, yet only Edmonton has a worse save percentage than the Wild's .893.
"It was a goalie win," Blackhawks coach Joel Quenneville said of Crawford. "They were the better team tonight for sure, and we dodged a bullet."
With teammate Zach Parise home with family after the death of his father, J.P., the Wild tried to soldier on without its engine. It played desperate, it played hard, it deserved better.
Yet, the Wild fell for the ninth time in 11 games (2-5-4).