COLUMBUS, OHIO – There are several mysteries in this world, but one that must be solved is how the Wild can so routinely struggle at Nationwide Arena — the home of its expansion-cousin Columbus Blue Jackets, who have made the playoffs once in 12 years.
Yet again on this snowy Friday night, the Wild walked into the mostly empty arena and succeeded only in making everybody forget the elation created by its comeback victory over the Chicago Blackhawks 24 hours earlier.
One night after coach Mike Yeo said the Wild played "probably 57 of the best minutes we've played all year," the Wild followed up by playing what Yeo called "the worst game we played this year" during a 4-0 trouncing.
"This was one for the garbage," Yeo said.
In virtually every category — goaltending, special teams, forechecks, neutral-zone play, breakouts, battling, simple passing — the Wild was dismal.
"OK in the first and straight downhill from there," defenseman Keith Ballard said. "They won races to the pucks; they didn't turn pucks over, we did; they won one-on-one battles. You could see in the second, we couldn't get the puck out of our end.
"We played D-zone, got it over the red, chipped it in, changed and they came right back at us and started the whole thing over again."
One night after the Blackhawks registered a season-low 19 shots, the Blue Jackets, who couldn't muster 30 shots in the prior 10 games, fired a season-high 41 thanks to countless odd-man rushes and shots off lengthy cycles. It was the most shots the Wild has allowed this season.