With the Wild 3.4 seconds away from being 20 minutes away from the second round of the playoffs and another postseason trip to Chicago, the Blues' T.J. Oshie turned the Wild's comfortable two-goal lead into a stressful one-goal lead.
Yet, there was no panic, no screaming at each other to "wake up" inside the Wild locker room during the second intermission.
"That's a great part of this group," goalie Devan Dubnyk said. "Nobody was upset in between periods. There was nothing really said after the period, and nothing needed to be said. We knew we had to go out and do a job."
It's not a shock, but of all players it was Zach Parise who gave the Wild its two-goal cushion back 61 seconds into the third period with his second goal of the game. It was a heck of a response to calm the nerves. From there, the Wild skated to a 4-1 victory on Sunday at Xcel Energy Center to avoid a win-or-season-over Game 7 in St. Louis and advance to the conference semifinals against the familiar postseason foe Blackhawks.
In front of 19,318 fans — many of whom abided by coach Mike Yeo's order to boost the Bloody Mary sales on West 7th Street before the game — the Wild eliminated the Central Division champion for a second consecutive season (last year it was the Avalanche) and it won a playoff series at home for the first time in history. Previously, the Wild won three Game 7s on the road.
"It meant a lot to us to try to win this game in front of our fans," Yeo said. "They deserved that."
The Blues suffered their third consecutive first-round exit. With the Wild on its heels in the second period, Justin Fontaine scored the eventual winning goal with a second-period dagger that ended goalie Jake Allen's outing. Nino Niederreiter scored an empty-netter and Dubnyk was fabulous for a second consecutive game, finishing with 30 saves.
Almost surprisingly for a team that often loves to do things the hard way, the win circumvented what would have been two very long off days in the Twin Cities waiting for another road Game 7. The Wild now gets four or five days of rest before the second round begins in Chicago later this week. The NHL hasn't announced the schedule.