Before Sunday night's Northwest Division clash between the Wild and Vancouver Canucks, coach Mike Yeo reminded, "They're not handing out first prize in our division tonight."
Too bad. The Wild played with the type of fire that made it seem a banner-raising was up for grabs. Instead, the Wild merely settled for taking over first place in the division with a 4-2 victory over its detested rival.
"These guys, it seems like they have had a stranglehold on this division for a long time," Zach Parise, who scored two goals and an assist, said of the Canucks. "I think we want to show that we can be up there, too."
The Wild hit the season's halfway mark with a 13-9-2 record and impressive road/home wins on consecutive nights. Jared Spurgeon scored a goal and assist, Jason Zucker scored a goal, Ryan Suter assisted on two and Niklas Backstrom made 25 saves to get the personal back-to-back sweep.
The Wild, 9-2-1 at home, was bestowed with several rousing ovations from its appreciative fans. The Wild's work ethic, especially when one considers it got back from its win at Nashville in the wee hours of Sunday morning, was visible. Sweat poured off players during an action-packed, physical, intense affair.
"Our guys were ready for this one," said Yeo, who was clearly confident before the game. "We feel we're a team that is on the up."
Sixty-two seconds into the third, things got hairy when the Wild's once-3-0 lead became 3-2 after Henrik Sedin lucked into the type of fluky goal that Backstrom has been victimized on a lot lately.
But Parise responded 5:27 later following a spectacular shift by rookie Charlie Coyle, who single-handedly allowed the Wild to execute a line change.