The ups and downs of a playoff series can be dizzying, and that's been especially proven during the Wild's first-round matchup against the Colorado Avalanche.
Home wins, road losses, late tying goals, overtime defeats, dubious officiating.
Not only did all that take place in Games 1 through 5 of the Western Conference quarterfinals, all that took place in Game 5 alone.
The Wild suffered a crushing defeat Saturday night in Denver. But if the Wild doesn't refocus and move past the disappointment, its season will abruptly end Monday during, as goalie Darcy Kuemper called it, "win or go home" Game 6.
"There aren't a lot of teams that just cruise through and every game there's not another challenge that you have to face," Wild coach Mike Yeo said before coaching one of the biggest games of his career. "That's part of the growing opportunity for our group. This is how winners are made in these moments. When you're tested, how do you respond? When things have gone well, how do you come back?
"We're trying to become a machine here where shift after shift, game after game we go out and play the same way regardless of who we're playing. And that's the challenge of this time of year and that's where we're trying to grow."
This is why Yeo gathered his team at Xcel Energy Center on Sunday. Yeo knew how much the Wild put into Saturday's 4-3 overtime loss. He also knew that frustration was high because of a couple of questionable calls, non-calls and a missed Paul Stastny offside that led to Colorado's tying goal.
Sunday, Wild players took their coach's cue and didn't use the offside as an excuse.