Zach Parise took the Xcel Energy Center ice for a playoff game Saturday night, returning from inaction to join his hometown team in the twilight of his career. It would have been heartwarming if not for facts.
Fact: Parise was a minus-2 as the Wild lost 4-0 to Vegas, which leads the first-round playoff series, three games to one.
Fact: Parise, making a prorated $13 million a year with four years remaining on his contract, and who fared well on the power play this year, was used on the fourth line and did not receive time on the power play.
Fact: Parise was benched for three of the final four regular-season games and the first three games of this series despite being healthy and his team needing a player with his particular set of skills.
That Parise only belatedly returned to the ice is promising yet ominous. He played because Marcus Johansson broke his left arm in Game 3, on Thursday night. That only an injury to a struggling player would cause the Wild braintrust to bring Parise back is a commentary on his play, and the Wild's altered philosophy.
Former general manager Chuck Fletcher and owner Craig Leipold had to play salesman to get Parise and Suter to sign with the Wild. Parise and Suter received 13-year, $98-million contracts that were bound to become burdens at some point.
Fletcher and Leipold knew they had handed the keys to the franchise to Parise and Suter. Fletcher and coach Mike Yeo knew who held the true power in the organization, and it wasn't them.
When Bruce Boudreau replaced Yeo, after an interim stretch by John Torchetti, Boudreau let his displeasure with Parise be known with snide comments and press-conference eyerolls. But Boudreau did not push back against Parise and Suter in terms of playing time.