1. Wild doomed by sub-par start.
Sure, the guy counting shots at Ball Arena had an itchy trigger finger. But any time you're outshot 25-6 in a period, like Minnesota was in the opening 20 on Thursday night, it's not a recipe for success.
While the 25 may have been a bit inflated, it was certainly an accurate representation of where the puck was most of the period, and that was in the Wild's defensive zone.
But save for a Nathan MacKinnon goal, that deflected off a Wild player in front of goaltender Cam Talbot, Minnesota looked like it was going to escape the first down by just a goal.
Unfortunately for the Wild, it simply couldn't slow Colorado's top line on this night.
After the trio of MacKinnon, Mikko Rantanen and Gabriel Landeskog connected on the opening goal, it was Rantanen who scored off the rush in the final minute of the first period, pushing the lead to 2-0 and providing Colorado with a boost in a period where the score could have been a lot more lopsided.
Talbot allowed five goals on the night but may have been the Wild's best player, stopping 50 shots.
2. Rask's ray of hope.
Despite a tough start to the game, all was not lost, however.
Minnesota's power play connected midway through the second period when Victor Rask went coast-to-coast with the puck, creating room for himself in the offensive zone before unleashing a nasty shot that beat Philipp Grubauer far side under the crossbar.