"We didn't think the start we had the energy, but we gathered it and we caught ourselves," said Wild coach Dean Evason. "We got better and better as the game went on."
After a night in L.A. where the Wild was forced to kill three first-period penalties, Evason implored his team to keep the game 5-on-5, which has been Minnesota's bread and butter all season long.
Unfortunately the game didn't play out that way.
Vegas converted two of its four power-play chances, including Mark Stone's game-winning goal, while Minnesota could score on just one of its six power-play chances, including a lengthy 5-on-3 advantage in the second period that was immediately followed up by another two-minute 5-on-4.
"We wanted to score there," said Wild forward Mats Zuccarello. "That could have changed the game there for sure. We take it on us, [the guys who] are out there. We don't score there and it's a big [momentum switch]."
Minnesota couldn't convert, and it ended up costing it in the end.
Overall, the Wild's power play has been better of late and has now converted at least one opportunity in five consecutive games. It just needed to be a little better on Sunday.
"We scored one goal, but 5-on-3, we have to convert there," Evason said. "They've got a special power play. And we believe that was the difference in the hockey game."
2. This time it counts
Saturday night in Los Angeles, Kirill Kaprizov whipped a turnaround snap shot from the left point through a bunch of traffic, apparently scoring past Jonathan Quick, only to find out the puck crossed the goal line a split second or two too late.
The Wild did it again on Sunday, only this time it counted.