"They were very good. Opportunistic. Ennis was skating. They were making plays," Boudreau said. "They could've had a couple more goals I thought. That's what we need from that line."
All three players on the line finished a plus-2.
Ennis earned 15 minutes, 18 seconds of ice time, his third-highest total of the season and most since he skated in 15:44 against Philadelphia on Nov. 14.
The points haven't come in bunches for the winger yet, but he said he feels his game is starting to round into shape. His confidence is certainly on the rise.
"I'm getting a little more opportunity, a little more ice time and I'm playing with some really good players," Ennis said. "It was fun, I think we played well. We knew we had to keep it simple and when we kept it simple, we generated a lot of chances."
"When [Ennis] plays like that, it's fun to watch, fun to play with. He's a special player," Coyle said. "When he's going like that, hanging onto the puck and patient, it's fun to watch, like I said, fun to play with. We want to keep that going."
3. Both teams got power-play goals during a three minute stretch of the second period.
After Minnesota's Daniel Winnik was whistled for a slashing penalty, it took Dallas just 10 seconds to capitalize. Tyler Seguin, who scored the first goal of the game 12:37 into the contest, used the power of geometry to bank the puck off the end wall to Janmark near the right post for a chipshot into the goal.
Not surprisingly, the Wild were given a power-play chance of its own a couple of minutes later, and in a delicious bit of irony, Minnesota capitalized -- you guessed it -- just 10 seconds in.
This time is was Granlund, scoring off a Plinko'd puck that initially came off the stick of Mikko Koivu and was re-directed at Bishop by Jason Zucker, the rebound of which went right into Granlund's wheelhouse at the bottom of the left circle.