"I think they got that goal in the third and they looked around and said, 'Holy crap, we're in the game, let's win it,'" Boudreau said. "So they picked it up, they were playing for their young goalie, and we stood around and did nothing."
To have it happen once on home ice is frustrating, but players after the game were downright angry it had -- for the second time in six days -- made life far more difficult than it needed to be.
"We keep playing down to the level of competition that comes into this building. It's getting to be embarrassing to set yourself up really good for the third and they have no momentum and yet we just seem like it's joke and let teams come back in. That's on us," said Wild forward Marcus Foligno. "That's a mental thing here. It's not that we're a bad hockey team. We're a good hockey team. We've got to play great though."
Minnesota now begins a stretch of games against some of the NHL's best teams, including three of four versus teams at or near the top of their divisions. Just one of its next five games will be played on home ice (Saturday against Toronto), with another road swing through Western Canada looming next week.
Minnesota will practice at TRIA Rink at Treasure Island Center on Wednesday before a mid-day flight to Columbus and a matchup with the Blue Jackets on Thursday.
Before then, the Wild hopes to find a cure for what ails it in defending third-period leads.
"We'll have to get back to practice tomorrow and try to figure out a way to be better in the third periods. Hopefully we can bring it next game," said Wild forward Eric Fehr. "We'll have to look at the tape a little bit and see what we did and what they did to get their scoring chances. That's a game we have to have at home, no doubt."
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Postgame Hat Trick: Coyotes 4, Wild 3