"You do take the preseason to prepare and get into that game shape," said Wild forward Zach Parise. "There's still just that lack of intensity and sometimes you fall guilty of it, just mentally, everyone wants to get to the regular season."
"Preseason is important, but now it's just way easier to get mentally engaged into the games [once the regular season begins]."
That lack of engagement is why so often, teams filled with young players likely headed to the American Hockey League or back to their junior teams go into buildings and compete with established NHL teams they'd normally have no business competing with.
Those young players are battling to stay another day or two in camp, or fighting to make a roster in general.
On the contrary, someone like Parise or goaltender Devan Dubnyk or any of the other veterans on the Wild's roster knows they will be in the NHL. Their only objective is to build towards Oct. 3 and be ready for game one in Nashville.
"The young guys ... they're hard to play against that are battling for a spot," Parise said. "They play hard and they're in your face. It's a little helter skelter there on the ice, where when you get more of an NHL lineup on the ice, the game is more controlled. It's almost a little easier."
While hockey is a team game, the exhibition season for established NHLers is almost more of an individual time. Guys are trying to get in game shape, or eliminating summer hockey habits from their game.
Once the regular season starts, the hope is that the bad has been worked out and they can meld that into a quality team concept.
That's especially true for goaltenders, who are just trying to see pucks again at real game speed. Fighting through screens and playing the puck are things goalies often don't see during summer training, so getting reps in the exhibition season are crucial.
"When you're going through training camp, especially when you get older, you use the time to get prepared for right now," Dubnyk said. "Every time you go out, of course you want to win the preseason games. It's still important to get a good feeling."
"But you're concentrating on individual stuff, for myself, seeing different plays, power play and all that stuff, always about getting your game in order and now you get to the end of it, and you forget about that and you do everything you can to win a hockey game."
For a coach, knowing there is another level to a player's game is simply assumed.
When asked about Eric Staal, Wild coach Bruce Boudreau responded with an answer that seemingly could have been about nearly any one of the veterans on his club.
"It's really hard, when you talk about veterans in training camp and veterans at the start of the season, there's a button that they push because they've been through so many of those training camps," Boudreau said. "And the goal is not to get hurt. That is their goal. They want to be ready and I know Eric Staal will be ready on Thursday."