Thursday, March 4, 2010

2009-10 Game Sixty-Two: Wild 4, Flames 0

Now that the Olympics are a memory, the NHL was able to return to its business this week. The Minnesota Wild, with three freshly-minted bronze medal winners, had a little extra rest before they headed to Calgary, to take on a Flames team that has historically knocked the Wild around. There were definitely questions as to how the Wild would play. Would this be the same time that soundly defeated the Vancouver Canucks on Valentine's Day? Or would this be the team that struggled through so many points of this season? Only one thing was crystal clear, and was made so during the team's morning skate. This would not be a team including Eric Belanger any more.

Mere hours after trading the player who has been their best face-off man this season, the Wild dominated that stat against the Flames almost 2-to-1, and used that, along with some very well-placed shots, to derail the Flames, and climb to within four points of the final playoff spot. The Wild know that the road ahead of them is a tough one, but the team is obviously not willing to give up, and, for the first time in franchise history, the Wild have beaten the Flames four times in a row. They have a chance to make it five this weekend, but first, they'll be travelling to Edmonton.

Game pluses:
- Mikko Koivu. The Wild's captain didn't even meet the team until they arrived in Calgary, but that didn't stop him from being all over the ice. Koivu was a dominant force, and he contributed offensively (two points) and defensively (bailing out his goaltender on a couple of rebound chances).
-Owen Nolan. A player that many felt may have been set up to move at the trade deadline instead chose to stay with Minnesota, and his career has given him the respect to do that. He responded with a big game, helping create the Wild's first goal, and providing the veteran grit that the Wild will need down the road.
- Niklas Backstrom. Sure, the start of the game looked a little shaky, and the Wild had to bail out their goaltender, but then Backstrom settled down and made some huge saves on the way to his second shutout of the season.

Game minuses:
- Officiating. Maybe the officials were still on an Olympic break. Absolutely no penalties called until Greg Zanon played the puck with a broken stick? The only other penalty coming on a retaliatory crosscheck? True, the game was fairly clean, but for only two penalties to be called all game long means that the officials weren't quite watching the same contest.
- Shots. The Wild won the game 4-0 with some good offense, so why complain about the shots? Because they didn't take enough of them as the game wore on. In fact, for parts of the second period, they looked like they were Team USA skating against Team Finland. The difference was that Team USA had amassed a six-goal lead, and Team Wild was clinging to a one-goal edge.
- Shane Hnidy. With so much of the Wild defense playing so incredibly well against Calgary, any one making more than a few puck-handling miscues got notice. That one against the Flames was Hnidy, who just couldn't seem to get a handle on the puck through much of the game.

Next up: The Wild look to see if they can keep their roll going against their divisional opponents Friday night, as they take on the Edmonton Oilers.

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