For the Wild, facing the Chicago Blackhawks has to feel like that scene from the movie "The Replacements" where a player talks about his biggest fear.
"You're playing and you think everything is going fine, but then one thing goes wrong and then another and another, and you try to fight back. But the harder you fight, the deeper you sink until you can't move, you can't breathe because you're in over your head … like quicksand."
For a third consecutive season, the Wild ran into the Blackhawks in the playoffs. For the third consecutive season, the Wild's offseason has officially begun thanks to the Blackhawks proving they're the better team.
Two years after taking Chicago to five games, one year after taking Chicago to six games, the Wild took a step back and was swept Thursday night when the Blackhawks won 4-3 to end the Wild's season quicker than anybody could have imagined.
"It's not fun. We got swept. We didn't do nearly enough," said Wild scoring leader Zach Parise. "Just disappointing."
"Feel sick. Doesn't feel right," added goalie Devan Dubnyk. "To be with the group that we have, to finish it that way, it just doesn't feel right."
In the day leading up to Game 4, coach Mike Yeo noted his team had come back from the dead before this season. After all, this was a team that went an NHL-best 28-9-3 in the final 40 games of the regular season after acquiring Dubnyk.
But the Wild, which didn't lead at any moment of the series, couldn't find a way to solve Corey Crawford until it was too late Thursday.