BOSTON – The puck disappeared in goalie Tuukka Rask's glove but if it didn't – if the shot center Eric Staal heaved at the net off the rush instead sailed into the net – maybe that would have been the spark the weary Wild needed to keep pace with the rested Bruins.
But that boost never came, and the Wild sagged to a 4-0 loss Tuesday at TD Garden – a dud at the end of an otherwise productive four-game road trip that pocketed six out of a possible eight points for the team.

"We got behind, got behind early and I think that made it difficult for us to get going," Staal said. "I had that look early to get some momentum and some energy, and it isn't falling. It's frustrating, but you gotta stick with it and find a way."
While this swing through the Eastern Conference revealed plenty of positives for the Wild, one of the downsides was the offensive woes for usual scorers like Staal.
He and wingers Jason Zucker and Nino Niederreiter went scoreless on the trip, the only members of the top-nine forward group to not contribute at least a goal.
"It's definitely not for a lack of trying," Zucker said. "But like I've said before, working hard is not good enough. We've got to find a way to do it. We've got to find a way to be leaders on the team and score goals like we're supposed to be doing, and right now we're not doing that."
Staal hasn't scored since the first game post-holiday break, a 5-2 loss to the Blackhawks in Chicago Dec.27, but he's been around the puck lately – earning looks that make it seem like he's close to busting out of this slump.
"It's frustrating because I'm generating a lot of chances, and I feel like I'm generating a lot – as much or more as I have in the last few years being here," he said. "It's just right now they're not going in. I have to stick with it and try not to let it creep into other parts of my game because it can be difficult."