Since a leopard can't change its spots, it probably was a matter of time before the Wild's penalty kill reverted to its ugly form.
The problem is this time, the Wild's feeble PK, which had been so efficient the first three games of the series, put the team's season on the brink.
During a five-goal second period in Wednesday night's Game 4, the Wild coughed up a pair of one-goal leads because it was incapable of killing either of Dallas' two power plays. After tying the score a second time, the Stars rode a late second-period go-ahead goal by Jason Spezza to the finish line for an eventual 3-2 victory at Xcel Energy Center.
The Wild heads into Friday's Game 5 in Dallas trailing the first-round series three games to one.
"They feed a lot off their power play, and tonight was a good example of it," said Jason Pominville, who scored one of the Wild's two goals. When you lose the special-teams battle, you're usually not going to win the game. That's what happened."
Teams that hold a 3-1 lead own an all-time series record of 255-28 (90.1 percent) in the NHL. The Wild rallied from a pair of 3-1 deficits in 2003.
"We have dug ourselves out of tough situations all year, so we've got to do it again," Pominville said. "We have an opportunity to do something special and something that doesn't happen that often."
The Wild pushed in the third period. It outshot the Stars 14-2, but Antti Niemi, making his first start in this series, was flawless to complete a 28-save performance. The Wild couldn't score on a 6-on-4 advantage that lasted 1 minute, 24 seconds to close the game.