Euphoria hit Minnesota like a crashing wave on the Fourth of July three years ago. The whole state turned giddy, and justifiably so, with the free-agent signings of Zach Parise and Ryan Suter.
No one felt the rush of that moment more than Wild owner Craig Leipold, who described himself as a "madman" after committing nearly $200 million to land those two coveted stars.
"They're not just coming here because it's Minnesota," Leipold said that day. "They're coming here to win in Minnesota. This was an opportunity that you don't get presented to you very often. This was our time, as Herb Brooks would say. This is our time."
The sand is rushing out of that hourglass awfully fast.
For sure, the Parise-Suter blockbuster put the organization on a new path to respectability and regular postseason appearances.
But now it's easy to wonder if the Wild will achieve the ultimate payoff — a Stanley Cup championship — for that aggressive commitment made in 2012.
Sports executives often recite a particular phrase in characterizing a team's immediate future. Teams are either getting better or they're getting worse.
The Wild is doing neither in terms of moving closer to a championship level. And that's a conundrum not easily solved.