DENVER – Back in 2013 when the Wild's run of five consecutive playoff berths began, the Wild had to win its final game in Colorado to clinch the eighth and final playoff spot.
On Thursday, the Wild plays its penultimate game of the regular season in the same site, yet players are a lot more stress-free with a lot less on the line.
Home-ice advantage in the first round is secured, as is the second seed in the Central Division. A couple more wins, and the Wild could secure home ice in the conference final — if it's so lucky to advance that far.
But most important, the Wild would love nothing more than to stay healthy these final two mostly meaningless games.
So on Wednesday, coach Bruce Boudreau was weighing the balance between possibly resting a couple of veteran bodies vs. not taking the proverbial foot off the gas now that the team, with points in five of its past six games, has turned the tide, players say, on a dreadful month of hockey.
"Every time I've coached a team and you start resting guys, everybody relaxes and it's hard to get it back," Boudreau said. "You want to keep your good habits and you want to make sure you're playing the right way. Because once you don't play the right way, it's hard to get back to doing that stuff."
Of course, oftentimes, this is easier said than done. In 2014 when the Wild closed the regular season at home against the Nashville Predators, it lost 7-3. Players, consciously or subconsciously, refused to get in shooting lanes and Ilya Bryzgalov was literally waving at pucks.
These are never easy games.