John Hynes has been in a situation like this before, where his roster has been sapped.
"Really twice," the coach said. "One in the COVID year, and then last year [with the Predators] we had a lot of guys out and traded guys."
What makes the Wild's current dip in manpower more challenging is the team's rash of injuries has coincided with a four-game losing streak, signaling the first crossroads of Hynes' tenure since he was hired on Nov. 27 to replace Dean Evason.
To help navigate the makeshift lineup out of this swoon, Hynes will take a two-pronged approach, one that focuses on what happens on the ice and between the ears.
"You have to have the right answers from a tactical standpoint, but also there is the mental side of it and the emotional side of it," Hynes said Thursday night after the Wild were overpowered 4-1 by the Lightning. "You always take all those things into consideration, whether you're on a winning streak or whether you're on a losing streak."
This four-game drought isn't the longest rut of the Wild's season.
That would be the seven-game funk that preceded Hynes' arrival. But this is the most regulation losses the Wild have suffered in a row, making this the most games they've gone without banking any points.
After their 4-0 start under Hynes led to a 7-2 run and 11-3 surge, the Wild admirably caught up to the playoff race in the Western Conference. Some of those victories came after key players like defenseman Jonas Brodin and winger Mats Zuccarello got hurt.