The Wild were gutted on Friday night when Dallas knocked them out of the playoffs, but imagine how they feel now.
Since they dropped a seventh consecutive opening-round series, the postseason has turned into anyone's game with the defending Stanley Cup champion Colorado Avalanche and the Boston Bruins — after winning an NHL-record 65 games in the regular season — getting eliminated.
"It's going to hurt for a while, especially with how wide open these playoffs are," winger Ryan Hartman said. "The way these past games have gone, it's frustrating because we feel like we belong to still be playing.
"But we didn't do what we had to do, and everything's over. So, yeah, it's frustrating."
How up for grabs the Cup has become is the latest woulda-coulda-shoulda for the Wild, a missed opportunity accentuated by injuries, untimely skids and familiar mistakes.
"It's human nature to think of the what-ifs," winger Matt Boldy said on Monday at Xcel Energy Center, where the Wild gathered for their exit meetings. "Every scenario runs through your head: 'What if this didn't happen? What if I did this? What if we start this all over tomorrow?' It's human nature, but I would say the what-ifs are an excuse to anything.
"You live with how you played. You live with the decisions you made and stuff like that. So, yeah, it's human nature to do it that way, but in the end there's no changing it."
The biggest question unanswered is what impact center Joel Eriksson Ek would have made on the Wild's best-of-six series vs. the Stars.