Wild fans are officially fed up.
After watching the Wild stagger aimlessly through a hellacious month of hockey with things only looking worse, many in the crowd of 19,184 Saturday afternoon let players have it by firing missiles in the sound of boos after a humiliating second period during an eventual 4-2 loss to one of the worst teams in the NHL.
There was a reason Bruce Boudreau's face was the color of his team's Iron Range Red jerseys during a mind-bogglingly weak second period against the Vancouver Canucks led to a ninth loss in 11 games and 10th in 13 games in March.
"That was embarrassing. I'm embarrassed," the Wild coach said. "If I were the fans I would be booing even more because they pay good money for this, and to see an effort like that?
"When you don't win any battles … if you can't compete one-on-one, if you don't have the emotion to want to get out there and do the right things, let alone the things the coaches are telling you, I'm telling you, if this was earlier in the year, changes would be made."
But with the trade deadline gone and nonemergency minor league call-ups limited to four, it's up to the current cast of players to figure this out. The Wild did end up clinching a fifth consecutive playoff berth when the Rangers beat the Kings on Saturday night, but right now, the Wild's poor play is all that matters with eight games left in the regular season.
After a scoreless first period, the Canucks, who had won six games out of 23 since the All-Star break, scored four unanswered goals in the second.
Ryan Suter and Eric Staal scored 86 seconds apart in the final 2:41 of the game to make the margin of defeat look more palatable, but the second period destroyed the fragile Wild.