Not even the best showing in franchise history last season could spare the Wild from a fate that's become all too familiar.
Despite winning and scoring more than ever before and having a superstar lead the way, the Wild still flinched in the opening round of the playoffs for the sixth time in seven years.
Plenty has changed since then, but the aftershocks of that demise remain because the Wild kick off training camp with the expectation that the disconnect will be addressed.
"Last year was great," General Manager Bill Guerin said. "But that's last year, and we didn't come home with anything. We need to build off that, but we all have to understand that we need to be better."
This isn't a new refrain for the Wild — who begin reporting to training camp Wednesday — but the context is different.
They were one of the elite teams in the Western Conference, ranking second only to eventual Stanley Cup champion Colorado, and their up-tempo offense was behind that success.
Kirill Kaprizov became the Wild's first 100-point player and a top-five scorer in the NHL. Kevin Fiala and Ryan Hartman were 30-goal scorers, Joel Eriksson Ek and Marcus Foligno had 20-plus goals apiece while shutting down stiff competition and Matt Boldy was a second-half revelation as a rookie. Mats Zuccarello turned back the clock to his prime.
Overall, 10 players reached double digits in goals and the Wild's penchant for scoring made them one of the league's gutsiest with 25 comeback victories.