With the sting of a first-round playoff elimination only four days old, Matt Dumba hesitated when asked about the injury that cost him 12 games in April and limited his effectiveness during the Wild's playoff ouster against the St. Louis Blues.
"Yeah, I punctured my lung, dislocated one of my ribs, broke another,'' the defenseman said Monday during the team's end-of-season interviews at Xcel Energy Center. "It was tough to go through. Thanks to our staff working with me every day or I wouldn't have been able to come back at the rate that I did and even play.''
Dumba was injured April 5 at Nashville when he delivered a check to Predators defenseman Michael McCarron. He returned for the regular-season finale against Colorado and played all six playoff games, scoring the Wild's lone goal in Game 6.
"I wanted to get back and help this team in whatever capacity because it's just so much fun to be a part of,'' Dumba said. "That's why everyone around here in Minnesota is pretty fired up and also disappointed because they've seen how crazy this gets down here on Seventh Street, in warmups, throughout the games.''
Dumba now enters a typical offseason for him, one that will include speculation about his status with the team. He is slated to make $6 million in 2022-23, then become an unrestricted free agent after the season. If Wild General Manager Bill Guerin wants to keep forward Kevin Fiala, he likely would have to trade Dumba because of salary cap restraints.
"I love it here in Minnesota,'' Dumba said, adding that, "Billy's got some decisions to make, and he's going to do whatever is best for this hockey club. I want to be a part of that. … But hockey is a crazy business.''
Eriksson Ek on the mend
Joel Eriksson Ek wore the look of someone who just went 15 rounds with Mike Tyson. A badly swollen bottom lip, a handful of missing teeth and the general appearance of disappointment.
Eriksson Ek's situation provided an apt metaphor for the Wild's collapse from a 2-1 series lead to a six-game ouster. In Game 6, he took an errant stick to the mouth from teammate Dmitry Kulikov, friendly fire that kept the Wild's standout two-way center out of the game for more than a period as St. Louis built its lead to 4-0.