EDMONTON, ALBERTA – John Torchetti's only goal heading into Thursday's game against the Edmonton Oilers was to "keep it rolling and go home in a good mood."
Three hours later, that mission was accomplished after a 5-2 victory resulted in a 3-for-3 western Canadian sweep for a second consecutive season.
As music blared inside the locker room, as high-fives were exchanged and jokes bandied about, it was impossible not to think back to the polar opposite attitude only five days earlier when the Wild's eighth consecutive loss and 13th in 14 games cost Mike Yeo his job.
"What a different feeling," Darcy Kuemper said after making 31 saves for his first victory since Jan. 21. "It's nice to see the smiles on everyone's faces again and having some fun coming to the rink. We're working for each other right now and cheering each other on. It's contagious."
In its last visit ever to Rexall Place — the Oilers open a new arena next season — the Wild got two-point nights from Mikko Koivu, Thomas Vanek, Matt Dumba, Mikael Granlund and Mike Reilly (the first two-point game of his career).
The Wild improved to 3-0 under Torchetti with five goals in each game. The Wild, two points behind Nashville and Colorado for the playoff threshold, hadn't scored more than three goals in the final 16 games under Yeo.
"It's a world of difference, it feels like," said Charlie Coyle, whose empty-net goal tied him with Zach Parise for the team goal-scoring lead (18). "All of a sudden we feel so good about ourselves."
The question though is why? Why did it take a coaching change for the Wild to start exuding more effort, more pace, more energy, more fun, more wins?