The NHL’s official stats website listed four distinct scenarios involving eight different teams by which the Minnesota Wild could clinch a playoff spot on Thursday. They were apparently in a “do it yourself” frame of mind and chose the most straightforward way: win.
Paced by a pair of goals from Matt Boldy, the Wild will head to the postseason for the second time in three seasons under coach John Hynes, via a 5-2, come-from-behind victory over the Vancouver Canucks at Grand Casino Arena in St. Paul.
Ryan Hartman added two goals of his own, and Kirill Kaprizov also scored for the Wild, who got 29 saves from Filip Gustavsson in the win. Minnesota will head to the postseason for the 15th time in the franchise’s 25-year history.
Boldy, who had gone more than two weeks without a goal, got loose near the midway point of the first and broke the dry spell when he glanced at linemate Marcus Johansson to draw the goalie’s attention, then snapped a low shot between the netminder’s knees for an early lead.
“I thought Bolds was working through it. And I thought tonight you saw kind of the pop and the little bit quicker, sharper in the way that he can play,” Hynes said, reflecting on the four days off that allowed his team some important physical and mental rest. “And, you know, he was working before that. But I do think for him, and particularly the couple days were good to have off, and then a couple good practices to get himself going. So it’s good to see him where he is tonight.”
Vancouver tied it with the teams skating 4-on-4 when a fortunate rebound off the end boards caught Gustavsson leaning the wrong way. Just 42 seconds later, the visitors took the lead on a power-play goal.
“That 4-on-4 goal, like, I kind of lose my guy, but that puck bounces perfectly off the back right onto his stick,” Hartman said. “And then they get, you know, there was eight seconds left before we go on the kill, and they get a power play goal. So it just happened quick.”
Trailing by a goal after the first, Minnesota needed just 23 seconds of the middle frame to tie it up. This time, Boldy stole the puck from former Wild defenseman Zeev Buium at the far blue line and went in alone on a breakaway, finding the five-hole again. It was Boldy’s fifth multi-goal game of the season.
With his second goal, Boldly had taken over the team lead with 40, but Kaprizov matched him before the game reached the midway point, scoring to give the Wild a 3-2 lead after a pretty cross-ice pass from Mats Zuccarello. Boldy and Kaprizov became the first duo in Wild history to each score 40 in a season.
“Yeah, I think it’s good. It’s nice. We both play power play and together sometimes same line. And I think it’s pretty good when two guys score so many goals and just help each other,” Kaprizov said of his friendly battle with Boldy for the scoring lead. “One guy want to score, and the other guy want to score again. You know, it’s good.”
Quinn Hughes was credited with the second assist on Hartman’s third-period insurance goal, giving him a team single-season record of 46 helpers by a defenseman in a season. It was Hughes’ 43rd game in Minnesota since the December trade from the Canucks. The previous record of 45 assists by a blueliner was set in 78 games by Ryan Suter in the 2017-18 campaign.
Nikita Tolopilo finished with 32 saves for the Canucks, who have lost seven of their past eight games. They pulled him for an extra attacker with more than three minutes remaining, but Hartman hit the empty net to seal the game.
The Wild, who play just two of their final seven games at home, head back on the road next, with back-to-back afternoon games in Ottawa on Saturday and Detroit on Sunday.
Briefly
After being a healthy scratch for the past two games, Danila Yurov was back in the Wild lineup on the fourth line, and relative newcomer Nick Foligno came out of the lineup for the first time since he was acquired from Chicago in a trade deadline deal last month. During the team’s Thursday morning skate, Hynes made it clear that Foligno’s absence was just a night off and not due to injury.