The Minnesota Wild picked a good time to find another gear: With back-to-back wins over the Vancouver Canucks and Ottawa Senators, Minnesota strengthened its playoff position while showing the kind of balance, depth, and composure that can carry over into the postseason. They won each game differently, but they carried the same message.

The Wild are heating up when it matters most. 

Minnesota delivered a 5-2 win over Vancouver at Grand Casino Arena that officially clinched a Stanley Cup Playoff berth. Matt Boldy and Ryan Hartman each scored twice, Kirill Kaprizov added a goal and an assist, and Filip Gustavsson stopped 29 shots as the Wild erased a 2-1 deficit with a dominant finish. 

The win mattered because it secured a postseason berth. However, the Wild also highlighted their ability to respond under pressure and close strong after a slow start. 

Boldy was the headline act in the Vancouver game. He reached 40 goals with a breakthrough performance that reminded everyone how dangerous he can be as a top-line scorer. 

 

Hartman also continued a strong run of form, and his two-goal night gave the Wild another layer of offense beyond the usual stars. That kind of scoring balance is exactly what teams want heading into April, when defensive game plans tighten, and secondary production often decides outcomes.

The Wild carried that momentum into Ottawa and earned a more methodical 4-1 road win over the Senators. Hartman scored twice again, Jonas Brodin and Jake Middleton each added goals, and Jesper Wallstedt made 33 saves to help Minnesota control the game from start to finish. 

 

It was a different kind of victory than the one over Vancouver. However, it was just as important because it showed the Wild can win with firepower and structure. 

Hartman’s recent scoring burst has been one of the biggest development stories of the stretch. He scored twice against Vancouver and then repeated the feat in Ottawa, extending a goal streak and giving Minnesota reliable middle-six production at a key moment in the season. When players like Hartman, Brodin, and Middleton contribute offensively, it gives the Wild more ways to win than leaning on Kaprizov and Boldy.

There was also a major goaltending takeaway from the two games. Gustavsson gave Minnesota the stability it needed against Vancouver, while Wallstedt handled Ottawa with confidence and poise. That combination is valuable for a team trying to enter the playoffs with options in net and a better read on how its crease can hold up in different environments. 

Just as importantly, the Wild’s recent results suggest they are handling the late-season grind with maturity. They rebounded from a loss in Boston, beat Vancouver to clinch, and then took care of business in Ottawa. 

For a team sitting near the top of a crowded Central Division race, that kind of consistency matters almost as much as the standings themselves.

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