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Wild accelerate their already fast start, overpowering defending champion Panthers

Sarah McLellan, The Minnesota Star Tribune on

Published in Hockey

SUNRISE, Fla. — Not even the defending Stanley Cup champions could overcome the Wild’s historic strategy.

The Wild scored first again, extended their lead and never looked back en route to a 5-1 rout of the Panthers on Tuesday night at Amerant Bank Arena and their most impressive performance amid this rare run.

They’re only the second team ever to not trail in regulation through its first six games, joining the 1969-70 Bruins, who went 457 minutes, 21 seconds before falling behind; the Wild are up to 360 minutes during a six-game point streak (4-0-2) that ranks as their best start since 2008-09.

Mats Zuccarello buried his team-leading fourth goal, Kirill Kaprizov had two slick setups, and Jake Middleton finished with a game-high three points (all assists).

In net, Filip Gustavsson continued his own roll, stopping 24 shots to improve to 4-0-1.

The Wild had five different goal scorers, and eight players picked up a least a point while four netted two in an opportunistic display by the offense.

Despite a season-low 22 shots, this was the most authoritative the Wild have looked on the attack.

Marco Rossi kept the trend of the Wild capitalizing first alive 11:40 into the first period when he tipped in a Kaprizov shot while his back was to the net. Rossi is on a three-game goal streak and five-game point streak, both career highs.

Just 22 seconds later, Matt Boldy eluded Niko Mikkola on a 2-on-1 rush to get to the left corner, where he heaved the puck to the middle for a Marcus Johansson one-timer.

Then, 2:40 into the second period, Boldy deflected in a Zuccarello shot on the power play. In the process, Zuccarello became the fastest player in Wild history to reach 200 assists, getting there in 70 fewer games than Mikko Koivu’s 400.

Joel Eriksson Ek drew the penalty, getting hauled down in front of the net while wearing his normal helmet. Eriksson Ek ditched the full-face shield he wore last Saturday at Columbus in his return from a broken nose.

 

That was the power play’s first of only two chances, a stellar showing by the Wild’s special teams since they didn’t commit a penalty.

Later in the second period, at 11:19, the Panthers finally eluded Gustavsson on a crease-crashing redirect by Sam Bennett.

But the Wild were unfazed.

Case in point: Zuccarello responded 2:39 after Bennett’s goal, wiring in an empty-net shot after Kaprizov pulled goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky out of position by going for a wrap-around before handing off to Zuccarello. Kaprizov is tied for second in the league with four multipoint efforts and has at least a point in five of the Wild’s six games.

Another 2:07 after that, Eriksson Ek scooped up an outlet pass from Middleton off the rush and flung the puck past Bobrovsky’s glove.

This finish gave the Wild goals on back-to-back shots, but they were economical all game: They went 1 for 3, 2 for 4, 3 for 7, 4 for 13 and 5 for 14 — a conversion rate that would give them an MLB batting title.

Bobrovsky was replaced after the second, exiting after 11 saves. Spencer Knight had six stops in relief.

The Panthers were missing captain Aleksander Barkov, who was injured in the second game of the season, but the Wild also still aren’t at full strength.

Ryan Hartman remained out with an upper-body injury, and captain Jared Spurgeon is still in Minnesota, where he has resumed skating as he deals with a lower-body injury related to the back and hip surgeries he underwent earlier this year. Coach John Hynes is still hoping Spurgeon rejoins the team on this five-game road trip, which continues Thursday at Tampa Bay.


©2024 The Minnesota Star Tribune. Visit at startribune.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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