In this opening month where nothing has come easy for the Minnesota Wild, an early lead Thursday slipped away, and the hole they have dug in October got just a little deeper.
Versus a better-than-expected Pittsburgh team loaded with weapons, the Wild managed just one goal and saw the Penguins take over the game in the third period. Pittsburgh’s 4-1 win was the fifth consecutive loss for a Wild team that last won on Oct. 20 against the Rangers in New York.
With the Penguins’ scorers coming at him in waves, Minnesota goalie Filip Gustavsson made 29 saves in the loss.
Kirill Kaprizov scored a rare early goal for the Wild, but their previously potent power play provided no relief as they went 0 for 4 with the man advantage and fell to 3-6-3 to close out October.
With the game tied 1-1 in the third, Pittsburgh got goals from Bryan Rust and Ben Kindel just 61 seconds apart. The Penguins are now 6-0-2 in their last eight games.
The Wild took the first lead midway through the opening period when Kaprizov fought off a check in front of the net and redirected a cross-ice pass by Marcus Johansson. It was Kaprizov’s team-leading seventh goal of the season, and extended his points streak to four games.
It also marked the first time since a 2-1 overtime loss in Philadelphia on Oct. 18 that Minnesota scored the first goal of a game.
The Penguins appeared to have tied the game, briefly, when Evgeni Malkin slipped a shot past the goalie from the low slot. But after review, officials determined that contact made by Pittsburgh forward Justin Brazeau on Gustavsson before the shot went in constituted goaltender interference, and they ruled no goal. Pittsburgh challenged the call, but after review the call was upheld, giving the Wild their first power play of the night.
Minnesota, which entered the game with the top power play in the NHL, got two man advantages in the first but failed to build on their lead.
Pittsburgh survived a surge by the Wild and tied the game for real early in the second when defenseman Ryan Shea’s long-range shot through a crowd found the back of the net.
The Wild bench went down a man a short time later when a shot by Penguins defenseman Erik Karlsson hit Minnesota center Danila Yurov below the belt. Yurov crumpled to the ice immediately and had to be helped to the locker room. He returned to the game midway through the middle frame.
The Penguins, who have not qualified for the NHL playoffs since 2022, are off the a 8-2-2 start. Minnesota, which has the worst penalty-kill numbers in the league, surrendered a goal on Pittsburgh’s first power play of the game.
Gustavsson came to the bench for an extra attacker with just under three minutes to play, but Pittsburgh’s Anthony Mantha hit a shot into the empty net from beyond the far blue line.
Tristan Jarry had 27 saves for the Penguins in their lone regular season visit to Minnesota. The Wild play in Pittsburgh on Nov. 21.
Up next is the fifth game of the Wild’s current six-game homestand when they host the Vancouver Canucks on Saturday evening at 6 p.m. The Wild are 1-3-2 at home this season.
Briefly
Pittsburgh’s second shot on goal of the game was a slapper from the blue line delivered by defenseman Matt Dumba, who was playing in his fifth game for the Penguins. Dumba, 31, was the Wild’s first round pick, seventh overall, in the 2012 NHL Draft. He spent his first 10 seasons with the Wild and has skated for Arizona, Tampa Bay, Dallas and now Pittsburgh since leaving Minnesota in 2023.
Related Articles
				
			Kirill Kaprizov’s desire to carry Wild leading to costly turnovers		
				
			Better Wild effort produces little reward, as Winnipeg rallies		
				
			Important next step as Mats Zuccarello skates with Wild		
				
			Youthful defensive play proving costly in sluggish Wild start		
				
			A loss, but not pointless, as Wild’s comeback fails in OT		
 
																
Leave a Reply