DENVER — In his first 48 hours as a member of the Minnesota Wild, defenseman Jeff Petry got a taste of the excitement and the reality of life with his latest NHL employer.
The excitement comes via his move from Florida, which is likely to be a spectator when the playoffs start next month. Minnesota, meanwhile, is all but a lock for the postseason and has designs on much more than just a playoff spot.
The reality came Friday night in Las Vegas, where Petry watched much of the Wild’s 4-2 win over the Golden Knights from the T-Mobile Arena press box. He’s one of the odd men out on a team that, when fully healthy, will have some tough choices to make about who makes the line chart on any given night.
Meeting with the Minnesota media for the first time on Friday afternoon, Petry acknowledged that reality.
“They’ve obviously put themselves in a good position with the crew that they have,” Petry said, acknowledging that the Wild were upfront about his role when they called to welcome him to Minnesota. “Whether that’s me stepping in, playing a handful here and there, whatever the situation is, that’s something that I’m fully ready to be with. (I’m) just excited to be a part of this and help the team in any way that I can.”
It is said that nobody in the NHL is fully healthy at this point in an 82-game season and, indeed, the Wild traveled to Nevada and Colorado without veteran forwards Marcus Johansson and Marcus Foligno. Those absences, and the departure of fourth-liner Vinnie Hinostroza in a trade to Florida, made it easy for Wild coach John Hynes to slot in new players Bobby Brink, Robby Fabbi and Michael McCarron versus Vegas.
One game into the new-look roster, Hynes already had to make the call to sit Petry, a veteran with more than 1,000 NHL games on his resume, and he knows he may have to do the same with McCarron, Nick Foligno or other pre-trade members of the roster down the final stretch of the regular season.
“It’s gonna happen,” Hynes said before the Vegas game. “It’s just being direct and honest. When you get in a situation like we’re in, where we’ve added players at the deadline, which the team deserved, then we want to give ourselves the best chance to have a strong last 20 games and get our game going and be ready for the playoffs.”
Some nights that might mean veterans like Johansson, Marcus Foligno, Ryan Hartman or others sitting when they’re otherwise good to go. Much like the friendly and respectful competition for playing time that drives goalie tandems, Hynes sees healthy rivalries on his new roster as players work to get noticed and find a spot in the game-night lineup.
McCarron was the most noticeable contributor right away, netting a goal and an assist while using his 6-foot-6 frame along the walls to be a disruptor — his primary job. Although when Brink was run from behind into the boards in the second period, Brock Faber took it upon himself to drop the gloves with the Vegas offender, earning a fighting major and a 10-minute misconduct.
In that action alone, from one of the Wild’s most skilled defensemen, McCarron saw an example of the roster he has joined, and the every night work that will be expected to guarantee playing time now and in the playoffs.
“It just shows everybody has each other’s back. Everybody trusts each other,” McCarron said. “It’s awesome to see Faber do that.”
Faber, for his part, was happy to play enforcer even for just a minute or so. But he didn’t like the aftermath.
“That was a long time in the box,” he said. “I don’t like doing that.”
But as the fully loaded Wild barrel headlong toward the playoffs, being an observer instead of a doer sometimes is one of the realities of this roster.
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