DENVER — Over the past few games, the Minnesota Wild have gotten beaten by two desperate teams chasing them in the standings.And if this latest funk continues, it won’t be long before Minnesota is fighting for its playoff life.The Wild have lost three in a row, with the last two coming against the Utah Hockey Club and Colorado Avalanche, which pulled away for a 5-2 victory at Ball Arena on Friday night. Unlike Thursday, when the Wild were outcompeted, outskated and outclassed in many areas, Minnesota had a stronger start against the Avalanche and held a one-goal lead after the first period.That’s when it all unraveled. Just a bunch of little mistakes that turned into a big loss.The Avalanche are now tied with Minnesota for third in the Central, though the Wild have a game in hand.“It’s hard to go through tough stretches,” veteran winger Mats Zuccarello said. “It doesn’t matter who you are. Because you start gripping your stick. You start trying to make the right plays and not making the plays you normally make because you want to do the right thing. And everything becomes wrong.“It’s important to back each other up, stay positive and make the plays you make on a regular basis. Don’t change something. It’s going to come.”The Wild’s margin for error was already slim due to injuries to Kirill Kaprizov and Joel Eriksson Ek, and Ryan Hartman still has one game left on his eight-game suspension. And with the trade deadline one week away, there’s no guarantee help is on the way. Minnesota could make a move, but any impactful deal would require getting cap space from a player like Eriksson Ek being put on regular-season-ending LTIR. Right now, Eriksson Ek is officially labeled “week to week.”More injuries came Friday, with Zach Bogosian missing the game due to a lower-body injury and Jonas Brodin leaving after one shift in the third period. Wild coach John Hynes didn’t have an update on either but said it was too early to speculate whether they’d need a call-up for Sunday’s game against the Boston Bruins.“It doesn’t matter who is in the lineup,” captain Jared Spurgeon said. “We have a system where we have to play it the closest to perfect as we can, no matter who is in the lineup, to give ourselves the best chance to win.”The Wild’s one-goal lead was erased in 52 seconds midway through the second period when Jonathan Drouin and Jack Drury scored. The first came on an awkward change by the Wild, with Brock Faber initially looking like he was skating to the bench after a 1-minute, 38-second shift. But the Avalanche quickly transitioned on a slick stretch pass by Oliver Kylington that sailed past a retreating Faber and got to Drouin for the rush. Drury’s goal was an odd one, starting as an innocent three-on-three rush. But Cale Makar hustled to join and got a shot off. Drury put in a rebound after collecting the loose puck behind the net, and defenseman Declan Chisholm got caught behind Filip Gustavsson in the crease.Hynes said that in the last two games, the Wild have “found numerous ways to beat ourselves.”“Our group cares,” Hynes said. “We have a good team, and we’ve done well. In these two particular games, we didn’t have the mindset to play the game the right way consistently enough in the details of the game, and it cost us. It’s something we’ve talked about from day one. We want to be a competitive team, which we are in the way we work. But there are other parts of the game, there’s another level of that: managing the puck at critical times, not giving stressed attacks, line changes. Look at tonight’s game. All those things occurred, and the puck ended up in the back of our net.”
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