Season Finale
Minneapolis, MN – Minnesota Wild coach Jacques Lemaire might be behind the bench for his final home game on Friday night.
The Wild could also see one of their top forwards in uniform for the last time.
With Lemaire considering retirement and free agency looming for Marian Gaborik, the Wild will try to keep their flickering playoff hopes alive against a Nashville Predators team trying to maximize its own postseason hopes in its regular season finale.
Oddsmakers from online sportsbook Sportsbook.com have made the Wild –170 money line favorites for Friday’s game against the Predators. Current NHL Public Betting Information shows that 65% of more than 132 bets for this game have been placed on the Wild -170.
The Wild (38-33-9) talked the only coach they’ve ever had out of retirement last season, but injuries and inconsistency have now pushed them to the verge of elimination. To make its third straight postseason, Minnesota would need to earn two points both Friday and in its regular season finale tomorrow evening in Columbus, and Anaheim and St. Louis would have to lose their final two contests in regulation.
If the Wild fall short of the postseason, the 63-year-old Lemaire is expected to consult with his family and Wild general manager Doug Risebrough before making a decision. Under Lemaire, the Wild advanced to the 2003 Western Conference finals, but have lost in the first round in each of the past two seasons.
Losing Gaborik for 65 games with an ailing hip was the biggest blow this season for Minnesota, and leading goal scorer Owen Nolan sat out 23 games. Pierre-Marc Bouchard and Brent Burns have also missed time down the stretch.
"It’s been a little frustrating," Lemaire said. "Because of the injuries, we never had a full team. Maybe a couple of games and that’s it. And when it happens to your key players, then it’s hard to get the players having a good feel about the group."
Gaborik, who set career marks with 42 goals and 83 points last season, is set to become an unrestricted free agent in July and is mum on his plans. The right wing has scored in five straight games, and has eight goals and five assists since his return March 22.
Gaborik’s performance hasn’t stopped his team’s inconsistency. Minnesota has alternated wins and losses over its last 12 games dating to March 17.
The Predators (40-33-8) kept their postseason chances alive with Thursday night’s 4-3 shootout victory in Detroit. Jason Arnott and J.P. Dumont helped Nashville overcome a two-goal deficit in the third period, with Dumont netting the tying score with 59 seconds left in regulation.
Arnott’s winning shootout attempt pushed the Predators into a three-way tie for seventh with Anaheim and St. Louis at 88 points, but they will likely need help as the Ducks and Blues each have two games remaining.
"This is the biggest game of the year," said Arnott, who has four goals and two assists in three games since returning from a concussion. "(Friday) night will be the biggest game of the year."
In Nashville’s last two meetings with the Wild, Pekka Rinne and Dan Ellis recorded shutouts, but the Predators are 2-7-1 with two ties in Minnesota since Jan. 4, 2002.
Posted: 4/10/09 1:09AM