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Kaprizov sends a chilling message to the locker room

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Jonathan Ouimet
May 5, 2026  (1:54)
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May 3, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; Minnesota Wild left wing Kirill Kaprizov (97) prepares to take a shot on goal against the Colorado Avalanche during the first period in game one of the second round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Ball Arena.
Photo credit: Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images

Kirill Kaprizov isn't waiting for the Wild to figure it out on their own. The 29-year-old star addressed what needs to change before Game 2 in Colorado.

Minnesota walked into the Avalanche building Sunday night and walked out the wrong end of a 9-6 score.

That's not a tweak conversation. That's a structural one.

Kaprizov has produced.

The Russian winger sits at 2 goals, 10 points, and a +9 rating across 7 playoff games on a $9 million cap hit, with a Round 1 game-winner already on his ledger.

His regular season was the kind that runs Hart Trophy ballots. He posted 45 goals and 89 points in 78 games, with 19 power play goals and 7 game-winners.

But the captain's job in this series isn't scoring. It's leadership. And after a 9-goal night against the deepest team in the NHL, the leader of the room had to say something out loud.

Matthew Boldy carried the offensive load in Round 1. The 25-year-old American posted 6 goals and 10 points in 7 games against Dallas, plus a +8 rating and a game-winner.

That production is real. It's also what Minnesota needs to keep producing while the back end gets sorted out.

What John Hynes has to fix before puck drop Tuesday

Colorado came in at 55-16-11 for 121 points, first overall in the NHL. The Avalanche didn't give up a game in Round 1 against Los Angeles. They swept the Kings in 4. That's the level Minnesota signed up to play.

The Wild finished 46-24-12 for 104 points, seventh overall, on the back of a 6-4-0 closing 10 games. They needed 7 games to put away Dallas. The bodies are tired. The structure is leaking.

Cale Makar produced 4 goals and 5 points across the Round 1 sweep, and added the kind of moment Avalanche fans will replay all summer.

He punched Ryan Hartman in Game 1 of this round, sat in the box alongside him, and reminded the league that he's not just the best skater in the building.

That's the temperature this series is operating at. Hynes has to coach against a 121-point team that just hit the Wild for 9 and brought edge to a series that wasn't supposed to have any.

Here's the editorial line. There's a difference between getting beat in a Round 2 series and getting embarrassed.

Game 1 sat closer to the second category than Wild fans want to admit. The captain knows it. The room knows it.

Filip Gustavsson is the goalie of record from Minnesota's net last night. The Wild's defensive group has to give him a better night. The forwards have to backcheck like the regular season hasn't already ended.

Bednar has all of the matchups he wants. The Avs are home for two. They have the best player on the ice every shift.

They have the deeper roster. The pressure is entirely on Minnesota to flip the math fast.

Game 2 lands Tuesday in Colorado. If the Wild lose another high-scoring night, this series ends on the road in Game 5. If they steal one, they steal momentum.

Kaprizov's words are now waiting for the rest of the room to make them mean something.