Windsor Star

Not cleared for takeoff: Jets wait on Duluth tarmac before flying home

Uninspired start to Game 3’s play might have roots in Saturday’s long travel day

- KEN WIEBE kwiebe@postmedia.com

Blake Wheeler surely would have enjoyed an evening in his hometown to visit with family.

But consider it a business trip for the Winnipeg Jets captain. The one benefit of flying in on the morning of Game 3 of the Jets’ opening-round series with the Minnesota Wild is that he didn’t have to shovel the driveway at his parents’ place.

The Jets were unable to get to the Twin Cities on Saturday because of a snowstorm that caused all kinds of travel issues. The team attempted the trip and spent some unplanned time in Duluth, Minn., before getting back in the air and returning to Manitoba.

“We got a little tour of northern Minnesota, got to touch down in Duluth, Hermantown area, spent a couple hours there. It was a long day, but ultimately we can’t control everything,” Wheeler said. “You try to control as much as you can. We’re pretty spoiled the way we travel, so got to spend a little bit of extra quality time with the guys and slept in our own bed last night, so not all bad. “It’s status quo. Luckily it was a close flight, a quick one, so you know, no different, our routine stayed the same (Sunday).” The only difference was that the Jets didn’t hold a morning skate, which is more of an optional thing come playoff time.

“The older guys love it,” Wheeler said.

The Jets understood they might not be able to land in Minnesota, but it was worth a shot — even if the journey ended up with a lot of spare time on the tarmac.

“It wasn’t bad. The nice thing is it’s a short flight Winnipeg to Minnesota, so that was the reason we tried to get in,” Paul Stastny said. “If we didn’t get in, by the time we got home, it was still 6 o’clock. It was kind of a long afternoon, but you get home in time early enough for dinner and get a good sleep and then just get back on. “We have a short flight. We got here early, got good prep in, got a good nap. Could have been way worse, right? Rather be safe than sorry. Conditions like this, you don’t want to risk it. “You’ve got to expect the unexpected all the time, and nothing comes easy around here or anywhere. When stuff like that happens, I think you’ve just got to go with it. It’s something you’ll never forget, especially come middle of April. You see a big snowstorm coming all over the U.S. and parts of Canada. But it’s a unique experience.”

How did the players pass the time?

“The Wi-Fi wasn’t working because we landed, so a lot of guys were using their hot spots,” Stastny said. “Guys were playing cards and watching hockey afternoon games and watching the basketball games. A few different guys used their hot spots to turn the games on. “Guys were kind of hungry, so once we ran out of food, everyone was roaming around, just hanging out with each other.”

Jets head coach Paul Maurice insisted the travel woes were a non-issue.

“We’re here. We’ve got all our gear. We’re fine,” Maurice said on Sunday afternoon. “The whole point of having a routine is so when an aberration comes up, you’ve got a good place to go. So we’re in our routine now. “We got to the hotel, did our meetings. “We’ll have our normal routine tonight, so that part’s fine. You play in the Western Conference, we’ve got a one-hour flight to our first playoff game, that’s about two and a half hours shorter than what we did four years ago, so there’s your time in Duluth. This is easy travel.”

The Wild weren’t expecting to gain any sort of competitiv­e advantage because of the Jets’ long travel day.

“It’s overblown. It’s playoff hockey and they’re going to be ready,” Wild head coach Bruce Boudreau said.

“It’s all about the will and Winnipeg has will right now. This travel thing is a non-issue as far as I’m concerned.”

The results Sunday may have proved Boudreau wrong. The Jets got out to a brief 1-0 lead, but trailed 2-1 after the first intermissi­on of what would be a 6-2 loss. The Wild gave its players the opportunit­y to stay in a hotel around the rink on Sunday afternoon rather than driving home and risking any issues with travel. “The option is there. Most of them have taken the option,” Boudreau said.

“The other ones probably live close enough that they don’t need it.”

 ?? ANDY CLAYTON-KING/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Minnesota Wild winger Marcus Foligno, left, tries to get the puck past Winnipeg Jets defenceman Tyler Myers and goaltender Connor Hellebuyck in the first period on Sunday in St. Paul, Minn. Hellebuyck was spelled by Steve Mason as the Jets lost 6-2.
ANDY CLAYTON-KING/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Minnesota Wild winger Marcus Foligno, left, tries to get the puck past Winnipeg Jets defenceman Tyler Myers and goaltender Connor Hellebuyck in the first period on Sunday in St. Paul, Minn. Hellebuyck was spelled by Steve Mason as the Jets lost 6-2.

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