The Milano Santa Giulia Arena is alive with the scrape of blades and the echo of pucks off glass as men’s hockey begins at the Milan Cortina Olympics.
Team USA does not play today, so Wild players in red, white, and blue will wait one more night for their first shift. Sweden does open its tournament, however, and Minnesota’s Swedish contingent was already on the ice this morning as the Olympic buzz settled over Milan. Teams began skating shortly after arrival to accelerate preparation.
Minnesota Wild Storylines to Watch For
The men’s tournament runs from
Feb. 11 to 22. Sweden opens today in Group B, giving Wild fans immediate action. Team USA begins group play later in Group C.
For Minnesota viewers, the storylines are clear:
Matt Boldy attacking off the rush,
Brock Faber exiting cleanly under pressure,
Quinn Hughes walking the blue line,
Joel Eriksson Ek battling at the crease,
Jonas Brodin closing space, and the
Filip Gustavsson–
Jesper Wallstedt tandem protecting tight leads.
Games against Canada and Finland, and potentially USA versus Sweden if brackets align, will demand attention. Breakaways, special-teams swings, and physical late-game shifts often decide Olympic outcomes. Minnesota talent will sit at the center of those moments. Today belongs to Sweden. The USA follows soon.
To maximize every minute on the larger
international ice dimensions, coaches condensed drills to sharpen spacing and timing. The added room creates new passing lanes yet demands split-second decisions from defensemen. For Team USA, Matt Boldy and Brock Faber inject dynamic speed and composure into transition play. Quinn Hughes arrives with elite puck control and leadership, ready to anchor the blue line.
In goal, Sweden boasts a formidable tandem that Wild fans are familiar with in Gustavsson and Wallstedt.