Minnesota Wild players enjoy having games every other night



Two years ago, as he was helping lead the Minnesota Gophers to the national title game, Brock Faber lived in a more simple world, schedule-wise. College hockey teams generally play two games per week, facing the same opponent twice, generally on Friday and Saturday nights.

This season, Faber played for Team USA in the 4 Nations Face-Off, which gave much of the NHL a two-week break in February, but also meant a condensed schedule which is being felt in March. Thursday’s game with the New York Rangers was the third in a stretch of seven games in 12 days. After getting two days off next week, the Wild will play five games in eight days.

For Faber and others, it’s a far cry from the comparatively light schedules they had in the NCAA days.

“It’s a lot different. You don’t have time to dwell on anything, especially with the 4 Nations,” Faber said prior to facing the Rangers, admitting a focus on keeping your mind sharp as well as your body. “Mentally it was more than it was physically in a tournament like that, then now to making a playoff push and hopefully making the playoffs and then hopefully going on a run from there, you don’t have time to dwell on anything. You play a game, sleep ok, sleep the next day and play again the day after that. That’s how it is and I love that.”

In his pregame comments, Wild coach John Hynes talked a little about the challenge that a team like the Rangers presents, and then mentioned St. Louis – which comes to Minnesota on Saturday – which was a quiet admission that the busy schedule means you are looking ahead out of necessity.

“It’s great. At this time of year, you want to play. I think the guys want to play. The situation we’re in, it’s an exciting time of year, it’s highly competitive,” Hynes said. In March, with games every other day, he is not afraid to cancel off-day practices and give the Wild opportunities to relax and enjoy the early Minnesota spring. “We know it’s not a ton of practice time. Yesterday we had a big win and then guys got away from the rink. It was a beautiful day out, guys come back in energized and ready to play again. That’s what you want to do at this time of year.”

Faber admitted that he came up on the short end of a friendly wager he made with teammate Vinnie Hinostroza, after the latter’s Notre Dame team upset the Gophers in a first round Big Ten tournament series last weekend in Minneapolis. That means that Faber’s old team will have more than two weeks off headed into the NCAA tournament. Most coaches tell you that excessive free time with no games to play is the last thing they want with the playoffs approaching.

“You don’t want to have a lot of lulls in the schedule,” Hynes said. “I think it’s nice that we have this homestand for us. Even on the days (off), you can get away from it because games are going to be very intense and emotional either way, so we’re looking forward to it.”

Jonas Brodin skating again

Wild defenseman Jonas Brodin was back on the ice during the team’s Thursday morning skate, but his return to Minnesota’s game night lineup is still days or even weeks away, Hynes said.



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Big sunspots have been few and far between on the sun in recent weeks. But there sure have been lots of smaller ones. On most sunny days I set up a small, filtered telescope to see what the sun’s up to. Solar observing is incredibly fast and easy — telescope, safe filter placed securely over the front lens, tripod, and you’re good to go.

Solar telescope

This is my simple setup for solar observing — 80mm refracting telescope, a solar filter over the front, and tripod.

Contributed / Bob King

On March 16 it looked someone had sprinkled bits of dirt across the sun. I counted 13 different sunspot groups that day using a magnification of 27x. None of them displayed any impressive spots, at least compared to the behemoths of last summer. But their sheer number made an impression.

Sunspots are sites on the sun where magnetic energy is strongly concentrated. They’re dark because they’re about 3,500 degrees cooler than the surrounding 10,000-degree surface. Strong magnetic fields — like those around an ordinary bar magnet but thousands of times more intense — inhibit the flow of hot gases from the solar interior, insulating and chilling the area. Chill is a relative term. Despite their dark appearance, spots are still around 13 times hotter than a very hot oven.

Sunspot group visible UV with whorls and magnet filings S.jpg

An enormous sunspot group from Nov. 2014 is seen in visible light at left. The center view shows the same group in ultraviolet light, and it reveals the whorls of group’s magnetic field. Sprinkle iron filings around a bar magnet (right) and you’ll see similar lines of magnetic force.

Contributed / NASA (left and center), Bob King (right)

At first glance, it may look like the spots are randomly scattered across the sun, but most gather in groups. Some groups stand alone and are easy to tell apart. For others it takes a little experience to see where the border of one ends and a new one starts.

Each group’s members are magnetically linked to each other, with one section acting as the north pole of a magnet, and the other as the south pole. Each bunch is assigned a number so we can keep track of it as the sun slowly rotates on its axis once approximately every 4 weeks.

Astronomers have been counting spots systematically since 1847, but useful data goes back to the early 1600s. Sunspot number is a good indicator of overall solar activity. Flares and coronal mass ejections are frequently connected to sunspot groups, so the more spots — and the more complex sunspot groups become — the better the chances for solar storms to occur. And that means increasing chances to see the northern lights.

Counting them is easy enough, but there’s a twist. Astronomers tally both individual sunspots and groups. Each group is assigned a value of 10 spots. In the photo there are 13 groups, so 13 multiplied by 10 is 130. Next, you add in the number of individual sunspots. I counted 40. Together, the total sunspot number for March 16 comes to 170. That’s a high number and indicative of strong solar activity.

When formally submitting sunspot tallies, an observer also has to multiply their result by a small factor depending on observing conditions and equipment. By counting sunspots with a small, filtered telescope, arriving at what the monthly average is, and plotting the result on a piece of graph paper, the ups and downs of the 11-year solar cycle will appear right before your eyes.

Solar cycle from 1700 to 2025

Counting sunspots reveals the ups and downs of the solar cycle. Sunspot number is shown at left with a timeline along the bottom. Monthly peaks for each cycle are shown in black. Solar Cycle 1 peaked in the year 1761; we’re now in Cycle 25. Notice how sunspot numbers (solar activity) vary from cycle to cycle. The red hump in Cycle 25 is the original prediction, which has been exceeded.

Contributed / NASA, NOAA, ISES

Or you can have the professionals do it. They count sunspots, average monthly numbers and lay it all out on a curve to look for trends. They also study historical patterns and include data like how much radio energy the sun produces, which fluctuates throughout the solar cycle. Before every new cycle they gather and make a prediction of when the next peak, called solar maximum, will occur.

The original forecast for the current cycle, dubbed Cycle 25, was made in 2019 with the peak predicted for this upcoming July. However, more recent forecasts hint that we reached maximum in late 2024, so we may have already passed the peak. A more definitive answer will have to wait until the sun enters a slump. Then we’ll be able to look back with hindsight and better frame the time.

March 21 aurora

A moderate geomagnetic storm hit on Friday night, March 21, lighting up the northern sky with colorful auroras. A stronger storm is expected Saturday night, March 22.

Contributed / Bob King

In the meantime, enjoy the sun’s busy period while you can by catching the northern lights. On Friday night, March 21, we had a fine display in the Duluth region. A stronger storm is forecast for Saturday night, March 22. If the sky stays clear, go out as early as 9 p.m., look north from a dark location, and you might just see arcs and rays dance across the northern sky. I’ll post updates on my Facebook page at facebook.com/astrobobking.

“Astro” Bob King is a freelance writer and retired photographer for the Duluth News Tribune. You can reach him at nightsky55@gmail.com.





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