Matt Boldy has spent this series turning every opening against the Dallas Stars into a shot, and that pattern has carried Minnesota into Game 5 with the matchup tied. Through four meetings, Boldy has averaged 10 shot attempts per game, hit at least nine attempts in every contest and cleared his 3.5 shots line in each one.
The Wild winger has been even busier in Dallas. Boldy piled up 13 shots on goal over the first two games there, and he has recorded at least four shots in 10 straight meetings with the Stars. That kind of repeat production is why the play keeps drawing attention heading into the next game in the NHL playoffs.
There is weight behind the volume. Boldy is averaging 5.3 shots on 10 attempts through the four-game series, while Dallas has managed to score on only 3% of its shots at 5-on-5. Even with the series level, one side has found far more ways to pressure the net than the other.
Todd Cordell said Boldy has not hesitated to put rubber on net in this series, and that his NHL betting picks are backing the winger’s shots on goal over again. The numbers back up that read: Boldy has been a steady source of attempts, not a one-game spike.
The bigger context is that Dallas has generated more chances and spent more time on the front foot, even though the series is tied after four games. That friction matters because playoff games often swing when repeated pressure finally starts showing up on the scoreboard, and the Stars have not yet cashed in at a rate that matches their territorial play.
Wyatt Johnston has given Dallas a different kind of edge. He has played more than any Stars forward through four games, averaged 4.3 shots on goal, produced five points and created 17 scoring chances. He has also found the net in four of his last five home games after two days of rest, a run that gives the Stars another offensive thread to pull as Game 5 approaches.
The tension in this series is not whether both teams can create chances. It is whether Dallas can turn its possession into goals before Boldy’s shot volume and Minnesota’s finishing tilt another game. Mikko Rantanen has four assists in the playoffs, but the series still turns on whether the Stars can raise their conversion rate before another night of chances slips away.