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  1. It’s no secret that the Minnesota Wild have struggled to find depth scoring this season, particularly from the fourth line. A quick glance at the organizational depth chart suggests that might not change anytime soon. Minnesota’s fourth line this season has primarily featured: Jakub Lauko (8 career goals in 121 NHL games played) Devin Shore (2 goals in his last 97 NHL games) Marat Khusnutdinov (2 career goals in 63 NHL games played) And Ben Jones (no goals in 26 NHL games played this season) While no team expects their fourth line to fill the back on the net regularly, they hope it can at least control possession so that the top lines can hop on the ice with the puck in the offensive zone as often as possible. However, that’s where the Wild’s fourth-line players have fallen short this season. Take a look at these possession metrics from MoneyPuck: While fourth-line players typically perform below the NHL average, the numbers above demonstrate less-than-ideal output. For context, all Winnipeg Jets forwards who have played significant minutes are above 48% in Corsi and expected goals percentage. In an ideal world, the Wild’s fourth line could produce somewhere in the same vicinity and give the top lines more opportunities to start shifts in the offensive zone each night. On Tuesday, The Athletic reported that Kirill Kaprizov will be out for at least four weeks to undergo surgery for his nagging lower-body injury. Therefore, the Wild’s depth will be tested once again, and it might be time for the Wild to provide other players with opportunities to make positive contributions to the fourth line. They should start with Caedan Bankier. I’ve watched Bankier closely since the Wild took him 86th in the 2021 draft. Most recently, I saw him when I attended the Iowa Wild’s home series against the Rockford Ice Hogs on January 17 and 18. The more I’ve watched Bankier play, the more I’ve become convinced that he’s the Wild’s future third-line center and that he has promise. He’s not ready to fill that role now, but the 6-foot-2, 192-pound center is trending in the right direction. Bankier has earned an opportunity to get a few games with the big squad. It’s been a tough season in Des Moines, where the team has suffered from the fifth-worst save percentage in the AHL. Iowa’s struggles are reflected in the skaters’ counting stats, and Bankier is no exception. He’s posted eight goals and nine assists in 40 games. While that’s unimpressive at first glance, it only tells part of the tale. As he’s developed over the past season and a half in Iowa, Bankier has slowly learned to use his size to influence possession. He has soft hands and makes crisp, accurate passes. These attributes, along with his superior hockey sense and responsible, two-way tendencies, have helped him grow into a player with a mature game that knows how to compete against professional players. He also can win faceoffs from the right side (you’ll have to take my word for it, as the AHL does not publish individual faceoff statistics). Considering that Khusnutdinov has only won 46.1% of draws thus far and has been unable to drive possession, Bankier could represent a clear upgrade, even if only for a few games. At the very least, he looks like a viable call-up option who can provide a different look. Bankier’s pro-level details and quality decision-making make him a reliable player. Consider the below clip from Iowa’s game against Rockford on January 18. None of that stuff is flashy. However, when players do it consistently, it drives winning. When Bankier came off the ice, the Iowa Wild had possession in the offensive zone, and Rockford hadn’t even come close to sniffing an offensive chance. It wasn’t a one-off, either. Bankier has moments like these regularly. Below is an example of him using his size and awareness to maintain possession in the offensive zone from a preseason game against Winnipeg: And lastly, watch him shrug off an attacker as he carries the puck up the wall in the neutral zone: None of this is to say that Bankier is close to a finished product, and there are warts to his game he must correct. He must learn to dictate moments and control pace with the puck on his stick, and he might benefit from a summer training with Andy Ness to add a bit of quickness to his lateral movements. Still, his game is coming along, and Wild fans should be excited. Caedan Bankier has earned the opportunity to play some NHL games, if only so he can be better prepared for when his time arrives. Undoubtedly, he can eventually become a quality third-line center in the NHL. When Wild fans get their first glimpse of him with the big squad, they’ll be able to see why.
    12 points
  2. So, the Wild are playing well. Even as of late they are still pretty good. Everyone has a feeling that the team is terrible right now. Here is their monthly records for the year. February 2-2, January 8-6, December 7-7, November 10-5, October 8-3, September 2-2, they have also gotten 4 points in 4 loses. The team has not been bellow .500 in any month of the season. It is doubtful that they will finish below .500 in any month the rest of the season. Calgary is 10 points behind the Wild and has 26 games left, Minnesota has 25 left. If the Wild play .500 the rest of the way out Calgary would have to get 35 points in 26 games. That is a .626 win percentage, at two thirds of the season Calgary has a .524 win percentage. As far as missing the playoffs it is going to be hard for this team to miss the playoffs. As for what they will do once they get into the playoffs we don't know. It is assumed that when everyone gets back and plays a few games before the playoffs they will be a pretty tough out. But we don't know and that is why they play the games. Hopefully the 4 Nations will wake Boldy up and he can start scoring again.
    11 points
  3. He's a crusty old veteran who hits like a rock but doesn't skate or shoot very well. Nobody stands in front of the net with this guy...at either end. His crosscheck is lethal and his right hook is a knock out blow!
    11 points
  4. What Happened To the Wild's Offense? It has a lower body injury...
    11 points
  5. The Athletic just released an article on Buium too, kind of centered around that lingering question of how long he might be at Denver. Wild comments: Denver Coach comments: Athletic writer comments:
    10 points
  6. The Minnesota Wild are building the foundations of a solid future. Experts believe Minnesota’s front office drafts well, and several prospects appear ready to make an impact in the NHL. Marat Khusnutdinov, Liam Ohgren, and Jesper Wallstedt have all played games for the Wild this year. Meanwhile, Danila Yurov seems to be on the way soon. The team's farm system is so good that Scott Wheeler recently ranked them second in the NHL in his yearly prospect rankings. Wheeler had them at 11th in the same rankings last year. The heavy lifting of the improved ranking is the new crown jewel of the Wild's prospect pool. Zeev Buium. When the Wild drafted Buium 12th overall in last year's draft, people immediately considered him a steal. We ranked Buium as the Wild's third-best prospect entering the season behind Yurov and Wallstedt, and the pick has only aged better since. Buium is a great defender with a winning pedigree. He had just finished a historic season at Denver University, becoming the first teenager to score 50 points in a season in over 20 years. Buium has built on his breakout year. In his second year at Denver, he turned himself into more than just a good prospect that the Wild got as a draft steal. Instead, the Californian is now a genuine top-defensive prospect in the league. After a draft year as productive as Buium's, imagining how he could improve was difficult. How do you improve historic scoring totals capped off by a national championship and World Juniors Gold Medal? Buium has answered by refining his impressive arsenal of skills. Last year, Buium showed the ability to be a positive player in every phase of the game. He wasn't bad defensively, but his offensive prowess stood out. Buium has been more committed to improving his defensive play and dominating possessions this season. "The harder I play in my own end and take pride in it," Buium told the Star Tribune, "the more likely I'm not going to be playing defense as much." It's an approach that has already resulted in better all-around play and even improved his offense. Buium isn't letting the game come to him. Instead, he's involving himself in every level of play. A player who can make a strong defensive play in his own end, execute a breakout pass, join the rush, and set up in the offensive zone all at the same time? That's a dangerous skill. Denver and Team USA coach David Carle also spoke about this ability. "He knows he needs to crank it up a little bit," Carle said. "So, that's what I think is really impressive about him is he has an ability to interpret what the game needs from him, and he can adapt and give it what it needs." His hockey IQ and high-end skills make him an elite offensive organizer. When Buium is on the ice, Denver's play on both ends flows through him. He's a smooth-skating puck-mover and a breakout quarterback. His mix of instincts, speed, and commitment to defense allow him to overcome his average stature in making plays in his end. When you compare Buium to some of the league's top defenders, he fits the mold of a modern elite NHL defender. He plays college hockey and doesn't have elite size, but he isn't small, either. He can play an extremely well-rounded game, even if explosive offense is his primary weapon. Players like Cale Makar, Quinn Hughes, Adam Fox, and Charlie McAvoy are similar and among the league's most elite blueliners. While Buium's play has been encouraging, it is impossible to look past the eye-popping stat sheet. Early in the season, Buium was producing but not quite at the level he had in his previous year. With no goals and 10 points in his first 10 games, the blueliner had impressive production but not the elite scoring we saw in his 50-point freshman campaign. Part of that decreased production was due to Buium's evolving role at Denver, which includes more responsibility. The team relies on him more defensively and as a play-driver than last season. Buium focused more on the process than the results. His stats indicate that his investment in improving his overall game is paying meaningful dividends. Buium's stat sheet production is catching up with his play. Now, he's scoring at a similar pace to last season while still playing a more well-rounded game. He has 32 points in 26 games, including 13 in his previous 10. That's a rate of 1.23 points per game, better than the 1.19 points he registered as a freshman. His 32 points are the most among college defenders. If Denver makes a deep run, he could have another 50-point season. Since 2009-10, only two defenders, Buium and Brendan Smith, have reached that 50-point mark in college hockey. Now, Buium has an opportunity to do it twice. Buium has myriad elite skills he’s constantly improving. He is also a historic producer. Those two attributes would already be enough to make him a top prospect. However, he also has a track record of being a consummate winner. Even at 19, Buium has already experienced more winning than many great hockey players do in their careers. In his freshman season, he won the national championship with Denver and played a key role in winning a gold medal for the USA at the 2024 World Juniors. He followed up that gold medal this year with another in the 2025 World Juniors, the first time the USA won back-to-back golds at the premiere event for junior-aged players. Buium again played a vital role, providing a beautiful assist on the overtime game-winning goal. The entire team wanted that game badly, but Buium had a burning desire to win hockey games. After the assist, the defender hesitated to join the celebratory scrum, focusing more on winning the game than celebrating. "I just wanted to win that game so bad," Buium recalled. "I wasn't even thinking about a celebration. I just didn't want to lose." Buium's ultra-competitive spirit has been evident at every level of hockey. That intangible quality completes his profile as one of the top prospects in the NHL. The Minnesota Wild are getting an elite talent. Buium affects the game just as much off the scoresheet as he does off it. He’s a defender who profiles as a top-pairing, play-driving defender. Most of all, Minnesota will be welcoming a winner. Time will tell if Buium can carry all of that to the NHL. For now, he's one of the best prospects in the league and is only improving.
    10 points
  7. 10 points
  8. While Slavin might have been the 1st D, there were multiple options to pair with him and Faber is the guy they trusted on the ice with him the most. Slavin and Werensky are both strong veteran options, but Faber was more than just "lucky" to be on that top pairing. He was out there because he was more trusted than any other options the US had available. Certainly fair to say that Faber's role may have been a little less prominent if McAvoy were healthy the whole tourney, but he was easily a top 4 D among the best in the US at age 22. He wasn't just a passenger, he was trusted and he was shutting down McDavid in his shifts. Faber's future is very bright.
    9 points
  9. I imagine people might argue both Tkachuk's, Eichel, and Guentzel were better as forwards. Those 4 had more goals, more points, or scored their 3 points in fewer games than Boldy. I realized after I wrote some of this that you specified "wingers", not forwards. Boldy was a +2 for the tournament, and no US forwards other than those listed above were able to finish ahead of him. Boldy being arguably a top 6 talent at age 23 for this roster is pretty impressive. For the Tage Thompson fans, he had 35 NHL points through his age 23 season. Boldy is at 219 NHL points, and counting. Tage Thompson is really good right now and probably deserved to be in the tourney, but not necessarily ahead of Boldy--there were others who were more replaceable. Also worth noting that only Nathan MacKinnon and Joel Eriksson Ek finished with a better +/- than the +3 that Faber finished the tournament with. Boldy very much belonged and didn't play small. He scored a key goal, and had a couple timely passes for assists. This could be a huge stepping stone for his development. The Wild could make a big leap forward next season. The Wild players were up against a team where Sidney Crosby isn't even a top 2 C on the team and they all looked like they belonged--including Sweden players here. That's huge. MacKinnon and McDavid make guys look bad most nights in the NHL, but the Wild players were hanging with them. I'll add that I didn't want to see the US lose, but I was somewhat relieved to verify that Boldy and Faber were off the ice when the US left the best player in the world wide open in front of the net for the game winner. Great hockey and excellent showing for the Wild players!
    9 points
  10. He had 5 shot attempts, and played the most minutes of any forward on team USA. Only thing I saw was he, like some other players, tried to make the extra pass on two occasions when he probably could have taken the shot. Just because you do not show up on the score sheet does not mean you shrunk in the big game.
    9 points
  11. There are only 3 defensemen in all of the NCAA that are above 1.0 in points per game this season and Buium leads them all at 1.231(tied for 12th among all NCAA skaters). While he might be considered an offensive defenseman, he is definitely a 2-way player. His coach uses him to shut down top players on the other team and he played at least 29 minutes in both games they played in the frozen 4 last year.
    9 points
  12. I would also like to caution people. You can have 1, 2, or even 5 of the best players on the planet and still not sniff a championship. Ovechkin got his what, year 15? Think of how many great players barely even get that chance. Acting woe is me all the time because the Wild "only made it to the first or second round" is kinda silly, considering you aren't handed anything. If anything, the Wild are going to win a championship or even a round or two like the Blues did: lucky goaltending. Acting like every team on the planet HAS to have all bases covered every single year is fucking impossible. It's also kinda sad if you're just expecting things to happen because some dream scenario popped into your head. Any dumb trade proposal you make has the same chance to fail or succeed as standing pat does.
    8 points
  13. The plan has been to phase out those veterans piecemeal when prospects or free agents prove viable enough to actually take those spots. You can't predict injuries, setbacks, or even drastic improvements like Rossi did. Outside of Hartman's boneheaded decisions and lackluster fall (and maybe Johansson because Nyquist was out of the price range), I fail to see how going from an afterthought team chasing ghosts one season to pretty much always in playoff contention can't be seen as improvement. They doing this in spite of Kaprizov only being around for 1/3 of the season, Ohgren and Khusnutdinov not exactly lighting up the score sheet, and Ek and Faber kinda faltering offensively. Spurgeon, Gaudreau, and Middleton bounced back like the hope was. They didn't trade Gus away when all signs pointed to that being a smart play...and look who's laughing now. You also can't do anything midseason if you wanted to. All the injuries made any miracle trade on ice. We saw Jiricek (the swing for the future) already play better than Bogo, Merrill, and Dermott, and guess what: nearly all of those underachievers are going to be gone or tradeable after this season. I'm not saying the team is a world beater. But the team is far better than it has any right to be, given all the holes that are present. Holes that get fixed by subtracting with ease. Zuccarello is only around one more season anyway, provided he doesn't take anymore pucks to the nuts. Anyone wanting Faber, Boldy, or Rossi traded for greener pasture players or SIZE is just asking for a Nashville fall. Forgive me for living through the Fletcher flops and seeing the positive side of a rebuild on the fly.
    8 points
  14. Aren't Boldy and Rossi already top 6 forwards? Saying Faber was lucky to play with him is kind of disrespectful to Faber. Coaches put Faber with Slavin and played both of them all those minutes because he thought they were the two best defensemen. They even had Faber out there on the PK. Did you not see the two plays that Faber made one on one vs. McDavid yesterday? You say you have to give up good players to get good ones? The Rangers got Miller for a 25-year-old winger that averages less than a 1/2 a point per game player, a 22 year old 5th round pick defenseman that has 15 games played and a protected first round pick. Vegas got Eichel and a third rounder for Tuch, who at the time was 25 and had averaged about 1/2 point a game for his career, a prospect and a first and a second. You can get good players without giving up a 23-year-old in Boldy who is averaging .846 pgp who is signed for 5 more years, a 22-year-old top pairing defenseman in Faber who is signed for 8, and a 23-year-old in Rossi who has improved dramatically every year.
    8 points
  15. I wouldn't say that Boldy wasn't good. He wasn't great but played a solid game against some of the best players in the world. He led the forwards in ice time, had two shots on goal and his 5 attempts was tied for first on the team. He was also third amongst forwards with two blocked shots. He was probably at worst the 6th best forward on the ice last night for team USA behind Matthews, Guentzel, Larkin, B. Tkachuk and Eichel in my opinion. Faber, I thought was very noticeable. I remember two occasions when he was one on one with McDavid, once at the end of the power play and another towards the end of the third period and he knocked the puck away both times. Not to mention that he logged over 28 minutes and was not on the ice for any of the goals scored against them. I personally thought this was his best game of the tournament.
    8 points
  16. Agreed. Saw that with Fabes too, first game was a little tentative and nervous but he really settled in. Both of them have proven they can hang with the best in the world, hopefully it does wonders for his confidence and he goes on a major heater starting Saturday.
    8 points
  17. I think just about everyone on this site would love to have B. Tkachuk wearing a Wild sweater, but I would guess that the majority would say your proposal is a little over the top.
    8 points
  18. This would not be 1C money though -- that's the appeal of signing him long term to play next to Kaprizov. JEEK + Rossi for a combined $13-14 MM AAV would be very enviable 3 years from now.
    8 points
  19. I would just like to add that the Florida Panthers, the defending Stanley Cup Champions and leaders of their division were shut out 4 times from December 12th-December 28. The teams were Vancouver, Calgary, Tampa and Montreal. The first two on the road, the last two at home. They had 4 straight wins sandwiched between those 4 shutouts.
    8 points
  20. What are you talking about? Nobody is saying he’s the second coming of Bobby Orr. People are excited and rightfully so. When you have a player that is doing things that no other player has done such as score 50pts as a true college freshman, there’s good reason to be excited. He also lead his world Junior team to gold and won a National college championship. Hes among the leaders in college hockey for points by a defenseman this year and has a bunch of records for the university of Denver. Buium scored more points than Cale Makar, Quinn Hughes, Adam Fox or Brian Leetch in their freshman year and in three of those players sophomore year. Hes on pace to score even more points than last year if he keeps it up.Do you not realize how special and elite that is? I think your apprehension comes from a lack of knowledge. I don’t see too many people saying for sure he’s going to be this or that. I see articles stating what type of company he’s put himself in. I don’t think anyone is comparing walstedt as an elite hall of fame type player. He hasn’t done anything extra ordinary in his career but he has been above his age group by a couple years and has played extremely solid in the best Swedish men’s league. What people don’t seem to realize is that even if you have the most elite goalie in the world, they aren’t going to be able to show that unless they have a very good defense in front of them. I still think walstedt is going to be good but I don’t believe he’s been breaking records and accomplishing things that few players have like Buium.
    8 points
  21. Great Article. But aren't we supposed to talk about Rossi when Tony writes an article? 😉
    8 points
  22. Whatever issues Trenin brings, he offers something the Wild didn't have: 5on5 defensive stability. A lot of us get so hung up on "where's the offense?" No one ever says, "How do we stop theirs?" There is something intrinsic to this team that works better than last year. The Wild have bought into Hynes's approach and is 10 pts ahead of the bubble despite the same if not worse injuries. Trenin is doing something that is helping the team win, even if we don't exactly see it in a scoresheet. PK problems? Seems like something Trenin alone can't fix. Only way to solve that at this rate is stay out of the box.
    8 points
  23. That seems a bit strong. 4th line tallied a nice goal. PP got lucky on a redirect from the Toronto player beating the goalie. Added an empty netter late. Maple Leafs caught some iron on shots that nearly went in, but only snuck one past Gus that went inside the goal mouth. Toronto had 9 more shot attempts, but goaltending and defense were solid for the Wild. Nice defensive game from the Wild, and great job staying out of the box to mostly remove the Toronto power play from the equation. The Wild did end up killing off the 1 penalty assessed to them.
    8 points
  24. I think this is the definition of a fantasy trade. This is a team that has a very good young core with Larkin at 28, Raymond at 22, DeBrincat at 27 and Casper at 20 at forwards and Seider at 23 on D. These are 5 of the top 8 scorers on the team. For a team that has went from 74 to 80 to 91 points and just missing the playoffs, to right now being in the playoffs, I can't see a world where they trade their captain who is signed for 6 more years.
    7 points
  25. The look on Rossi’s face after the game winner was almost like embarrassment. He was like, “yea I scored, but that was ugly”. Made me chuckle.
    7 points
  26. Would love Brady too, but with three years left on his contract after this year, the only way he gets traded is if he flat out says he wants to be traded. Ottawa is right now in a playoff spot and have some pretty good young players. Can't see a world where they would trade him besides him demanding a trade. We can wish though
    7 points
  27. “Made up” our not these guys have been playing their asses off. Fun to watch.
    7 points
  28. Playing hockey was all in the family. It’s a tale not uncommon in athletic circles. Claire Thompson grew up lacing up skates and picking up a hockey stick in Toronto. She followed the lead of her dad, Ian, and older sister, Jennifer, who each played hockey growing up. The girls started skating at a young age. It was just the thing to do, Claire said. “Just go out to the outdoor rinks and learn to skate as a family,” Thompson said. “And then my older sister started playing organized hockey, and I wanted to do everything just like she did. That’s how I kind of got started playing hockey.” That start blossomed into a successful hockey career. Thompson, 27, is flourishing in her rookie season as a Minnesota Frost defenseman. The third overall pick in the 2024 PWHL Draft has 14 points in 16 games and is one of the top scorers in the league. She played high school hockey for Martingrove Collegiate Institute and two seasons for the Toronto Junior Aeros, which won the Provincial Women’s Hockey League (also PWHL) and Provincial Championship in 2015-16. Looking at Thompson’s production from the blue line, it’s easy to refer to her as an offensive defenseman. She leads the Frost with 11 assists and is tied with forward Taylor Heise for second in points with 14. There’s a good reason for that: She started as a center and didn’t switch to defense until later in high school. She was a defensive, play-making center, and her dad wanted to see if she could switch to playing on the blue line. “My dad just thought that my skillset would translate into being a skilled, efficient defenseman,” Thompson said. “He brought it up to me to see if it was something that I was interested in considering, and I said that I was.” They talked to her coach, and by the next season, she fully switched over to defense. She said they didn’t know exactly how it would turn out or if it would be a good decision. “It’s obviously panned out pretty well,” said Thompson, adding that she has no regrets about the position swap. But hockey isn’t Thompson’s only passion. She wanted to become a doctor ever since she could remember. Thompson always liked math and science. She also had another family tie; her grandfather was a doctor. He died when she was young, and “I think that was always kind of in the back of my mind.” That career aspiration – of becoming a doctor – was realistic and attainable while Thompson was growing up. Playing professional hockey was not. She always saw hockey as a way to help her get admitted into the best university she could “because, unfortunately, at that time there wasn’t a big pro women’s league to aspire to be a part of, despite there being the Olympics and that always being a dream.” Hockey on the collegiate, international stage Thompson played hockey at Princeton from 2016 to 2020 and was a captain her senior season. She scored 31 goals and 87 points in 128 career games while being named a four-time ECAC All-Academic selection, three-time AHCA All-American Scholar, and two-time Academic All-Ivy honoree. As a junior, she finished third on her team in scoring and led defensemen with nine goals and 28 points. While the Olympics was ultimately her dream, Thompson didn’t make the Canadian national team until her senior year. So, from her high years and most of college, she didn’t think professional ice hockey was a viable career option. She hadn’t made the national team until then, and there wasn’t another hockey league worth putting her medical school dreams on hold. She graduated from college with her undergraduate degree in 2020. After making the national team, she took two years off of academics to chase her Olympic dream for the 2022 Games, where she won a gold medal with Canada in Beijing. In the process, she broke the Olympic record for the most points scored by a defenseman in a single tournament with 13 points (two goals, 11 assists) in seven games. Thompson also won International Ice Hockey Federation World Championship gold in 2021 and silver in 2023 with Team Canada. Following the 2022 Olympic cycle, Thompson started her medical school journey in August 2022 for the fall semester at NYU. She wants to pursue orthopedic surgery. The summer following her first year of med school, the PWHL presented an opportunity. However, Thompson was already committed to another year of school. When the puck dropped on the PWHL inaugural season in January 2024, Thompson took a year off from competitive hockey and was busy studying and working toward her medical degree. “I had never really planned to take a whole year off hockey,” Thompson said. “The year prior to that, I had played in the PWHPA and with the national team and was able to do both with school. And then the league (PWHL) kind of came together late last summer, early in the fall.” With everything so new, it wasn’t clear how she could pursue hockey and education simultaneously as she’d done previously. But once she found out the terms of the Collective Bargaining Agreement, weighing the hockey requirements versus her med school requirements, she focused on school but also how she could continue to play hockey. Drafted by the champs When Minnesota celebrated its Walter Cup Championship, Thompson had completed two years of school and entered the 2024 PWHL Draft. Thompson, like other players, was not at Roy Wilkins Auditorium in St. Paul, attending the PWHL Draft on June 10, 2024. Instead, she watched the proceedings from her med school apartment. She and her roommates and friends had a draft party. There were a few Minnesotans in the room who were excited when Thompson’s name was called in the first round by the defending PWHL champion. That night, she told the media via virtual video press conference that entering the draft was a “really difficult decision” because she loves med school. Still, her “sights have been set on continuing to play professional hockey during this period of my life.” Thompson expressed her excitement at being drafted to Minnesota that night. “I’m just so excited to be a part of such a successful team coming off the most recent championship,” she said on draft night. “I couldn’t think of a better place to start my professional ice hockey career. “They always say ‘absence makes the heart grow fonder.’ So not being able to play this year has really reinvigorated my love for hockey.”
    7 points
  29. The Minnesota Wild have employed more than their fair share of players from Finland, the European hockey hotbed. Some are among the most impactful players in the organization’s history. The club’s affinity for Finns eventually earned it a new nickname. The Finnesota Wild. Heck, there even used to be a Finnish hockey podcast with the same name. While the team hasn’t had a Finn suit-up since Kaapo Kahkonen played 25 games in the 2021-22 season, that has a chance to change in the coming years. Over the past two drafts, the Wild have selected three Finnish players, all of whom the organization hopes to develop into NHL players. In 2023, they selected Rasmus Kumpulainen; in 2024, they selected Aron Kiviharju and Sebastian Soini. All three prospects participated for Team Finland in the 2025 World Junior Championship in December and January. The Finns showed well in the tournament, making it to overtime of the gold medal game, where they eventually fell to Team USA. For Kumpalainen, it was his second time playing for Finland in the World Juniors, while Kiviharju and Soini participated for the first time. I watched all seven of Finland’s games in the tournament and paid particular attention to the trio of Wild prospects to get a sense of who they are as players and, more importantly, what they might become. My biggest takeaway was that of the three, Aron Kiviharju has the best chance to become an impact player. Aron Kiviharju - Defense Shoots: Left - 5-foot-10, 181 lbs. Current Team: HIFK (Liiga) Acquired: 2024 NHL Draft, 4th round (No. 122 overall) Kiviharju endeared himself to Wild fans on draft day last summer when he told Bill Guerin that he had just made the steal of the draft when the Wild selected him in the fourth round. After missing most of his draft season due to a dislocated kneecap, the once highly-touted Finn had slipped down draft lists and was none too pleased. He’s rebounded nicely with a solid post-draft year thus far, playing in Finland’s top professional league and earning a spot on the Finnish World Junior squad. At that tournament, Kivharju was named captain of a team full of older NHL prospects, which speaks volumes of his character and demeanor on and off the ice. The confidence that led Kiviharju to declare to Guerin is also visible in how he plays the game. While he may not project as a high-end prospect, there’s reason to believe he has enough tools to make an impact in the NHL. However, there is some uncertainty about how his game might translate as he moves up levels. Let’s dig into his game a bit. Strengths The game calms down when Kiviharju has the puck on his stick. He handles it with poise, and it’s extremely rare to see him make a bad decision. He has a knack for understanding the game’s trajectory and adjusting in real-time. When things break down, and players around him start to scramble, Kiviharju makes calm plays to get the puck out of the zone by skating it out of trouble or relieving pressure with short passes against the grain to evade forechecks. When his team struggles to generate offense, he’ll activate in the offensive zone to try and create a spark. Kiviharju’s poise with the puck allows him to be effective offensively when walking the blue line to create passing or shooting lanes. He doesn’t have a hard shot and prefers to make a play. Still, he uses his teammates well and can break down defenses by interchanging with forwards and attacking soft spots to create space. Kiviharju uses strong footwork to move laterally while walking the line but keeps his torso towards the play. That allows him to see the ice and keep options open. All of this is on display in the clip below. Kiviharju recognized an opportunity to attack a collapsed defense and created a goal: Kiviharju uses situational awareness to disrupt plays and deny options with his stick and body positioning in his own zone. As a smaller defenseman, he holds his own in board battles. He uses solid footwork and positioning to gain leverage, spin out of contact with possession, or poke a puck to a teammate, similar to Jared Spurgeon. Kiviharju’s footwork and sturdy frame mean he rarely takes big hits. His breakout passes are a joy to watch. He consistently throws passes to the tape at the right pace for the situation and can wire or finesse them. He isn’t a dynamic skater, but Kiviharju is efficient in that he stays balanced. He doesn’t lose his form, which usually allows him to get from point A to B at the right time. When defending rushes in the neutral zone, Kiviharju handles himself well when forced to back up against a quick transition and can read attacks to string plays out and get into passing lanes. Question marks My biggest question regarding Kiviharju’s ability to be a reliable NHL defenseman is whether he has the pace necessary to defend against players who attack him wide with speed. He’s not the swiftest backward skater. Kiviharju usually adjusts for that with positioning and awareness, but he can have trouble recovering if he gets caught flat-footed or there’s a quick counter off a turnover. That isn’t an issue too often for him now, but I could see it being something that NHL teams might exploit if he isn’t able to add some explosiveness to his backward stride or improve the power he gets when turning from backward to forwards so he can beat guys to the near side post. Kiviharju also tends to be overconfident when defending one-on-one and goes for a poke check in situations where he shouldn’t. As he moves up levels, players will also be able to exploit this. Kiviharju will have to learn to adapt his game to leagues where he’s no longer a top player who can get away with unnecessary risks simply because he’s better than everyone. I am confident he can, but it might require time and growing pains. The play below is a perfect example of something he does well and also where he has room for growth. Note how Kiviharju uses his strong lateral push to recover and get into position quickly. (He was only out of position because he got crossed up with a forward covering the point). Once he gets there, instead of relying on that positioning to deny or deflect a shot, he goes for a poke check and misses. The result is a goal against. Finally, it’s fair to wonder about Kiviharju’s NHL role. He’s an effective offensive player but not a dynamic one. He can quarterback a power play unit, but he is probably more of a distributor than someone who can be a scoring threat and would probably not be a top-two option for that role on good teams. Kiviharju isn’t a physical presence. While he doesn’t get pushed around often, he might struggle against heavy opponents. He moves well enough to defend in all situations, but Kiviharju is probably not a dynamic enough skater to be a shutdown defender against top players. Where exactly he’d fit in a lineup will have to be clarified with time. Projection When I watch Kiviharju play, I see a future NHL defenseman. He can probably be a No. 4 to 6 defenseman with time, but it might take 4 to 5 years to get there. Kiviharju’s intelligence and poise will separate him from other players with similar toolkits. If he can adapt his game to the AHL and then the NHL, he can become the type of player that coaches love because he’s well-rounded, won’t make bad decisions with the puck, and is an efficient distributor up the ice. It remains to be seen if Kiviharju is the steal of the 2024 draft. Still, if he can go from being a fourth-round pick to becoming an NHL mainstay, that would be an exceptional outcome for Judd Brackett and the rest of the Wild’s scouting staff.
    7 points
  30. Here's what I'm really looking forward to: Both Buium and Faber seem to have that "it" factor. They are able to elevate to 120% of their normal play when the moment calls for it. Whether it's playing 30 minutes a game, or whether it's hitting that clutch goal or driving play. Having 2 of those on a team is amazing and a reason I might not want to pair up Buium and Faber. Think about this: We could have 2 top pairing defensive units on a bargain pricetag. Maybe it's overkill, but to get back to MNH03's idea of trading Rossi, Boldy and Faber for Thompson and Tuch. While the short term on this looks like it might be a win, and Thompson and Tuch would look good here, I think losing Faber would really be a detriment to our longterm success. I still believe in the 3-4 hits on 2/3 drafts for longterm success. Getting a core of guys around the same age group with tutelage from an older draft. That's what we have in the '20-22 draft group. Sure, we traded for 2 of those guys and I didn't include that in my research, but having that group of 8ish guys from 3 drafts that can play a significant role tends to build championship caliber teams. I'm ready to give this type of build a run. There's no guarantees that either is the way to go, but I like what I see from those drafts.
    7 points
  31. Ya a bunch of rumblings from a lot of people. Russo stated on a recent podcast that folks should be careful to temper their expectations. He went on to mention how Faber is pretty much the exception for a defensive player making an impact upon arrival. I’m optimistic but I’m just going to wait and watch him develop at his own pace.
    7 points
  32. I would expect Ohgren and Shore to head to Iowa and try to gain some positive cap room over the next 2 weeks. Ohgren will be back, but he'll stay sharp getting to play some games.
    7 points
  33. You act like Thompson and Tuch are available. And I would rather have Boldy who already scores about as much as Tuch does and is 5 years younger with a higher ceiling. It is so easy to be a fantasy GM and after your team is one of the 31 teams that does not win a cup you can say see, I told you we should have made this move or that move. And just because Vegas won a cup with Eichel, it sure doesn't mean we would have. They were far closer to being a contender than we are. Vegas traded Tuch a prospect and picks for him. You are suggesting we should have given up two of our top prospects who are on pace for 66 and 67 points this year for Eichel who will probably put up 100, but doubt he hits 133. I know this. I will be a fan of the Wild, whether they win 5 cups or 0 cups. I will root for the team that we have and will still root for them in the future when they are all gone and not be negative about every little thing they do or do not do. All the complaining about this team that has lost their best player for 18 games and counting, and multiple other top players for 10 or more games and we still have the 7th best point percentage in the league. As I said in another post, this is the first time in the Wild's history that they have a true superstar, a very good young core, in Faber, Boldy and Rossi that have not hit their peak, and a top prospect pool with probably 4 players ready to contribute next year. Although it is tough to be patient with a team that has not even been to the cup finals in their history, (excluding the North Stars), if there has ever been a time in their history to be patient it is now. See where we are at the end of 2027 and if we are where Vegas was when they traded for Eichel, or the Panthers when the traded for Tkachuk, then we make a move.
    7 points
  34. I agree with Burnt toast. Really can’t believe people are hating on Faber and want to get rid of him already. He is 22 and only on his second full season. Yes his point production is down a bit from last year, 6 goals and 15 assists in 50 games this year compared to 8 and 39 in 82 last year, but he is a plus 10 this year compared to a minus 1 last year. Maybe the 8.5 mill is an overpay next year, but if he continues to grow as player I think he will be underpaid in the middle and back half of his contract.
    7 points
  35. If only the Senators had traded for Brady Tkachuk, they might have stopped Ryan Hartman from driving their star's head into the ice.
    7 points
  36. Khusnutdinov struggled with Lauko out with injury. I think the Wild should keep Lauko if he's willing to take a decent contract and all the other dominoes fall properly. I think the team runs better when there is chemistry in places: Kap with Zuccarello, Boldy with Ek, Rossi with...everybody, and Khus and Lauko. I wouldn't say Lauko will be a priority with so many other things the Wild need to focus on this summer. But keeping him might be a blessing in disguise.
    7 points
  37. Shout out to Hynzy for healthy scratching Chiz and T-biz. Both players needed a wake up call and it also put rest of team on notice that sleep walking thru middle of season ain’t what a hynzy coached club does. I’m beginning to love me some Hynzy. His pressers are solid. Bro lives for this shit and it shows. Give him a couple full grown top sixers and let’s see what he can do. Good hire by Guerin.
    7 points
  38. I have this feeling about the Wild. They are not winning the cup this year. They are not winning the cup this year. They are not winning the cup this year. Any trade should be looked at long term. If it brings an awesome top 6 at the right salary for years to come without giving up too much, great. If not wait for the offseason. And as far as trading Jiricek, we sent a 1 and a 2 for him. So if you trade him, you are losing a high value young defenseman, a 1 and a 2 that you already gave up. The player you get in return better be a home run or you just fleeced yourself.
    6 points
  39. At age 37 we are getting the best of what we can expect of him now. Expecting much more from him particularly without Kaprizov feeding him is a big ask.
    6 points
  40. Best undersized Austrian NHL center to ever play the game. No.1 star of the game, #23, Marco Rossi!!! Let's throw another shrimp on the barbie!
    6 points
  41. Hopefully Boldy learns to be more selfish and hits the net more. Improve the one-timer. Canada is a damn good team. Boldy could make more of so.e chances but not lighting up Canada is not an embarrassment. He's way better than his golf-offseason. He and Faber are both really good new-core guys IMO. Hopefully they do get even better and learn how to become more effective.
    6 points
  42. So I've liked Big Yak since he played for NSH. He was always pestering the Wild puck-hounding or engaging in physical battles. He had some flashes too where he'd score on a breakaway. My interest was in his size and strength MN didn't have. At the time he was around 1.7M, I think? GMBG doubling his AAV to secure him through free agency has been sold as an overpay. He's currently sitting at 0.24ppg. This is -0.02ppg below his career average. Guerin knows more about the cap and where that was headed than us. Trenin's number wouldn't have made the Wild's 24/25 season way easier to navigate, had it been 2.75M. It might have reduced the reflux about his production but the decision to sign him was never an expectation that he'd become Treninsenko and wear #91. I agree watching him for fifty games, his highlight reel is gonna be short and sweet. What he said in his interview with MN after signing was something I liked. MN was easy to play against. Look at NSH and the Wild today. Just sayin, Trenin isn't the reason MN loses games or why they have cap issues. Some might think he's a bum or is overpaid but I believe he's a player that hardens your team. I've liked him on a line with Knudi and I see him as a Foligno insurance policy AND multiplier. When they're both going/healthy you can assemble two lines with a big man OR put them together on the wings. I love making fun of things, so I'm not defending Trenin form that.(Little fact, his middle name is Vyacoslavovich. Gonna need a nickname for sure.😆) I am gonna defend his value and Guerin's contracts. The Wild aren't bad and never signed guys to big, nasty contracts that have soured or become problems right away. You actually have to propagandize that message on a hockey chat website for two years and people still don't buy it.(Hehe, HW.com🙃) Super-long post because I've stayed out of most debate recently. I think the Wild are slowly but surely growing into a team with a great opportunity. Looking at neverending rebuilds and wheels falling off organizations around the NHL, I'm just fine with the undersized Rossis or overpayed Trenins of this team...
    6 points
  43. Lol. Never happy. Islanders had won 7 of 9. Not saying they are great but a win is a win. More importantly 10 points in past seven games before the break, and doing it without Kap. Go Wild!!
    6 points
  44. You say it like what you say is fact. It is an opinion just like mine. I use stats to back up what my opinion is. Necas last year scored 53 points and was a minus 9 player and you say his would have unquestionably been our second best player last year. Not sure about that. Yes, he might end up being a ppg player or even get 100 points in a season or two. Also possible based on their age and where they already are, that Boldy and Rossi will to. It is also possible that they flatline or regress. If Rossi and Boldy were 25 or 26 and producing like this and never sniffed a season as a ppg player, I might feel differently about trading them. I just have a hard time thinking you trade away 60+ point players who still have 2-4 more years of development.
    6 points
  45. And what young studs other than Rossi, Boldy, and Faber have allowed Guerin to pay them instead? Addison, Beckman, and Walker were failures. Addison of such catastrophic kind that Bogo and Chisholm were cheap yet immediate improvements. Yurov could have come here but said no for another year, but he and Buium are next up to prove something. Ohgren is "too good for the AHL but struggling in the NHL" and Khus's PPG is sub 10%. Sorry the answers don't fall from the sky. Kinda like that $15m hole is "so easy to fix.". Injury issues forced cap space to wither to nothing. Hartman's injury was a very small part of that. Guerin has had to fix Fletcher's mess and still has a lot of darts to throw if we wait it out until next year.
    6 points
  46. I believe this also coincides to the injury to Kaprizov who tried playing through it for a couple of weeks in December. Now we are subjected to a counterpunch method where we pack it in defensively and hope the other team has a breakdown we can exploit. I would expect our offensive stats to get worse, but we can win games like we did last night just by being frustratingly frugal with giving up chances.
    6 points
  47. So, in execution Boldy/Ek/Zuccarello did "ok." Ek and Boldy did their best to hold the offensive zone whenever they could. Boldy still can't hit the broadside of a barn on open looks, but what else is new? Foligno/Rossi/Hartman and Ohgren/Gaudreau/Trenin did not have good games at all. Didn't keep up with Toronto's pace, and Toronto wasn't even playing all that good. Ohgren at least had some nice shifts where he didn't make mistakes...but he's still nowhere near ready to be a threat for this team. That 4th line though: Goddamn. Someone stole their lunch money, and they just bitchslapped the Leafs all the way in the offensive zone. They had some miscues in the d-zone, but everyone did. It's going to be hard to switch lines. The main issue is Foligno, Hartman, and Ohgren all kinda do the same things. Ohgren for sure isn't ready for an offensive role. I would put Lauko on 2nd over any of them...but I've given up thinking that would ever happen. Lauko in Top 6 is my version of ODC's Khusnutdinov dream. Never going to happen, even if it kinda should.
    6 points
  48. He'll be fine, he's shown why we acquired him but there's times where he leaves you scratching your head. I think his defensive metrics were still good from last I've seen but he needs to bring it every shift, every night. Hynes has history with him and probably knows which buttons to push to get him going.
    6 points
  49. Looks like he throws the body a lot and also turns the puck over a lot. Svech had better seasons prior to this one and I have no idea why he's been less of a point scorer this year. Clearly a good PP scorer, but he is -5 for a team that is #2 in the conference and has 29 more goals scored than goals against this season. Boldy doesn't have any years on the negative side of the +/- ledger. Svech has drawn 6 more penalties and tallied a few more PP goals, but also taken 3 more penalties. Svech is getting 60% offensive zone starts compared to Boldy's <47%, but Boldy is tallying more points this season, and possibly rates as a better 2-way player. Boldy is well ahead on even strength scoring per 60 this season. Seem like they are pretty even and one could argue either way. In the last 4 years, Svech is +33 with nearly .84 points per game while Boldy is +29 with more than .85 PPG.
    6 points
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