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You have to admire Rossi's off-season progress. Great work ethic... and it has paid off. Hats off to the young man.9 points
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Playing Kaprisov 27 and Yurov less than 7 is not SMART coaching9 points
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Looking like Yurov will be getting those 1st line minutes some folks have been clamoring for. Hope he seizes the opportunity.8 points
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I read in these comments so many times that if Rossi was so good, how come he was not offer sheeted by someone or shown interest by other teams. Does that mean players like Luke Hughes or Mason McTavish this year were not seen as great players because they were not offer sheeted either? Or how about Moritz Seider, Lucas Raymond, Seth Jarvis, or Matthew Beniers last year? I would say all of these players were as good or better than Rossi when they were RFA's and none of them received anything from any other teams either. Maybe, just maybe Rossi did not receive one because teams very rarely give offer sheets and it had nothing to do with his skill or perception from other teams in the league.8 points
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Rookie defenseman Zeev Buium has hit the ground running in his first NHL season, displaying the skating, creativity, and playmaking skills that make him one of the best prospects in hockey. The 19-year-old phenom has nine points in his first 16 games, which is tied for third in rookie scoring and 20th among NHL defensemen. Still, there have been some expected growing pains, exacerbated by the fact that the Minnesota Wild coaching staff has had trouble finding a defensive partner who can complement the dynamic, free-wheeling Buium, who occasionally is as much a rover as he is a defenseman. Entering this past week, Buium had played at least 20 five-on-five minutes with Brock Faber (20:30), Zach Bogosian (28:13), David Jiricek (53:19), and Jared Spurgeon (89:57). Buium has experienced mixed results, partly because he must play in tandem with someone who can read off his aggressive, rover-like mentality, something that is easier said than done. However, the search may be over. Over the Wild’s past two games against the Carolina Hurricanes and the New York Islanders, the Wild activated Daemon Hunt. They’ve slotted him next to Buium on the third pair, with the left-handed Hunt playing on his offside, allowing Buium to continue to play on his natural left side. The early returns have been fantastic. Through 22:42 of five-on-five ice time, the two have produced an expected goals percentage of 54.47%, including a dominating 70.77% in just over 15 minutes of ice time against an uninspired Islanders team on Friday. Hunt and Buium appear to have found instant chemistry, and after some early struggles against Carolina that reflected the team’s performance for much of that game, the duo has really begun to pop. Hunt is a talented, intelligent player who makes good reads, decisive puck plays, is sound positionally, and doesn’t hesitate to join the rush when he sees an opportunity. He has good feet and a solid center of gravity, and almost always positions himself so he’s facing the play. While Hunt is not an overly powerful or dynamic skater, he has excellent footwork. He makes efficient turns, weight shifts, and pivots, and because he’s always facing the play, his movements are usually in the right direction for a given situation. That makes Hunt an ideal partner for Buium, because when Buium is at his best, he’s wheeling around all three zones, slicing through lanes and breaking down defenders with deceptive fakes and excellent lateral movement. Basically, he’s all over the place. Hunt seems to understand how Buium wants to play and, more importantly, reacts quickly and gets to the right places. Since Hunt is always facing the play, he reads Buium’s movements and works in tandem with him in all three zones. It’s not uncommon to see them switch back and forth between the right and left sides three or four times in a shift, and the duo has a knack for understanding when to do so. Here's an example of the type of shift these two regularly turned in on Friday. Watch how Buium (No. 8 ) and Hunt (No. 48) work in tandem to cover ice and move creatively in all three zones, and how they create and fill space. Notice also how both of them defend with footwork and positioning: That was basically a perfect shift and exemplifies what makes Buium and Hunt a compatible defensive pair. Hunt is the first to take the initiative offensively, working a give-and-go with Zuccarello and slicing down low, with Buium reading that play and filling in on the right side. Their pass doesn’t connect, but it was a perfect read by each of them. After they retrieve the puck, they interchange in their own zone, and Buium transports the puck into the offensive zone. When it was time to defend, Buium used his skating to stick with his man and keep the puck to the outside, while Hunt used his 6-foot-1, 201-pound frame and strong footwork to out-leverage his man in front. He then beats his man to the puck down low and creates a turnover. This pairing works because Hunt doesn’t just defer to Buium positionally. That’s the key to taking what Buium can do and elevating it to the next level. A defense partner that’s able to read off of him and work in tandem to create a five-man unit moving up ice and pressuring in the zone unlocks Buium’s ability to break down defenses by giving him the options that he needs to be able to attack with the puck freely. Sometimes, he allows himself to get caught on an island with the puck, and that’s when bad turnovers happen. Hunt’s play reading and movement might be able to give Buium another option and ensure he has that safe outlet, and Hunt’s ability to jump into open ice helps create the space that Buium uses to deadly effect. Here are a couple of examples of Buium and Hunt working in tandem to interchange up high, creating space and pressure in the offensive zone: Notice how Hunt reads Buium’s intentions when he decides to walk the blue line, often recognizing immediately that Buium is going to slice across laterally, and skating hard to fill in his place on the left side. That’s an example of the quick chemistry that the two have developed. Hunt also has a strong offensive-zone presence, using his play-reading and understanding of time and space to jump up in the play at opportune times. Here are a couple of examples of him taking the initiative offensively: When Buium played with other defense partners, particularly Spurgeon, it seemed there was a tendency to sit back and watch what Buium was doing, ready to cover for his mistakes. While that is occasionally understandable, it also limits his effectiveness. Hunt’s willingness to play a free-flowing game is exactly what is needed beside Buium. It also works on the defensive end: The first clip above is an example of how Hunt playing on his offside can be an advantage. Buium roams to the right, and Hunt feels natural when shifting to the left; when the Islanders come in on the attack, they’re still on the opposite sides, which allows them to rotate naturally throughout the D-zone. Hunt can use his skating to recover and kill a play. In the second clip, Hunt and Buium switch sides for the O-zone faceoff, which is common practice for defensemen with righty-lefty pairs, so that each is in a good stick position to handle a won faceoff. However, with both being left-handed, this switch was clearly to allow Buium to make a play if the Wild win the faceoff. Instead, they lose it, and the Islanders come down the ice and establish possession. As the Islanders begin their cycle, Hunt and Buium switch coverage to get back to their right and left sides, and both make positive plays with positioning and footwork to help get a zone clear. The fact that Hunt and Buium press the advantage every chance they get makes a pair that can help put the hammer down and give the Wild the upper hand in possession. The thing that separates high-level teams from the pack is their ability to hound opponents relentlessly and ensure there are no easy shifts. Suppose Hunt and Buium can consistently play at a tempo that forces opponents to match it, one that seeks the initiative at every opportunity. In that case, it will make the Wild a much tougher matchup for up-tempo opponents like the Colorado Avalanche, who won’t be able to count on having a dozen shifts against a slow, overmatched third pair, as has sometimes been the case in past iterations of Wild D-pairings. It's early, and David Jiricek and Zach Bogosian are also looking for chances to get playing time. Buium and Hunt are young players who will have some tough nights from time to time. Still, Hunt has brought a dynamic to the Wild’s back end that they didn’t have. If he and Buium can continue to display chemistry and cohesion, the Wild will become a much more well-rounded, dangerous team.8 points
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Stats aside watching Rossi play he’s clearly a very important player for the Wild. Every year he gets better. I’m having a blast watching him because his ceiling is kind of a mystery. I’m thinking 70-80 as CS mentioned. Who knows though maybe even higher.8 points
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8 points
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That's just utter nonsense with "very available" Only offersheet was possible for other teams If Wild are sellers upcoming trade deadline we will see how other teams judge Rossi8 points
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Keep him on the team, and they will succeed. He has an innate knack to be clutch when a lot of the team isn't. Kap and Boldy are great, but Rossi is right there with them.8 points
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Maybe it is just me, but I am not seeing superstar play by Kappy this season. I see someone who is trying but not getting it done. Too many turnovers and too little puck control.8 points
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Ugh these would ve trading our young prospects for another journeyman. No thanks. Let’s wait for a home run mega trade later in year8 points
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Well isn't this the "learning curve" we were all expecting? As good as Zeev and Jiri look at times, they have just as many mistakes at critical times. Yurov looks good, but he isn't going to put up a lot of points for a while. I'm loving Yurov as C though... I hope we can afford to continue to groom him there. Bottom line is we are going to lose games if we play these guys. The gamble is that in a couple months they will reach a level to where we can compete. All the young guys are improving almost every game. Let's not all cry in our beers like a bunch of fair weathers. This is what we signed up for and have been screaming for. Play the young guys! The real beef here is our 2nd line. Complete fail with no silver linings. Tarasenko and Nojo have maybe a little value on the PP with their singular talents but really have no business playing 5v5 in the NHL.8 points
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When 90 & 91 make up two of your top 6, you’re a pretender not a contender. NoJo is NoJo. 91 is not even NoJo. The Sanko gamble didn’t pay, cut your losses and hide him in bottom six. Another Guerin FAIL.8 points
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Most important: Foligno and Trenin are just wrecking faces. A lot of the Wild's success and energy last night was in no small part to laying into Vegas hard. This team will probably never be a track meet team. If the first part of the season is any indication, they shouldn't try. It led to them stumbling really hard. Hynes talked about "identity" a lot. Punching one of the highest scoring teams in the mouth and keeping the last 4-5 opponents to 2 goals or less is what Wild games are. Hunt for Jiricek also made a huge difference. One day, Jiricek may be better, but results never lie: Hunt is a better fit.7 points
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Marco Rossi has been sidelined by a lower-body injury, according to a report from The Athletic’s Michael Russo. As a result, Russo and I must (separately) write about David Kampf. It would be one thing to write about Kampf joining a team other than the Minnesota Wild. Kampf is a solid role player who delivers middle-six quality forward play from the center position. His defensive impacts are effective, and he can chip in on the penalty kill when needed. His skill in the faceoff dot is also solid. He’s won between 51% and 53% of his faceoffs in each of the past six seasons, something that any beat writer (or me) will have to take a sentence or two to tell you about. I almost wasted another 15 minutes in Excel providing more context on just how many extra possessions this comes out to, until I remembered: I don’t care, and you shouldn’t either. Here is a list of things that David Kampf simply does not do: Drive offense Score goals Assist on goals Skate on the ice at the same time as his teammates have scoring chances Sure, it happens occasionally. But Kampf does none of these things above a fourth-line level. That is to say, below the 25th percentile. That has been true each of the past two years, as confirmed by Dom Luszczyszyn’s analytical model. There are many incorrect responses you could make to these numbers. Analytics are unfair to role players. They don’t know he’s shutting down the top line every night! Luszczyszyn’s model specifically quantifies the offensive and defensive impacts of opponents and teammates for the 2024-25 season. Kampf actually gets deployed against his opponent’s best defenders and worst offensive threats. The net effect was about two goals for and two goals against. I don’t believe in those made-up stats. Kampf’s faceoff percentage is something you can take to the bank. Made-up, like “goals” and “assists?” I’ll concede that “offensive impacts” are more of a black box. However, if you want to get real, offensive impact is mainly made up by shot attempts, the King of Hockey, with context given to the location of those shots. Compare that to faceoffs. While they are always credited to one team or the other as the winner, there’s no context for the quality of a faceoff win. The team that wins the faceoff can turn it over on the next puck touch. It also lacks context for where a faceoff occurs. Most teams give their most valuable faceoffs to their best centers, meaning the quality of competition has a massive impact on faceoff percentage, which raw faceoff win rate doesn't capture. Do you know who this looks like? Do you know which player on the 2024-25 Minnesota Wild looked just like David Kampf, but a little bit better? Freddy Gaudreau. We did it. We recreated Freddy Gaudreau in the aggregate. Let me be clear: I think Gaudreau is a serious NHL player. He could fit on many NHL rosters. But didn’t Minnesota seek a fourth-line center in free agency? If Nico Sturm weren’t a serious upgrade, why else send out Gaudreau? If the Wild wanted both players, they could have kept both! They traded Gaudreau for a reason, and it isn’t that the 2025 fourth-round pick they acquired for him is going to help them win a Stanley Cup. It’s that another role-playing bottom-six forward does not fit on this roster! And, Freddy Gaudreau is better than David Kampf! The only area Kampf has Gaudreau beat is that he will win between three and five more faceoffs out of every 100 faceoffs they see. None of this even begins to drive at the heart of the issue. It’s not that David Kampf should never take an NHL ice sheet again. He just brings nothing to the Wild that they don’t already have, while addressing none of the issues that have Minnesotans questioning this team’s playoff hopes. Examine this Wild lineup without Rossi: Kampf would slot in at 3C. Perhaps Yurov gets to stay on the third line, but it doesn’t really matter when you look at the wingers in that bottom-six. What if, instead, the Wild addressed that problem? Imagine if this team played with the above lineup, waited to accrue cap space, and put it into a second-line winger. Does it really look that different from blowing a quarter of their current cap space on Kampf and handcuffing their options at the trade deadline? (By the way -- when was the last time the Wild acquired a second-line winger? Drafting Matt Boldy in 2019? Trading for Kevin Fiala in 2019? Signing Ryan Hartman in 2021? Don’t you dare count trading for Marcus Johansson at the 2023 trade deadline.) Johansson slides into a third-line role next to Tarasenko and Yurov, replaced by Hartman when Rossi returns. Both versions of that line fit the mold of the line on which Tarasenko excelled in Florida. Some rotation of Foligno, Trenin, and Hinistroza keeps all three fresh and provides flexibility on the fourth line. Most importantly, though, this would address the two glaring weaknesses of the 2025-26 Wild: They don’t have a real second line, so they can’t out-score mistakes from their rookie defensemen. David Kampf could be Mikko Koivu 2.0, and it wouldn’t address that second weakness. No matter how good the other four players defend, there will be open space to the outside of Zach Bogosian. When Zeev Buium or David Jiricek’s brain falls out and he turns the puck over on the breakout, David Kampf’s faceoff win is not coming to the rescue. These things will happen many times over the next five months. It’s what happens when teams develop new defensemen. Without a serious secondary scoring threat, Minnesota will continue to give up leads and be unable to retake them. It’s time for the Wild to address the problem that has plagued this club since Kevin Fiala departed. The problem isn’t the depth forwards, and the solution isn’t another role player. David Kampf isn’t the answer for a team with Stanley Cup aspirations.7 points
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Anyone thinking the team is "done" already can stop. The team will not just give up on its own. What this stretch should tell us is whether or not the weird parity this season has been on is a mirage or not. Too many teams are where the Wild are (no mans land). What I hope for is seeing is some separation happens so the Wild know by the fabled Thanksgiving, "What can we we do and what "should" we do, cause those are different things Wins and OT points will work wonders. The "defeatist" will only happen if all these teams just beat the Wild to a pulp and they get nothing.7 points
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Some of you guys will never ever get it. Rossi is a very effective, silent, clever Center and getting better every season. He is a playmaker, making his line scoring without losing defensive responsibility. He is not the (expensive) hey-man, but provides solid, effective productivity. In other words: you can't buy that breed.7 points
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Always been a rossi fan. Each year he gets better and takes all the criticism and works on improving those areas of his game. He also does it without fanfare or pitching a fit, making demands. If he continues to improve and hits 70 to 80pts, I'm with CS and the others that mention the trade talks better be put to bed. But I worry about Billy and his unwillingness to change as several on this board previously pointed out. I would still like to see yurov elevated as well.7 points
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If he ends the season at 70-80 points, I think any complaints will probably get ditched in a bin. I get that people want a McDavid, MacKinnon or what not, but having Kaprizov, Rossi, (and hopefully Boldy) at those kinds of point totals will calm things down. But this again goes to the "1C vs. Top 10 scoring center" argument I've had for a couple years. Haters won't be happy unless Rossi is those players levels. Reminder that Staal had 76 one time. Rossi doing anything close should be cause for celebration when Koivu, Ek, Granlund, and Staal for a cup of coffee have been the slim center pickings.7 points
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Maybe I am the odd man out in the comments here, but I feel like our defense is getting worse. This is the second game in a row where our defenders got out muscled on the puck in our own zone multiple times a game. These led to grade A chances for the Canes and puts Gus in a bad spot. And this isn't just forecheck, I'm referring to when we clearly have possession, should clear the zone but a single forward comes in on an attack and wins the puck with authority. What gives with that?7 points
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In other news Benak had another three point game. He's at 30p in 15GP, 2nd in the OHL only to his teammate.7 points
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Buium won't learn how to defend by playing wing. He has to see real NHL moves, save them in his brain archives, and not fall for it again. Same thing for all the kids, especially The Wall. Ever since Spurgeon has taken over PP1, it looks stagnant with 5 pylons. Buium needs to be put back on that unit, they were all over the ice and had a lot of success. PP2 is now the scoring unit. Yurov is going to take a little time to get used to. He's got sneaky skill and passing and sneaky acceleration. Some of his passes look to be perfectly placed but his linemates are not ready for them. To me, that would indicate he should be with more skilled linemates.7 points
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Which is exactly why Ohgren should be playing up as well.7 points
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If he was 26 or even 28, sure, but he's not so that isn't worth it.7 points
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I like the home run idea because they just are so lacking in elite skill. They have a ton of mid-grade players. Hein's suggestion of adding two upper mid-grade is the kind of move they have been making for years, and you are supposed to be hoping your youth of Yurov or Ogie or Haight can offer that kind of play. If you trust nobody in your system to be equal or better in the near future to a 30+ year old $5 million player, then what the hell have you been doing in you drafting and development? Boldy and Kap, and pretty much Faber and Buium came ready to play in the NHL. Their farm system has done jack sh*t for the last decade to prepare anybody or they have drafted players who had low ceilings. Maybe both. And let your young guys play a bit and make a couple mistakes before total banishment. It is REALLY frustrating to watch playoff highlights of other teams that all seem to have our former players playing well in the playoffs.7 points
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I’d vote for playing the kids and letting them learn this year alongside the journeyman and chalking up this season to learning. The kids are Zibo, jiri, yurov, ogz, Haight, Lambos and bankier. This would be a more fun season for this fan to watch and more productive in terms of wild future development than sliding sideways for 70 more games watching Nojo do button hooks at the blue line and Sanko looking lost and tired.7 points
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I think last year’s hot out of the gate wild was more mirage than trend. Let’s remember they were coming off their first season with hi NZ and they miss the playoffs so when they started the season last year after a full Heinze’s first full camp, they were stinging with embarrassment of missing the playoffs so we were getting peak journeyman core at the beginning of last season, they squeaked into the playoffs and the rest of history I think what we’re seeing this season is more trend than Mirage. The journeyman are all one year older slower, less motivated and that’s what we’re watching now.7 points
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Everyone select now which player from the 2025 draft you wanted at pick#20 or later, who you believe will be better than Jiricek. Keep that in mind for 4-5 years down the road when that prospect might see NHL ice for the first time.7 points
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Guerin dumped Chisholm and Merrill and went to say, "Our D is set.". They gave a PTO to Johnson. Bogo plays yes, but who has gotten in the games as soon as he got injured? Not Hunt. They are going to play Jiricek come hell or high water. He definitely tries hard, which is way more than Addison ever did. I am not worried about him. He's getting his reps, and isn't a complete dumpster fire as was feared. Joke's on Columbus I suppose. Spurgeon's got 1-2 years left, and may retire. Barring some crazy move, it is Jiricek's spot to lose.7 points
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Agreed. We are playing some of the young guys. We have to expect the mistakes. Be patient and let them learn. I don't think we are losing because of the youngs though. I think we are losing because the 2nd line isn't capable of performing their duties. The beef is definitely the 2nd line with Nojo and Senko. They need to go. I do think Ek is the silver lining. He is playing a pretty reserved style with those 2 guys because he has to... He is limiting the damage rather than being the 2nd scoring line.7 points
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Hunt has really stabilized the D pairings and seems to work well with Buium. Spurgeon and Mids are back to being comfortable. I would not say that Brodin is back to being Brodin. But even a lesser version of himself is still an adequate top 4 player. Faber has looked good. Box outs and goal side play by all 5 players on the ice is working. I'm not seeing the shots coming from the slot anymore. I would still get Jiricek on the ice. He is a part of that future core. As well as Hunt is playing I don't think he comes out of the lineup either. Perhaps a 50/50 game split between Mids/Jiricek would be the way to go. No wag BG does this though. We are getting points. He won't change it while that is happening.6 points
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6 points
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Old man feebly yells at sky. Looks to bring in another 35yr old reclamation project instead of developing player. Water is wet. Welcome to OCL and GMBG's vision of full seats on another first round exit.6 points
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BOO!!! Rossi only needs to outlast Silly G. in the organization... hopefully that happens!6 points
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Disappointing to me to watch Boldy, Gus and Faber in post game interviews all talk about how well they played and that just hanging in the game against Carolina was such a positive. When losing becomes expected and winning becomes moral victories you need to re-evaluate your roster. Where is the grit?6 points
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Why don't I like Nojo? Simple. I think he is capable of this type of play every night. But he doesn't. He disengages himself and turns his shifts into skating drills that hurt the team. The vast majority of his time with the Wild he does not play to his potential. That unwillingness to leave everything on the ice while his teammates do... ticks me off. I don't care what your contract is... play every night like you want it. That's why I loved watching Shaw play. That kid gave everything he had every night.6 points
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Mostly because he gave the appearance of just mailing it in shift after shift and plays well when he is on an expiring deal.6 points
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Smart move would be to parlay top D prospect Zeev (future potential ) for top 5 player Pasta(proven result) - that aligns us for peak years for Boldy Ek Kap and Pasta, you’d likely loose Rossi, Ohgren or Yurov and Zeev and a pick - but you can go for it all in the next 5-7 years - I don’t think it’s too bad of an outcome for either team (fair blockbuster) I bet there’ll be takers to join Wild on the cheap too next year (Panarin perhaps) reality - Bill will ship Rossi for Buravskiy or some other crap6 points
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What a horrible return for one of the few pieces that's actually working out.6 points
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November schedule: 14 games, 9 Home 5 Away. SC Contenders: CAR x2, WIN, VGK, COL. Lesser teams: VAN, NAS, NYI, CGY, SJS, ANA, PIT, CHI, BUF. Tomorrow, Vancouver is hurting with injuries, then Nashville, if we can't win those two games in a row then we're really in trouble.6 points
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Kaprizov will make 50% more than Necas. Thats insane. Kap didn't reset the market. He is an outlier and it's going to take 3 to 4 years for the market to catch up. Largest overpay in NHL history. Especially crazy when you consider the deals signed before and after him. Who is responsible Leopold or SillyG? Hard to say. Shared stupidity I guess.6 points
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Spurgeon is still making quite a few good plays on the ice, but he hasn't been quite as sound all around as he was a few years back, which isn't shocking given his age. He could still be valuable in a 3rd line role with Middleton. Might be time to put Buium with Faber and Brodin with Jiricek. If it fails, the Wild get a high pick, but what they've been trying hasn't been ideal so far. Spurgeon has been a very good player for a long time, but replacing Buium with Spurgeon on PP1 while also expecting Spurgeon to be a main contributor on PK seems like a horrible idea. Let the youth at least play where they excel. I don't even hate Buium on line 3 with Jiricek, but why limit the PP time? They certainly aren't going to deploy either of them on the PK if they can avoid it.6 points
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Guerin was on a game recently and said in no uncertain terms that the team gets too cute and tries too hard. On that same call, the opposing team scored. You would think a GM telling you to just go for the net and stop doing fancy shit would register sometimes. Maybe Boldy is one of the few trying that a bit more.6 points
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Across the board our defense has been below their norms. Even Brodin has looked pretty average. Bogo was the one guy that looked good or at least solid for what he can bring. But... I want Jiricek to play warts and all.6 points
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Exactly. Some of you guys are ridiculous. A few games into the season, and half of you guys turn into Deans, whining about everything and so quick to point fingers at anyone. I'm not defending the team as there is (obviously) a lot of room for improvement, but if you can't be patient to see how things shake out 8 games into a season, you would never be able to handle an actual rebuild. If the Wild should give up this season, then I suppose that's also your opinion on both the Oilers and the Stars? As bad as our offense has been, it's been better than theirs, AND we have more points in the standings too. It's too early in the season to call anything. The sample size is far too small and there is lots of time to make up ground. The Wild are only 5 points out of first at this point and people are acting like it's the end of March and the team is freefalling out of the playoff race.6 points
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Only question is how badly bill gets fleeced in upcoming trade. memo to bill: please don’t trade any of our kids not named Ogz. We’ve been waiting a long time for these kids. Don’t punish us by trading them now…you stupid fuck.6 points
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Absolutely!! Get Ohgren and Hunt some ice time! JoJo, Tarasenko, Foligno, Trenin, and most of our defense, have been lousy, good grief! That was the worst game I've seen Kaprizov play. Devils are a really good team that have been decimated by injury the past two seasons, but they played the night prior also. The Wild will be golfing early this spring.6 points
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Outlets ranging from ESPN to the Star Tribune reported the Minnesota Wild’s decision to trade Calen Addison and acquire Zach Bogosian as a tandem deal in 2023. “It’s not a knock on Calen,” Bill Guerin explained. “It’s just a change in direction.” Addison had played 100 games for the Wild, and Guerin had seen enough. He was shifting gears. The former Wild defenseman had scored 18 of his 29 points on the power play the year before. His 26 assists were a franchise record for rookie defensemen. However, Addison’s lousy defense made him a liability, and Guerin was ultimately right to move on from him. Addison was a minus-35 in 60 games for the San Jose Sharks the rest of that season, and the 25-year-old defenseman has spent the rest of his career in the AHL. Still, the change in direction is significant for the Wild. They made it clear they were prioritizing experience and size over talent and upside. Bogosian, 35, has remained in Minnesota, even as the stakes have changed now that the team no longer has severe cap penalties. Bogosian is hardly the player who scored ten goals for the Atlanta Thrashers during the 2009-10 season. However, the Wild feel he’s a reliable defensive player who coaches can depend on to eat minutes. They’ve continued to value veterans like Bogosian, Marcus Johansson, and Gustav Nyquist last year, creating a high-floor, low-ceiling team. A team that constantly makes the playoffs and loses immediately once they’re there. The Wild have been an F-150 trying to win a race against the league’s Ferraris under Guerin. They’re large and built Ford tough, but they’re also slow-moving and cumbersome. Ferraris win playoff games; F-150s don’t. If Addison represents the gas pedal, a player who’s all go and no brakes, then Bogosian is the clutch. They turn to him when they want to slow things down and control the game. However, a team that continues to rely on past-their-prime players in crucial roles will never contend. Unfortunately, the Wild developed a bad habit of riding the clutch under Guerin. In a car with manual transmission, the driver must step on the clutch pedal to change gears. They must also engage the clutch when the vehicle is stopped or slowing down to avoid stalling. In that instance, think of it as the equivalent of placing your foot on the ground when your bike stops. “Riding the clutch,” or pressing down on that pedal too long while moving, will wear it out. The car will also never shift into high gear because the driver must release the clutch to change gears. The Wild have been stuck in low gear because they continue to ride aging, declining players instead of prioritizing youth and upside. Guerin’s approach hasn’t yielded results. Minnesota has yet to win a playoff series since he took over in 2019. He created cap hell since buying out Zach Parise and Ryan Suter in 2021, but they have access to most of their cap space this season. Still, the Wild continue to play 30-something veterans in crucial roles in place of their young stars. They’ve escaped cap hell this year. It’s time for them to prioritize upside over experience. It’s time for them to hit the gas. Bogosian is comfort food for John Hynes and Dean Evason before him. He’s in his mid-30s and offers little upside. Still, Hynes can deploy him as an experienced player, and he fits the mold of what Guerin cherishes. “He’s a big guy. He still skates well. He brings heaviness,” said Guerin. “[Bogosian] brings some grit, and we need that. I think the experience that he brings, with all the other intangibles, he's a great teammate.” As a large player who was more productive in his 30s than in his 20s, Guerin has always valued large veteran players. He’s built the Wild in his image. Large, heavy, gritty. However, they’ve lacked a vital trait he had as a player – enough skill to compete with the league’s best teams. Guerin has typically valued experience over upside. Matt Boldy had 18 points in 14 AHL games after the Wild signed him out of Boston College in 2021. Still, Minnesota didn’t call him up for the playoffs that year, and he may have been the difference in a seven-game series against the Vegas Golden Knights. A year later, Marco Rossi made Minnesota’s roster out of camp. However, he only had one point in 19 games, and the Wild sent him to Iowa. Still, they never recalled him, even though he had 51 points in 53 games and 53 points in 63 the year before. Last year, they tried to roll with three goalies, only to send Jesper Wallstedt back to Iowa after telling him to get a place in St. Paul. Everyone understands Marc-Andre Fleury’s value to the Wild. Still, trying and failing to roster three goalies with minimal cap space and poorly communicating expectations with Wallstedt set his development back. Ultimately, the Wild prioritized winning with a shorthanded roster over player development, a common theme throughout the buyout penalties. It’s continued with higher stakes now. They were never going to win in the playoffs with Suter and Parise’s dead cap on the books. However, they should be able to with access to more cap space. Unfortunately, we’ve learned that the higher stakes have made it harder for the Wild to release the clutch. It never made sense that they were straining to make the playoffs in recent years, only to exit in the first round. They could have been playing young players to prepare them for this season, when the cap penalties are in effect, and ownership wants them to advance past the first round. Hopefully, they have accumulated enough young talent that they can trust, because it’s time to look to the future. Eventually, they’ll have to prioritize young players like David Jiricek over Bogosian; Danila Yurov and Liam Ohgren over Johansson. To truly contend, they have to stop riding the clutch and step on the gas. They’ve got to transform from an F-150 to a Ferrari.6 points
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I can help coach Hynes figure this out: Play the kids. He's not soft, he's pretty strong but doesn't realize it yet. He's not interested in throwing big hits, probably never will be, but he can neutralize guys and doesn't mind going into the home plate area. If he were soft, he'd do a flyby, but he stops there and is willing to take the punishment. You're not wrong here. What has changed? 5 new players on the team and all are being sheltered. If it's change you're wanting, then Heinzy has to play the kids. If Heinzy decides he's going to shelter the kids until they get it, it will take far longer for them to get it. Sometimes you just have to play them, take your lumps early, and accelerate their learning curve. These kids can play, but most are used to decent TOI. Sheltering them puts them off their game and doesn't give them enough opportunities + you are burning out your vets. You do not have to trust the kids to play them. You will just have a harder job as you will constantly have to be coaching them up. But that's precisely what is needed at this time. Heinzy- you work for BG. BG gave you 5 kids to develop. Just do it, don't try to shelter, give them regular shifts and regular minutes so you can see what they have. Why does OgZ seem to get goals in the A and not in the N? Could it be that he's playing twice as much down there? You're not giving them a chance to get going. They have no rhythm in their game because you won't give them regular shifts. Coaches Note-When Yurov was forced to play more than normal due to Ek being out the 1st period, no goals were scored against him. He can be responsible enough to take on more responsibility now.6 points


