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I think the best part of getting him is that, for us, he doesn't HAVE to be that smooth skating defenseman who can keep up with a Connor McDavid or a Connor Bedard like he did for Columbus. We have those players already. What we don't really have is a blueline bomber since we shipped out Addison for being bad at defense. So, for now, Jiricek can focus on the positive aspects of his game while continuing to work on the weaknesses behind the scenes and, hopefully, during the offseason. Honestly reading about his struggles at the NHL level reminds me a LOT of what Marco Rossi went through. And he's turned out pretty okay with a little more experience so far...10 points
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We've seen the difference between AHL speed and NHL speed. However, you can counterract that in ways. Trenin and Foligno aren't fast guys, but they are defensively sound and hit people. Rossi isn't the fastest center, but always seems to have a knack for clutch points. I don't think anyone is expecting a Brodin, Spurgeon, Faber, or Buium smooth skater. They are giving Jiricek a chance to be "different." If he disrupts and plays fearlessly, that can be an ice tilting player. Those reports tell me he isn't all offense. It's just a part he can play. If he has the willingness to use his strengths and hide his weaknesses, he could be a Middleton type, but even younger. No one accuses Middleton of being the strongest skater or defensive wizard, but look at this guy this year. He has his place next to a more defense oriented guy and doesn't shit the bed unlike last year. Jiricek has the size and apparent confidence to be a game changer. Unless he's Ryan Reaves slow, he should get a leash.10 points
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Interesting how nearly every early scout on this guy had skating as a strength. Now it's not? I have only seen the available clips and can't really guage it, but it's not sticking out as a glaring issue. I am excited for the transaction. The Wild need someone who likes to punish on the ice. Plus, that hammer of a shot. Get Mr. Ness to work.10 points
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By now, all Minnesota Wild fans are aware of the shiny new toy in the State of Hockey: defenseman David Jiricek. The Wild paid a hefty price to acquire the No. 6 overall pick from 2022 (and a fifth-round pick), sending Daemon Hunt and a first, second, third, and fourth-rounder to the Columbus Blue Jackets. For that kind of price, it makes sense that fans would expect something special from Jiricek. Will Minnesota get that kind of player? We could discuss his limited NHL track record, his shining performance in the 2023 World Junior Championships, or his extensive pro experience in Czechia and the AHL. But that does not quite convey the experience of watching him play regularly. Fortunately, Jiricek has been on the radar long before 2022. He debuted in the Czechia Extraliga -- the country's highest pro level -- on January 26, 2020, barely two months after turning 16. Jiricek has had scouts' attention for a while, but how have their opinions developed alongside Jiricek through the years? Let's track it in four phases, starting with... 2021: On the Rise We first see Jiricek's name cropping up, at least on public scouting reports, in the back half of 2021. Early prognosticators of the 2022 Draft seemed to have Jircek as a consensus top-15 pick. NHLEntryDraft.com even had him going to the Columbus Blue Jackets in their early mock draft. Great job! Their report? The Czech rearguard is a two-way presence that skates very well for his size, showing a promising ability to break up plays, control the rush, or turn the puck up the other way. At the end of September 2021, Bob McKenzie of TSN released his 2022 draft list, and Jiricek debuted at No. 10. Jiricek is viewed as a throwback, hard-rock shutdown defensive defenceman, an ultra-aggressive big hitter with a mean streak who is a strong skater. Scouts love all that bite but are still debating his offensive ceiling/limitations. Though released much later to the public, Elite Prospects had been monitoring him in April 2021. David St-Louis wrote of him during the Under-18 Worlds: He kills rushes with backward skating and has some lateral mobility. He is physical. Very. Finishes every check.... He's an interesting player for sure. Just six months later, Jiricek made a much bigger impression on St-Louis. From October 2021 in Extraliga: Jiříček is going high in the draft. His tools clearly project as above-average (he’s a 6-foot-3, mobile, righty), and he cares about the defensive game... he can match shifty attackers with his four-way mobility. He is also physical, able to pin even pro attackers already. Impressive. So, at this time, Jiricek is seen as a big, mobile defender with upside as a shutdown defender. Then the offense starts coming. He scored five goals and 11 points in 29 games at Extraliga. Those don't sound like huge numbers. Still, no one has ever come close, before or since, to that kind of production for a draft-eligible defenseman in the Czech league. A big part of that came from him pushing the tempo as often as humanly possible. Wrote Elite Prospects' Mitchell Brown in an October 2021 scouting report: "I like how he doesn’t just make the simple play once he gets the puck. He beats defenders, looks for teammates cross-ice, and uses space before shooting." EP colleague J.D. Burke agreed at the time, saying, "[He] doesn’t connect on a lot of his plays -- the stretch passes, the activations off of the blue line and the deceptive feeds into the slot, and the pacey efforts to move the puck – but he’s trying them, and that counts for a lot." While noting that Jiricek "could be a pain in the ass on NHL ice" someday, Josh Tessler of SmahtScouting gave a lot of love to the rugged defenseman's surprisingly crafty hands. "Jiříček has excellent timing at cradling the puck and uses his elusive stick-handling ability to maintain possession of the puck for his team to keep the offensive momentum alive." Jiricek's star would only rise from there. 2022: Draft Day For almost every NHL player, draft day is the high-water mark of your potential. No one's seen you play North American pro hockey. You can be anything -- an All-Star or a Hall of Famer. Heck, you can even be an all-time great soccer player. The hype train runs wild, the superlatives fly, and we all lose our minds a bit. And at this point, Jiricek's potential is through the roof. After the Blue Jackets drafted him, his agent pegged him as Shea Weber, and his Czech teammate, former NHL defenseman Jakub Kindl, compared him to Aaron Ekblad, the former No. 1 overall pick and Calder Trophy winner. Scouts weren't rushing to disagree, either. Even the normally conservative Corey Pronman believed he was most similar to three-time All-Star Alex Pietrangelo (No. 4 overall in 2008) as a prospect. There were only two opinions about Jiricek leading up to the draft: You loved him, or you looooooved him. No major outlets had him outside the top-10 of his class, and few had him out of the top-five. Here's the accompanying scouting report from Scott Wheeler, who merely loved Jiricek, ranking him sixth in his final 2022 Draft ranking: [He has] one of — if not the — hardest point shots in the draft. It’s a bomb, and he does a really good job keeping it on target and a few feet off the ice... he’s a confident, active, engaged three-zone player who has all of the tools you look for in a top defender. As he continues to smooth out and polish his game, it’s hard to imagine he doesn’t become, at the very least, a top-four guy. And that's from a comparatively tepid perspective. Sam McGilligan (from scouting publication McKeen's Hockey, whom a young Judd Brackett wrote for) was over the moon for him. For me, Jiricek stands out as such a unique player that you can't find anywhere in the draft. If I go back another year, I still can't find someone like him. He's a bit of a unicorn. The obvious draw to Jiricek's game becomes crystal clear after just a few minutes of watching him -- his unprecedented aggression.... Calculated aggression means constantly applying pressure to the opponent, forcing fast decisions to avoid being smashed by the Czech freight train. And if that seems like a lot, Elite Prospects might have been even higher. The outlet ranked him second overall in his draft class and in the top five of several skills, including: Best Defensive Defenseman (first) Best Neutral Zone Defender (first) Highest Floor (second) Best Offensive Defenseman (third) Hardest Hitter (third) Best Transition Defenseman (fourth) Highest Ceiling (fifth) EP's player comparable was Moritz Seider, who also won the Calder Trophy. Their ultimate conclusion? There’s a durable defensive foundation in place that will carry him to a top-four role at a bare minimum, even if his play with the puck doesn’t come along for the ride... You’re looking at a 6-foot-3, right-shot defenceman who can do just about everything at a low-end top-pairing level through the height of his career. But unlike most players, Jiricek's high-water mark as a prospect wasn't the draft. 2023: Top Of the Worlds Jiricek could go directly to the AHL for his first season after being drafted, a luxury not afforded to many players in the first year after their draft. But already a seasoned pro at age-18, Jiricek could seamlessly handle the transition to North American hockey. He set the record for most AHL points for a defenseman in their Draft+1 season, piling up 38 in 55 games. It was an impressive campaign, topped off by a dominant Under-20 World Junior tournament. The goal above helped Team Czechia to the Gold Medal Game against Canada (where they lost in OT), earning their first medal at the U-20 tournament since 2005. Jiricek was especially dominant, scoring three goals (on 30 shots, ranking sixth-most among all players) and seven points in his seven games. Jiricek had a plus/minus of +10, getting tagged with just one minus on the tournament. He was the obvious pick for Best Defenseman of the 2023 World Juniors. Jiricek faced players already having massive success in the NHL: Connor Bedard, Logan Cooley, Dylan Guenther, Logan Stankoven, Luke Hughes, and more. He not only acquitted himself, but the data shows that Jiricek was an absolute beast in all three zones. Wrote EP's Lassi Alanen after the tournament: He was a commanding factor both offensively and defensively. He had the highest shot volume in the entire tournament, forwards included, and also set up scoring chances at an above-average rate. Defensively, he killed plays both in in-zone setting and while defending against the rush. At The Athletic, Wheeler ranked him as the ninth-best prospect that summer, with Pronman tagging him as the 20th-best Under-23 player/prospect in the NHL. Pronman had him eighth among defensemen behind Rasmus Dahlin, Seider, Owen Power, Noah Dobson, Jake Sanderson, Hughes, and Bowen Byram. "Jiricek has been one of the most impactful teenage defensemen I’ve seen in the AHL in recent years," declared Pronman. "He’s showing a whole other level of offense this season.... Everything, except for his footspeed, points to a big minutes NHL defenseman. EP was still massively high on him, ranking him as their seventh-best NHL prospect, and top defenseman. "When he steps on the ice, the game belongs to him," their profile read. Hard to beat that. There was just one group that wasn't so all-in on Jiricek... 2024: The Struggle (Colum)Bus Jiricek's path to Minnesota started in 2024, though no one knew it then. The top young defenseman made his displeasure known after Columbus sent him down to the AHL in January. “I played good hockey in the NHL," he said. "I’m an NHL player right now. That’s my opinion, that I should be in the NHL right now." Jarmo Kekäläinen (who Jiricek outlasted in Columbus, for what it's worth) might have seen it differently, but plenty of scouts took the player's side. Sportsnet's Jason Bukala went scorched-earth on Columbus' management: The Blue Jackets seem to forget what they have in this prospect. Jiricek can beat goalies at any level with a clapper or snap shot from range. He’s a power play threat waiting to happen. He has always produced offence along every stop in his development. St-Louis re-entered the picture to lend his support: "At the very least, Jiříček looks like an NHL player," he wrote. "His confidence knows no bounds. He plays the same creative and hyper-aggressive game in the NHL as he did in the AHL last season, in the Czech league before that, and in his junior days. That’s a massive positive for his development, as he’s constantly testing his limits and pushing them, becoming more and more skilled as he advances in levels." And that's perhaps where the core of the conflict lay between Jiricek and the Blue Jackets. Maximizing Jiricek means allowing him to play a high-risk style. But when he messes up, it's more dangerous than it might be for other players. St.-Louis explains why: Most daring defencemen usually have the skating ability to repair their mistakes.... Jiříček doesn’t have that kind of safety net, that recovery ability. Either [his daring plays] work spectacularly or they fail in the same fashion. And it’s the same defensively. The failure to launch, it turns out, brutally affected his stock with the Columbus organization. However, it didn't fully take the bloom off the rose outside of it. Pronman downgraded Jiricek on his U-23 rankings before the season from 20th to a still-strong 47th: The long-term projection on Jiricek remains promising given his toolkit. I like his defensive edge and thought he showed he could be a great two-way player at other levels. His feet aren't the best and he struggled adapting to the NHL pace.... With time I think he'll be an all-situations top-four defenseman. But, like with many players, the hype dies down eventually, and the NHL starts to reveal warts in one's game. After a vigorous defense of Jiricek in January, Bukala was a bit more muted in his assessment on November 18: As much as I appreciate what Jiricek can produce offensively he also needs to provide better-than-average defensive detail to find a regular role at the NHL level. St-Louis' scouting report from November 29 also puts his weaknesses into greater focus: A weakness even in his draft year, Jiříček’s skating hasn’t improved over the past few seasons. While he can speed up the ice to catch up to the play... his pivots lack fluidity. His decision-making with the puck and defensive awareness have been equally problematic. Of course, St-Louis points out that there's still a ton to like: Despite his ever-present weaknesses, Jiříček remains one of those rare right-shot defencemen capable of tilting the ice for his team. And, of course, in Minnesota, there's really one scout whose opinion matters most: Brackett. And the Wild's head scout is sold on him. "David Jiricek still has some things to work on, obviously," e told The Athletic's Michael Russo. "[But] he wants the puck.... He has an ability to get into spots where he can utilize it and support the rush. He plays definitive in his D zone." Brackett also provided immediate optimism by going on the record with his belief that his skating won't be the limiting factor as Columbus thought. "He is an average skater, but it’s good enough," he assured Russo. "You’re not going to look at him and go, ‘Oh, jeez!’ It’s good enough." Now that everyone has weighed in, and the Wild put their money where their mouths were, it's time to start seeing if Jiricek can live up to the faith so many have had in him throughout the years.10 points
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Nice article, nice move. I'd been itching for news since about 3pm this afternoon. The return? It had to be done! This was a win that Guerin needed. The time was absolutely right. I'd like to see him get a few practices in, assess him, and send him down to Iowa to work on some stuff. He'll have a friendly face down there in Spacek. My hope now is that Andy Ness dusts off his magic wand and applies it to Jiricek. Jiricek must familiarize himself with our system, with our checks, with our pinches, and with his new teammates. I suspect he will be just fine! On the other side, Waddell got what he could. My suspicion is that he didn't like the prospects being offered and went for draft picks instead. It's not his fault any of this happened, previous management really screwed this kid up. For Jiricek, pinned on his jersey as he heads to Iowa should be the instructions: Play this man 22+ minutes a night, all situations. Personally, I'd like to have him teamed with Lambos on the #1 pairing. He's got some things to work on that only heavy minutes will produce. Call him up whenever Spurgy needs some maintenance time. As for our fanbase, we've got to be patient with him. Just put it in your expectation bucket that there will be mistakes, particularly on the defensive side. Cheer for him anyway. If he fills in for Spurgy, he'll have Brodin as a partner, a very calming influence. Please remember he's just turning 21. I like the future right side of Faber-Jiricek-Spacek. This was a very nice move. Where else are you going to find a player for a 1st rounder in the 20s? That guy is going to take 5 more years to develop and the same with the subsequent picks. More importantly to us, this signals that Shooter has changed course. The flags are blowing and they read "We are now in NOW mode." This is who we're running with. Now we've just got to get them developed.10 points
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Draft guru or otherwise, the draft is a low likelihood lottery. Like 19% of prospects end up playing more than three seasons in the NHL. 63% of first round picks, and only 25% of second round pick end up playing. With this in mind, let's do a deep dive of Brackett's way too early numbers in Minn. 2020 Round Pick Player Games Played 1 9 Rossi 134 NHL 2 37 K Nut 44 NHL 2 39 O'Rourke 0- AHL +2 3 65 Hunt 13 AHL +1 5 146 Novak 0 KHL? 2021 1 20 Wallstedt 5 AHL+1 1 26 Lambos 0 AHL +1 2 54 Peart 0 AHL +1 3 86 Bankier 0 AHL 4 118 Masters 0 AHL 4 127 Pillar 0 Usports (NCAA CAN Equiv) 6 182 Benoit 0 NCAA 2022 1 19 Ohgren 2 AHL 1 24 Yurov 0 KHL 2 47 Haight 0 AHL 2 57 Lorenz 0 NCAA 3 89 Milne 1 AHL+1 4 121 Healey 0 NCAA 5 153 Spacek 0 AHL 6 185 Petrovsky Czechia Obviously this is an extremely early look as most of his first draft is 22/23 years old at most. The average age to break into the NHL is 20.6 years, however the average age in the NHL is 26. I would say what we have is what we will get out of the 2020 draft, which is absolutely solid. A first, second, and third rounder all playing over 10 games at an NHL level is more than you can ask of most draft classes. 2021 draft is getting to the point where we have a good idea of what will come out of this. I think Bankier and Lambos both have a possibility of making it but it is getting lower and lower. Wallstedt will be an NHL goaltender, only a matter of time. 2022 draft- Ohgren and Yurov will likely both get NHL action, but still a question of will they stick. Spacek, Milne, Haight and Lorenz all have a possibility of making it, however thin. I'm not even getting into 23 and 24 drafts because it is WAY too early to pass judgement on either one. Still, from what we have seen so far, Brackett is exceeding the average, if not by a huge margin.8 points
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Great backstory to Jiricek. Fun and informative read. Thanks Tony!8 points
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8 points
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By the time Saturday's Minnesota Wild game starts, the team will have heisted No. 6 overall pick David Jiricek from the Columbus Blue Jackets. Daemon Hunt, the Wild's most NHL-ready defense prospect, will be sent the other way along with a first-round pick in 2025, a third in 2026, a second in 2027, and a pick swap, per Michael Russo. The move doesn't come as a surprise, it's been in the ether for the last week. But now we know it's happening, we know the Wild beat out the other offers, and we know the hit to Minnesota's prospect capital. Having seen it all laid out, this is a decisive win for Bill Guerin and his front office. Should the Wild unlock his potential, they have the final missing piece to their youth movement. The Wild's under-25 movement was strong as hell earlier this week, having nearly everything a good, growing team needs. A star winger? Check, there's Matt Boldy. A potential (current?) No. 1 center? Hello, Marco Rossi. A guaranteed, bedrock top-pair defenseman? There's Brock Faber, right there. High-upside forward prospects? Danila Yurov and Riley Heidt have entered the chat. A bonafide power play quarterback that's nearly NHL-ready? That's what drafting Zeev Buium was for. A goalie of the future? We all know about Jesper Wallstedt The only question -- other than whether the Yurovs, Heidts, and Buiums would pan out -- was their defensive depth beyond Faber and Buium. The Wild had invested heavily in defense prospects at the 2020 and 2022 Drafts, spending top-70 picks on Ryan O'Rourke, Hunt, Carson Lambos, and Jack Peart. Despite the investment, only Hunt trended as NHL-ready in the near future. Beyond that, Minnesota wasn't able to land their Owen Power, Jake Sanderson, or Moritz Seider-type defenseman -- a defenseman with premium size and a top-four-caliber skill set. They'd also struggled to backfill the right side of the defense past Faber, with David Spacek being their only top right-shot defenseman. That's why Minnesota gave up three assets to get Jiricek. At 6-foot-3, 204 pounds, he brings beef, skill, and a right-shot to the next generation of Wild players. As soon as the end of the season, the Wild could theoretically ice a starting lineup that includes: Yurov - Rossi - Boldy Buium - Jiricek Wallstedt That's a tantalizing collection of young talent, even before realizing that the Wild would have Faber in the back. And Faber with those two makes Minnesota a potential defensive powerhouse for years to come. The collection of pure, raw talent on the Wild blueline is now at incredible levels. Before the season, Corey Pronman released his rankings of Under-23 players and prospects. Buium slotted in at No. 16 (sixth among defensemen), Faber at No. 35 (11th among d-men), and Jiricek 47th (17th among d-men). Only the New Jersey Devils -- with Luke Hughes, Anton Silayev, and Simon Nemec -- rival that quantity of high-upside defense talent. But it's even better. Again, Jiricek gives Minnesota more talent and a diversity of skills. Here's the elevator pitch on all three of those top names, per Pronman: Buium: He is an extremely intelligent puck-mover who can run a power play like a top NHL player. He makes high-end plays routinely and can break shifts open with his puckhandling and passes. Faber: His excellent skating, gap work and compete have helped him become a great defender who kills a lot of plays, but the offense he showed this season was a pleasant surprise. Jiricek: He's very skilled, especially for a big man, and combined with a strong point shot, he should provide offense in the NHL. I like his defensive edge and thought he showed he could be a great two-way player at other levels. There's some overlap, but Minnesota now has three defensemen who fill three vital roles. The bloom has fallen ever-so-slightly off the rose with Jiricek, but Pronman's player comparable for him in 2022 was Alex Pietrangelo -- massive praise from the usually conservative draft analyst. Leading up to the 2024 Draft, Pronman tabbed Buium as a young Morgan Rielly. Faber has been a right-shot Jonas Brodin with surprising offensive chops. That sort of well-rounded blueline is hard to find, even among elite NHL clubs. As for the price, it's a big "Who cares?" from Minnesota's perspective. Hunt's future was likely as a third-pairing defenseman who could crack the top-4 in a pinch. The Wild's 2025 first-round pick is trending to be in the 20s, and perhaps the late-20s. Even if Minnesota would hit on that pick, it likely wouldn't have the upside of Jiricek and a much longer timetable to get a return on investment. A third-rounder in 2026 or second in 2027 is downright negligible. More importantly: the Wild got this deal done without sacrificing their forward depth, particularly NHL-ready, middle-six winger Liam Öhgren, who brings skill and physicality to the pool that would be hard for Minnesota to replace. They get a huge boost in near-term upside without sacrificing anything for the 2025 season when the Wild's Cup ambitions truly begin. Minnesota will need to unlock Jiricek's potential in a way that Columbus couldn't do, but the reward in acquiring Jiricek vastly outweighs the risk.8 points
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Jirizy for Hunt + picks done mind this at all. We keep Rossi and ogz for more seasoning8 points
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Agree. Giving up hunt+ 2nd tier prospect (bankier) is ceiling for this project. anything higher and it’s fair to question the choice8 points
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Interestingly enough, Russo's last Pod he walked back the 'Rossi's a goner' and seemed to believe that he has played his way into being kept around, with an extension coming after the season but prior to July 1 as that's when they'll announce the cap going up. While Ross-Vegas seems to be in the doghouse, he also seems to have listened to the coaching and bought into what he needs to do to improve which seems to be a trait that's appreciated by this organization. Maybe we'll look back at this season and regret not selling high on Rossi, but I don't see how an organization who's near the top of the league in points can sell off a guy on an ELC who's producing at the rate Rossi is. I know as MN fans we're conditioned to wait for the other shoe to fall and figure out how the team is going to disappoint us, but it's absolute lunacy to think the Wild should be selling off parts at this point in the season.7 points
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We need to spend more time talking about 97’s ability to ‘flop’ pucks over defenders stick onto the tape of teammates. Puck doesn’t bounce when it lands. It lands more like a corn hole bag would land. Not quite a sauce pass. And clearly easy to handle as teammates rarely bobble these passes. Just another thing 97 can do that’s special7 points
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It wasn't that bad of a price though? You could consider Hunt a 1for1 if Jiricek only plays 3rd pair. The 1st rounder would be in the 20's, 3rd & 4th in 2026 have very little chance of being a fulltime contributor especially in a top 6 role, the 2nd rounder is in 2027. I think it was Judd that said you don't find players like Jiricek in the 20's and Billy said something along the lines of it would've cost a lot more to trade for the 6th pick. I honestly don't think it was an overpay. Russo rumored there was a team offering 2 1st's and there were 4-5 other teams in the hunt as well.7 points
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IMO, that blueline is far too young for the AHL. It's a good thing to have 2-3 of those guys there, but putting them there all at once has been a disaster.7 points
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After going 9 games without a point, Johansson has looked somewhat adequate in portions of the last 9 games, tallying 6 points. I'm still not a fan, but he's a less annoying passenger when he at least collecting points for the team along the way.7 points
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I've been of the belief you can fit both Rossi and Yurov and figure out who is better afterward. Any worry that the team would lose offensive punch with Zuccarello out and Kap and Boldy going up top died when the Rossi/Hartman line (and I guess Johansson too) found success. If keeping Rossi means losing a Lauko or Khusnutdinov, you do it. As good as the 4th line has been, they aren't the scoring threats Rossi keeps proving to be, "passenger" or not. "But he's 5'9" and kinda slow." I like Khusnutdinov, but what has the speed advantage gotten him but PK skills? Khusnutdinov has 6 points in 100 games. Rossi has 56 in 120.... If you have to bridge deal, just get the bridge deal done. Figure out if Yurov or Rossi are the better top line fit and pay them more later.7 points
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Interestingly, after a horrific 0-6 start to the year for the Iowa Wild, they've gone 9-5-1 in their last 16. After the recent 3 game stretch where Iowa outscored their opponents 14-3, Lambos is up to a +5 on the year, which is 2nd best among defensemen on the team behind 27-year old Joseph Cecconi, who's leading the Iowa Wild at +12. The Iowa Wild started the year with a lot of new players and some injuries, but might actually be turning things around with some positive developments. Too early to tell maybe, but things aren't looking as hopeless as they were early on.6 points
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I’d keep him on the first line. Ek’s primary offensive skill is his net front presence. Kaprisov seems to handle that (and every other part of the game) just fine. Boldy is big enough to provide some of that and Rossi has shown a willingness to score from dirty areas. No need to double up on that when you could spread it out and have an elite net front presence on the second line. Defensive chops don’t matter quite as much when you’re driving possession at the rate Kaprisov and Boldy do, but Rossi holds up fine defensively. Again, bumping Ek down provides an elite defender on a line that may need it more. Rossi also seems to fit well with Kaprisov and Boldy stylistically. Rossi seems to be a notch above Ek is regard to his hands, shot, etc. Not that Ek is a detriment in that regard, but the little extra offensive juice from Rossi may open things up a bit more for Kaprisov and Boldy. Rossi also has room to improve. I think Ek is what he is at this point. More time to gel with Kaprisov and Boldy may bring the high water mark up even more. The real question is, what the heck do you with Zuccarrelo when he returns? You can’t break up Boldy and Kap, IMO, but I also don’t want to see Mojo and Zuccarrelo on the same line. That’s where another top 6 guy at deadline would be huge for this team. Bump a less desirable guy off one of the PP units and make that second line a little more potent.6 points
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Good to hear some good news on Stram-boli. If this can become a bottom six center for us playing a physical bottom six style that’s a huge plus for this group. Think Foligno as a center. Delivering punishment and munching minutes with few goals against.6 points
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There's some Ek screen/greasy goal potential there. Probably won't be a powerplay guy with all the skill in there, but all he needs to do is be a big net front problem for some more skill guys. I'm curious what his other skillset is like right now. There's such a premium on, "Can he score, can he skate," but he's going to be rounding out the team's bottom six at best. Heck, imagine if Stramel and Kumpulainen end up on the same 3rd or 4th line with someone like Foligno or Trenin? Just a bunch of brick walls.6 points
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Of the two, I'd expect Buium to be the one inching towards or exceeding Faber's cap hit, not Jiricek...having both playing the level that'd require would mean the Wild D-corp would be fucking insane.6 points
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I'm not saying his word is gospel but if the rumors of other teams offers are correct he wasn't the only one who thought that way. That's the thing about this "competitive rebuild" we haven't had high picks and picks in the 15's-20's usually aren't superstars. His 1st rounders since he's been here are: 2020: Rossi at #9 (same draft as Khus and Hunt) missed at Lundell unfortunately 2021: Wally at #20, Lambos at #26 (Bankier is a sneaky one here at #86) the only other 1st round stud is Johnston but we needed a G, guess you could say Knies and Stankoven are considered misses 2022: Ohgren at #19, Yurov at #24 (Haight at #47) nobody after them has even played 50 games 2023: Stramel at #21 (non-NHL whipping boy it seems) (Heidt #64) nobody after him has played even 10 games 2024: Buium at #12 only one after him has played 4 games and a 5th rounder that has played 7 for COL Point is, it's too early to judge his results with the Wild. I suppose I could go back through VAN's drafts but I just did the Wild's.6 points
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3 different coaches have sent Jiricek back to the minors. Haven't seen him play but I have to think that he is making untimely mistakes to have that happen. Doesn't sound like his value is equal to a player like Rossi. Probably just a matter of time before Jiricek is a mainstay in the lineup though and at 6' 3'' I would imagine he will be highly coveted. If I am BG I would be careful about giving up too much. Maybe Chisholm and an AHL forward. I doubt that is enough. Let a different team pay too much for him.6 points
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I think the biggest reason to worry about this (outside of Russo's reports) is simple: When was the last time a Wild player played this well and didn't get an extension in a quick manner? We tend to know very fast when a player is one of "Billy's Guys" and a lack of extension for Rossi is a pretty big outlier if he is one of "Billy's Guys."6 points
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Lmafo!!! He had 13 total turnovers last night including turnover assists.6 points
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ODC - Just keep the idea of NoJo sucks in your frontal-mind and buy into the group-think. In this case it's 100% justified and not weird. NoJo is indeed brutal. He's mentally toast in the NHL and only little flickers remain in his non-factorish game which hinges on short obvious passes. He doesn't create any chances or shots on his own. He regularly puts a Boldy setup into the goalies pads or gets boxed out at the net-front. His hustle-effort is like a 4 out of 10. He doesn't sacrifice the body. I really can't spend the time going over it all again. He's got the same goals as Gus and he's on the second line. His linemate is a point per game guy and NoJo is just +1 in 17 games. He's dead weight. A passenger. I have argued that Hartman or Ogie should be in that spot and bump up a depth guy to fill out the bottom six. I know it ain't gonna happen, but the first time NoJo was here we secretly applauded his playoff injury. MN went to seven games against Vegas while the refs and Fleury shut the Wild down. I don't think NoJo should be hated as a person, just as a hockey player. He exemplifies every Euro stereotype perfectly so we can't deny that. You're right, Russians, and Americans can do it too. Zegras was highly-touted and now looks like kinda a blowbag. What's that all about? Gaborik was this way. Talented but at home with groin injury playing race car simulator while the Wild have a losing season. NoJo isn't intentional IMO, just not an NHL 2nd liner.6 points
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If Spacek is that good, that's a great problem to have. As it stands now, Jiricek is at the very least a much better AHL defenseman and is also younger by around nine months.5 points
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Joe Smith’s “Fellowship of the Rink” podcast, Wallstedt said he had trouble accepting the demotion in his first couple of games. After all, promises were made in the offseason — to the point that on the eve of the season, he signed a two-year, one-way extension starting in 2025-26. This is from an athletic article but Jesper got a bit more into it on the actual podcast. He wrestled with it and a wrong mindset in starting the season can definitely cave in confidence if he plays badly. It spirals from there. Jesper is a good kid, that put in a ton of work this offseason to try to make the big leagues. I have confidence he will find his groove again and settle things down.5 points
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I'm having a hard time trying to understand what happened to O'Rourke. He came up during the Covid lockout and played underaged for the baby Wild, and while his stats suggest he was lost the first half of the season, his 2nd half was pretty good. Then he goes back to jrs. for a season and he never gains any traction after he gets back to Iowa. I wonder if he would have stayed in Iowa and not looked back if things would be different? He was a quality prospect, when drafted. Now, he's an afterthought. Also, don't look now but Ryder Ritchie has found his game again. After a really tough start he's up to 9 pts. (13 games). Heidt is still killing it.5 points
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When OCL said it was going to be like Christmas next season, I don't think he envisioned getting a young guy like this and then having to pay him. I'd love it if we could do this with a forward too, and that would be our Christmas. Does Jirzy, at this time, have the same callup capability as Hunt did? I think it's close and about the same price. But here's what I noticed this past week. Lambos is improving in Iowa. This may have made Hunt expendable. The #1 pair was Crotty-Lambos, the #2 pair was Spacek-Hunt. I think with that information, trading out Hunt was good for Hunt and was probably good for Lambos. It just thins the herd a bit. I'm not very high on Masters as he's with the Heartlanders, nor Peart as he looks like he has a lot of ground to make up. With Jirzy, I'm seeing a bridge deal no doubt! He will not have his first full season until next year. I think he's a cornerstone type of piece. Another consideration that has played absolutely nothing in the N is Yurov. He's 7-7-14 in 26 games, so far, and Metallurg looks like a 5 seed in their conference right now. Things look to me like they are fitting right in place. Finally the large bodied defender with offense is here. Luke, my thought was similar, this looks like our Parayko. The Parayko before the back problems was really a great player, probably coveted by almost every team. I don't know about you, but it's hard not to get excited about where this team can go. If I'm Kaprizov, I'm noticing that I can win with these guys!5 points
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It is far too early in the season to begin dreaming about anything post-season. Take a look at the Jets, opening the season on a hot streak, now have lost 4 in row. We still have season distractions such as 4 nations, All State break, not to mention teams peaking later in the season. The Wild have been in this situation before, 2 or 3 years ago they peaked way early in the season, and ran out of juice by April. When you gauge 2023-24 Wild against 2024-25 Wild, not much has changed in terms of the roster. A couple coaches replaced, a few roster adjustments, and a couple guys out on Injury. The biggest change I see thus far is Leadership. Whatever Hynes brought with him, is summed up to Leadership. He has most of the same resources Evanson had, however Hynes's ability to lead shows now that the Wild are playing as a team, not a hockey roster recipe change every game. Last season I mentioned this was lacking, but pinned it to GMBG instead of the coach. I'm starting to see the BG does have a vision, and it could be successful. Nonetheless, they are an exciting team to watch and follow, even better when they play for each other and win many more games than not.5 points
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There's always risk involved. The important distinction is making the right risky plays for the right returns. I have been leery about Rossi trade talk because he has done it here, with our players, our system, and keeps finding ways to win games. No player they can get for him (unless it is a Tuch or something) matches his current and future trajectory. You pay the guys that play well and gel. Jiricek is a futureproofing upgrade over Hunt. Hunt likely never plays top 4 for the Wild, and will be boxed out. You have guys like him in the system, so Guerin ponied up for the hope Jiricek is Spurgeon's Top-4 replacement at best or high end 3rd pair at worst. If Hunt or the 1st rounder hit...welp, thems the breaks.5 points
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I absolutely love the addition of Jiříček. He's gonna completely transform our blue line, starting next season. The Middleton-Faber pairing is great. Buium and Jiříček are offensively minded D-men who take risks. Well, we've got two elite veteran defensive D-men able to cover for linemates' risky plays in Brodin and Spurgeon. Middleton - Faber, Buium - Spurgeon, Brodin - Jiříček, that's one hell of a blue line. With Bogosian or Chisholm on the bench. On the powerplay, Buium can step in and quarterback the top unit right now. On the second unit, Jiříček could send clapbombs from the half wall, with Faber or Spurgeon distributing from the blue line. Yeah, I love it.5 points
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As MNCOUNTRYLIFE stated awesome article….And the evolution of the player continues. Super excited about adding a player already a couple of years from draft without trading players from the present team.5 points
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And they want him to practice with the Wild today, so they can get a good look at him, which is what they are doing. I don't think it makes any sense to throw Jiricek into the game when he doesn't have background on the structure and expectations of the coaching staff. In my mind, Jiricek won't play unless another defenseman comes up with an injury prior to Tuesday night's game against Vancouver. Bringing him in was an investment in the future, not someone they want on NHL ice right away.5 points
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Sure he has a personality that many don't like but I'll take cheap gas, world peace, and orange... Ope, sorry wrong argument. I'll take first in the league, solid future, dickhead comments, and lazy-eye over the previous GM. 😎5 points
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Bare minimum this trade is an upgrade on Hunt. Reality this is next years 1st round pick. I could live with that. Have someone who steps in and plays the year he is drafted. Since he is an upgrade over Hunt we don't need to keep Hunt on the I-35 shuttle. Most of the picks that were given up were ones the Wild have acquired over the years. Which means we could acquire more or not. Reality is the are making moves to try and win.5 points
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Saying he can’t skate isn’t really accurate. He’s 21. He needs work on his back skating more than anything though. He’s young and needs time to make mistakes and learn from them. Columbus didn’t want to do that. Ppl have said they really aren’t good at developing their prospects. Where are you getting this notion that he wouldn’t be drafted that high? He absolutely would be drafted that high. He’s 6’3-6’4 and a right shot dmen that has a tremendous amount of offensive upside. Have you checked his ahl stats? Those are crazy stats for a 19 year old. Luckily for us we have an amazing skating coach. If you look at how Rossi’s skating has improved you’ll realize a lot of that was from working with Andy Ness5 points
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It fits the timetable perfectly. It fills a need and future proofs the right side in a way they really needed. Big defensemen with scoring punch are big gets. If he gets anywhere close to the hype, it was a big win.5 points
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This is exactly the kind of move I was hoping for. A player that is absolutely not a quick fix rental but a potential long term piece. Getting a big RSD with skill is huge. We need a couple of more upgrades in key positions but suddenly the Wild are in the conversation for contenders. The timing seems right.5 points
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THEY JUST GOT HIM! 25 first round 26 second round 27 fourth round and Daemon Hunt we get Jiricek and a 25 fourth round pick5 points
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Great prospect recap mnfan. Thanks. I’d like to see bankier get a cup of coffee in St. Paul to see what we’ve got with him. Not very encouraged by the ogz recap. I wonder if he’s part of the jirizy conversation. I sure hope Rossi is not. I’m changing my tune on Rossi. He’s looking more and more like a middle sixer depth scoring on a playoff team. Our playoff team, not someone else’s5 points
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With Winnipeg going 5-5 in their last 10, the Wild are now closer to them in points% than the 3rd team is to the Wild! Amazing start for the good guys!!!5 points
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Recent sixth-round picks rarely become available via the trade market, particularly when the rebuilding team is shopping that player around. And yet, that's exactly where the Columbus Blue Jackets find themselves this Black Friday. Suddenly, they're shopping their 2022 6th overall pick, defenseman David Jiricek, at a supposed bargain. The Wild find themselves smack dab as the purported front-runner in the middle of every rumor. The reasons are well-exhausted if you’ve been following along the past week. Tony Abbott explained why Columbus was shopping Jircek a few days ago. The Blue Jackets don’t think his game is where it needs to be defensively to be a regular NHLer. However, Jiricek and his camp believe the young Czechian is ready to graduate from the AHL, which he has dominated. The standstill has led to what seems to be an unrepairable situation, and Columbus is attempting to recoup a bit on its investment in Jiricek, who recently turned 21. Compensation for right-handed defensemen seems to have also dropped recently. No team has stepped up to offer a prized prospect in return. For those reasons, the Wild and their deep pool of second-tier prospects have emerged as a leading candidate. For those same reasons, Minnesota's front office should view this potential trade as a no-brainer. We aren’t going to get into the potential compensation for Jiricek here -- Tony covered that in his piece. The consensus is that no trade would involve the Wild’s top prospects in Jesper Wallstedt, Danila Yurov, or Zeev Buium. That’s all I need to hear to pound the table for general manager Bill Guerin to execute a deal. It makes too much sense. The Wild sorely lack a big, mobile, offensive-minded right-handed defenseman on the cusp of becoming an everyday NHLer in their prospect pool. But it’s more than that. Outside of Jiricek's value dropping like the smoker you've had your eye on this Black Friday or his fit in the Wild prospect makeup, the short- and long-term value makes Jiricek a perfect fit for the Minnesota Wild. Remember, Guerin is in Year 2 of the five-year plan he proposed last summer to his boss and owner, Craig Leopold. He designed the plan to ice a perennial Stanley Cup contender in that window and give the Wild a shot at bringing their first championship to St. Paul. Much of that plan hinges on Guerin’s ability to re-sign superstar Kirill Kaprizov to an extension. However, Minnesota also needs improvements around the edges of its roster. I know it seems odd the Wild would be looking to improve upon a defensive core that already ranks among the best in the NHL in nearly every metric. But in this case, it’s about more than bolstering a strength. It's about insulating your aging core and contributing veterans to the ice, not only the best defensive core in hockey in the short and long term. Captain Jared Spurgeon turned 35 today. While the Wild will undoubtedly immortalize his name and number in the Xcel Energy Center rafters once his playing days are over, he still has two years remaining on his contract following this season. Spurgeon continues to play as though he’s still 25. However, his recent injury history is concerning. He’s missed 117 games in the past four seasons and another handful earlier this year. He’s been honest about his recovery from hip and knee surgeries last season, admitting he would require “daily maintenance throughout the 2024-25 season.” That’s not the sign of an aging veteran turning back the clock. Spurgeon remains an elite defender when he's in the lineup, but the Wild need an in-house solution to protect the last few seasons of Spurgeon’s $7.6 million contract. Brock Faber is the natural answer, but only part of it. The Wild thrive on having the best top-four blue-line unit in the NHL. It’s a large reason they are among the best teams in suppressing expected goals every year. Removing Spurgeon from the equation eliminates their greatest strength and weakens the identity of their team. Do you remember how last season turned out? Bringing in Jiricek now would give the Wild the insurance they desperately need in the short term. Yes, Jiricek is not the same player Spurgeon is, but he would still fit perfectly into the top four due to his handedness and a style of play that would mesh perfectly with the rest of the unit should Spurgeon miss time in the next few years. Right now, when fully healthy, the Wild’s blue line pairs up as follows: Jake Middleton – Faber Jonas Brodin – Spurgeon Jon Merrill – Zach Bogosian Should Spurgeon’s injury history take him out of the lineup for significant time, having Jiricek available would enable the Wild to avoid elevating their third pair into roles outside their skillset. Instead, the Wild could slot Jiricek alongside Brodin, the league's best defensive-minded defenseman. Not only would Jiricek be able to learn from the best, but he would also be free to do what he does best in providing elite offense from the blue line. Jiricek could give the Wild short-term options should their aging captain miss time. At this point, it seems more when than if. But what about the long-term vision for Jiricek? How would he fit into this lineup when the Wild are competing for a Stanley Cup in the final year or two of their five-year plan? Suppose Jiricek reaches his potential as a dominant offensive defenseman with the size to defend adequately. How would their defensive core look with the near arrival of the similarly offensively-inclined Buium? Jiricek could be the missing piece in a young core who all could be elevated into larger roles as their veterans slide back into less prominent roles better suited for their age. Imagine the Wild in the final year of Spurgeon’s contract, hopefully with Kaprizov inked to a long-term deal to anchor the forward group and the defensive core below: Buium – Faber Brodin – Jiricek Middleton – Spurgeon A lot could change between now and then, not only in health but also in the development of these young defensemen. But this is why you draft well, as the Wild have done in the Guerin era. Not only to accumulate young talent for your roster but also to take swings at trades that have the potential to secure your blue line as perhaps the most dominant group in the entire NHL for years to come. Trading for Jiricek now while his value is at its lowest could be the perfect bargain-bin gamble the Wild need to boost them into contention during the next few years. And the Wild find themselves at the front of the line, standing in the cold and waiting for the Blue Jackets to open the door.5 points
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It's never too early in the season for trade rumors, and the Minnesota Wild rarely get through the early part of the season without activity. Since Bill Guerin took over as general manager, he's been proactive at fixing holes on his roster, trading for Ian Cole, Ryan Reaves, and Zach Bogosian in the first two months of the season. So where there are trade rumors, there's the Minnesota Wild, and it looks like the Wild are circling around defenseman David Jiricek, whom the Columbus Blue Jackets are looking to trade. This isn't the first time the Wild have been connected to the former No. 6 overall pick, but the smoke surrounding the hot stove is finally heating up. National reporters like Frank Seravelli and local beat writers like Michael Russo are backing up the idea that the Wild are in. Again, this isn't the first time there's been buzz about this possibility. But that was then, and this is now. The Blue Jackets have changed their general manager and coach since then, and while, say, someone like Kent Johnson has thrived with a second chance, Jiricek has fallen out of favor with a second regime. He turns 21 on Thanksgiving, and for now, he's as much of a Cleveland Monster as he is a Columbus Blue Jacket. It's a bit young for this label, but the former top pick is officially a post-hype player. So, what would Minnesota get in today's version of Jircek, and is the juice worth the squeeze? Unsurprisingly for a player whose team is rushing two years removed from their draft, Jiricek doesn't have much track record in the NHL to speak on. In his 53 career NHL games, the former top pick has cost Columbus 1.6 Standings Points Above Replacement, struggling offensively and defensively at 5-on-5. That's not to dunk on Jiricek -- it's hardly a crime to not be NHL-ready in your age-19 season, as he was last year. However, the source of friction is Jiricek's public displeasure with being in the AHL. If Minnesota trades for him, they need to be ready to keep him in the NHL because chances are he won't enjoy Des Moines much more than Cleveland. To be fair, if Jiricek believes himself to be too good for the AHL, he has a point. Through 86 games for Cleveland, he has 14 goals and 59 points as a defenseman. Those are exceptional numbers for a player his age. He also thrived during the Calder Cup Playoffs, scoring three goals and 11 points in 14 games. Purely from a points perspective, Jiricek's trajectory is promising. But as Dean Evason told The Athletic, "We know his offensive side." So what's the problem? So far, it's been his footspeed. The Athletic's Scott Wheeler wrote about him last season, saying, "He moves his feet well for his size, though I do worry about his stilted backward skating and how often he gets caught flat-footed against the rush... He's a better skater going forward than backward." Ask, say, Jonas Brodin, and you'll find out how important skating backward is. Though, if you're the Wild, that's probably the source of optimism that Jiricek can be fixed. Wild skating coach Andy Ness has a guru reputation and successes to show for it in players like Marco Rossi. If Ness can work his magic on Jiricek, then Minnesota would have a big, right-shot defenseman with high-end offensive skills on their hand, and that's something that any team could use. So, the question becomes: What are (or should) the Wild be willing to give up for him? There may have been a time when acquiring Jiricek might have cost another former top pick in Rossi. That's almost certainly not the case today. Whatever the Wild feel about Rossi, he's a center who has 17 points in 21 games. No team is trading that for an AHL defenseman who is clearly out of favor with their club. It might not even cost a (current) top prospect. TSN's Chris Johnston reported that the Jackets will "start to listen" about draft pick compensation. However, the Wild can give Columbus immediate -- or near-immediate help, which is a value-add over a team like the Pittsburgh Penguins. Who makes sense? It feels difficult to think Minnesota would part with their top prospects at forward, defense, and goaltender, so Danila Yurov, Zeev Buium, and Jesper Wallstedt would be out. Going to that next tier of prospect would lead us to Riley Heidt and Liam Öhgren. Heidt is interesting as a potential center prospect, but with Adam Fantilli and Cayden Lindstrom in Columbus' Under-21 pool, Heidt's destination would likely be the wing. If that's the case, then the 5-foot-10 forward would have competition in top short king winger prospects in 5-foot-8 Gavin Brindley and 5-foot-9 Jordan Dumais. Öhgren probably makes the most sense in a one-for-one swap for a few reasons. For one, teams like to save face in these types of prospect-for-prospect trades. Look at the Winnipeg Jets with Rutger McGroarty, who they traded for the Pittsburgh Penguins' Brayden Yager -- both players being forwards drafted No. 14 overall. Öhgren wasn't a top-10 draft pick, but he has a first-round pedigree from the same draft. It's not equal value, but it's something. The other reason Öhgren might be appealing is that there isn't a one-to-one comparable to him in Columbus' system. The Jackets' wing prospects are either small or have major flaws with their skating. Öhgren doesn't have either problem, and his presence as a player who combines physicality and skill should appeal to someone like Dean Evason. But maybe Columbus would want a defenseman to refill their pool. While there aren't any Jiricek's in Minnesota's system (assuming Buium is off the table), there are plenty of intriguing names. David Spacek is a right-shot defenseman riding a five-game point streak and has two goals and nine points in his second pro season. Daemon Hunt is widely considered to be NHL-ready. The drop-off in pedigree would likely mean a draft pick would have to come into play, but a lottery-protected first-rounder in 2025 seems like a reasonable thing to sweeten the deal. Jiricek has his red flags, but his skill set makes for a smart buy-low on a caliber of prospect that is difficult to come by. His physical stature also would lend a strong balance for an up-and-coming blueline that lacks sheer beefiness. If the Wild can wrest him away for the right price,5 points
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If other teams offers are anything like Farabee or Frost, or McGroaty, I'd say let other teams do it. That would probably mean pawning off Rossi, who is too much for a "big guy with potential NHL upside." Rossi already has proven NHL upside. There's a big difference. We saw that with players like Heidt. You can be world beaters all you want in lower levels, but the NHL is just a complete beast.5 points
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I think the biggest change i see this year vs last year is the team is playing level headed. The last couple years under Deano the whole team was flying off the cliff. Dean was always screaming at the refs and i think that had a follow-on reaction from the team. i am not seeing the stupid penalties we saw the last couple years. I hope this continues and the team keeps playing with controlled violence. At times maybe a little more retribution hits would be welcomed however.5 points
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I like the way he plays and contributes. I also like the fact that he doesn’t look lost out there (like #4).5 points