Jump to content
Hockey Wilderness
  • Are the Wild Putting Too Much Mileage On Kaprizov?


    Image courtesy of Kyle Ross-Imagn Images
    Jonathan Ryan

    Minnesota Wild fans fell in love with Kirill Kaprizov before he started playing at the level he is now. He’s a special player and a rare and unique talent. Kaprizov has the work ethic to accompany the skill, which makes him even more rare and unique. 

    Kirill Kaprizov is built for this, and the Wild are leaning on him more than ever.

    Fifteen games into the season, they are putting a lot of early miles on their Russian winger. They will need him at this current effort level and production as they head into a subtle stretch of important games through the end of November.

    Seven of their next nine games are against Western Conference opponents and five of them against the Central Division. It’s still too early to know how the division will shake out. Still, it’s not too early to keep building on a strong start and create some separation between themselves and some of the biggest foes they’ll be stacked against in the playoff picture 65 games from now. 

    That’s where Kaprizov comes in.

    Minnesota’s 27-year-old fine-tuned machine has performed impeccably this season. His offensive output is firmly stamped among the league’s Tier-1 players nearly a quarter of the way through the season. 

    Last year, he scored 15 points in 15 games. In 2022-23, he had 17 through 15 – great production in both seasons. He’s reached a new level this year, accumulating points rapidly, recording 28 in the first 15 games. 

    Given Minnesota's late November schedule, the Wild will need the best of what Kaprizov has to offer over the next two weeks. We’re hoping he’s got enough in the tank to keep producing at nearly 2 points per night.

    Kaprizov is playing an average of 22 minutes per night. However, that may increase as he plays about two minutes more per night against the Central. With five games against division opponents, now isn’t the time to ease up on Minnesota’s workhorse winger.  

    This stretch of games may be long-forgotten by March and April. However, the Wild have 14 points on the line against the conference and 10 against the division at stake.

    Minnesota is five points below the first-place Winnipeg Jets. Still, it has a five-point cushion over the Dallas Stars and six over the Colorado Avalanche. Dallas and Colorado were among the betting favorites for the Stanley Cup this season.

    It’s unreasonable to expect the team to run the table over the next two weeks. However, it’s reasonable to expect the team to be able to put good teams away. The Wild have played as well as their record indicates, despite hiccups against the Philadelphia Flyers and Chicago Blackhawks.

    The Wild were not expected to be among the top teams in the West this season. The Athletic’s staff projected them to be average with one of the worst offenses in the league.

    But they’ve proven that isn’t the case, and they’ve done so consistently enough to expect it to continue. Now is not the time for the Wild to feel comfortable where they are in the standings and take points away from teams they could face in the playoffs. John Hynes needs to keep his foot on the gas, ensure this team continues performing, and place itself firmly among the league’s most dangerous teams. 

    That’s where Kaprizov comes in. 

    He’s never going to complain about his minutes. It’s not easy to spot superstars with Kaprizov's work ethic. That engine is big, and he’s got new fuel in 2024-25 after missing the postseason last year. 

    Think you could write a story like this? Hockey Wilderness wants you to develop your voice, find an audience, and we'll pay you to do it. Just fill out this form.

    • Like 1

    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    Featured Comments

    9 minutes ago, Citizen Strife said:

    Hey look.  It's the passenger doing all the work on the PP and scoring too.  Guess I'll forgive him for that penalty.  Wonder if other people will too...

    I went into the comments knowing that CS would have this post waiting for me.

    Only about 40 more games of this to look forward to.

    • Like 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Walz had seemed to at least fix his tic a little bit for a while...but I don't know that I've just heard "Canadiens" in the absence of Montreal this evening. So glad he keeps telling me, because I can never remember where they're from. 

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Note: Tony doesn't have me on his payroll.  Maybe it's karma for me hating the "Bogosian Dead Cat Bounce" thing.  Guess we had to agree on something.

    But hey.  I'm sick of hearing you guys talk about trade value, so to each their own.  We have a lot to look forward to.

    Edited by Citizen Strife
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    1 hour ago, Citizen Strife said:

    I'm sick of hearing you guys talk about trade value, so to each their own.  We have a lot to look forward to.

    I had called Johansson a passenger on his line, so I was confused by some of the earlier comments. I'm not sure Rossi belongs as a #1 C, but he clearly has value in the top 3 lines. He has like 14 points in 16 games, which is pretty solid.

    Now, NoJo's 4 points in 15 games playing primarily with JEE and Boldy is far less solid. He was setup by/for a nice pass to assist the Boldy goal tonight. In many ways, a pretty simple tap across to the other side of the goal, but that was well executed and probably his best assist of the season.

    • Thanks 2
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    2024-2025 Numbers Game v2 (16 Games Played)

    Record: 11-2-3; (25 pts, 2nd in Central, 2nd in Western Conference, 3rd in NHL)


    Goals For: 3.50 Per Game (9th in NHL)

    Goals Against: 2.38 Per Game (3rd in the NHL)

    PP: 21.6% (T-10th in NHL)

    PK: 76.9% (24th in NHL)


    Gustavsson: 8-2-2, 2.08 GAA (7th in Goalies), .924 SV% (11th in Goalies)*

    Fleury: 3-0-1, 2.89 GAA (T-26th in Goalies), .904 SV% (T-30th in Goalies)*

    *Goalie Rankings could be skewed due to differences in games played. For instance, when weighed against goalies with 6 or more starts, Gus is ranked 2nd in GAA and 4th in SV%


    Kaprizov: 10G, 20A, 30P (2nd in NHL), +16 (1st in NHL)

    Boldy: 10G, 7A, 17P (T-32nd in NHL), +7

    Zuccarello: 6G, 8A, 14P (T-58th in NHL), +6

    Rossi: 5G, 9A, 14P (T-58th in NHL), +5

    Gaudreau/Middleton/Faber all tied at 9P (T-162nd in NHL)

    +/-

    Highest: Kaprizov (+16/1st in NHL), Middleton (+15/2nd in NHL), Faber (+9)

    Lowest: Merril (-1), Khusnutdinov/Ohgren (-2), Hartman/Lauko (-3)

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 2
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    So far so good. 

    NoJo had a nice assist. Oh gee, wow!😆

    Give him credit, he broke out of his non-factor shell. It's the eye test for me. The stuff he does, is sometimes just stupid. The NHL is too fast for him now. Making one play every 5-6 games is not L2 NHL stuff. I've tried not to rip on him, but for me he's behind Suter and ahead of Rask for most aggravating Wild player in recent memory. 

    • Like 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    18 minutes ago, Protec said:

    Give him credit, he broke out of his non-factor shell. It's the eye test for me. The stuff he does, is sometimes just stupid.

    He doesn't have any assists that are actually him creating the play. Kaprizov set him up with the perfect position to simply slide the puck across the goal mouth to Boldy for the nice finish. It was well executed, but the scoring chance was created by Kaprizov. His only other contender for best assist came from Boldy making a great play to setup the scoring chance with Johansson executing a relatively simply drop pass to JEE. Both were solid assists, but not truly created by Johansson doing something impressive. Any other player could make those plays.

    His goal was a nice feed from JEE out in the middle of the net from about 15 feet out. A solid shot, but he has whiffed on 1-timer opportunities at least a handful of other times. Definitely not line 2 material. When I saw him on the ice with Foligno and Gaudreau last night, I thought they had dropped him lower for a moment, but later realized that the Wild were missing some top line players and all the lines were reimagined--I missed much of the first 2 periods.

    Against Chicago, I saw NoJo run into Nick Foligno and topple to the ice. Pretty sure Foligno had not seen him coming, and seemed to looked back at him with what looked like a confused, "what are you doing"? It was pretty funny.

    • Like 2
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    4 hours ago, Imyourhuckleberry said:

    He doesn't have any assists that are actually him creating the play. Kaprizov set him up with the perfect position to simply slide the puck across the goal mouth to Boldy for the nice finish. It was well executed, but the scoring chance was created by Kaprizov. His only other contender for best assist came from Boldy making a great play to setup the scoring chance with Johansson executing a relatively simply drop pass to JEE. Both were solid assists, but not truly created by Johansson doing something impressive. Any other player could make those plays.

    His goal was a nice feed from JEE out in the middle of the net from about 15 feet out. A solid shot, but he has whiffed on 1-timer opportunities at least a handful of other times. Definitely not line 2 material. When I saw him on the ice with Foligno and Gaudreau last night, I thought they had dropped him lower for a moment, but later realized that the Wild were missing some top line players and all the lines were reimagined--I missed much of the first 2 periods.

    Against Chicago, I saw NoJo run into Nick Foligno and topple to the ice. Pretty sure Foligno had not seen him coming, and seemed to looked back at him with what looked like a confused, "what are you doing"? It was pretty funny.

    Last night he got the puck up high on the PP and waived his stick up in the air like a fake slapper that mites wouldn't fall for. Of course while standing still. Watching Caufield motor around, it's obvious NoJo is to slow and lacks the quickness to create much. He can make an easy pass or tap it into an open net but he's cooked for driving chances. 

    • Like 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites




    Join the conversation

    You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
    Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

    Guest
    Add a comment...

    ×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

      Only 75 emoji are allowed.

    ×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

    ×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

    ×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


×
×
  • Create New...