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  • David Jiricek Offers the Wild More Than Raw Talent


    Image courtesy of Aaron Doster - Imagn Images
    Tony Abbott

     

    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 the Wild's prospect capital. Having seen it all laid out, this is a decisive win for Bill Guerin and his front office. Should the Wild be able to unlock his potential, Minnesota has 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, 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 not just more talent, but 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.

     

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    So, if we look at the trade as being our 2025 first round pick this is a really good trade.  The other picks would just be trade material or roster fillers in Iowa.  Though it is possible that they could turn out to be stars, it is however unlikely. 

    Next year the Wild will have to choose from the following for defenseman.  Faber, Brodin, Spurgeon, Middleton, Bogosian, Buium, and Jiricek.  As much as I like Chisholm he really hasn't seized the opportunity and run with it.  So, I doubt the Wild resign him now.  

    Things like this always look good on paper.  We will have to wait and see if it turns out to be what we want.  

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    Was a pretty decent amount to give up but I like it. We need size and skill on defense and that’s what this guy has. As a rookie 19yr old in the Ahl he put up some big numbers. Only thing is he needs to work on his defense a bit and his skating.

    Luckily for us we have a fantastic skating coach to help him. I think it’s really important for people to give him time to develop. I dont think the Jackets wanted to give him much slack to develop and let him learn from mistakes. He’s 21 now and the start of NHLers prime is early to mid 20s.Defenseman typically take a little longer. 
     

     

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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. 

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    Well we will see if this works.  It's pretty hard to say Guerin won this trade or made a great deal.  It's assuming Jiricek turns out to be a stud. If not then all the draft picks given away could come back to haunt.  Go Wild!!

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    I really like the trade BUT two questions:

    - like was said before next year we will have Faber, Brodin, Spurgeon, Middleton, Bogosian, Buium, and Jiricek. All of them except Bogosian are top 4 defenders. Who will be 3rd pairing?

    - if we are in the “win now” mode as we should be, will having 3 very young defenders be a problem? 

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    40 minutes ago, mnfaninnc said:

    More importantly to us, this signals that Shooter has changed course

    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. 

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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.

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