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  • Freddy Gaudreau Has Earned John Hynes' Trust


    Image courtesy of Matt Krohn - Imagn Images
    Tony Abbott

    Special teams are incredibly important in crunch-time games, and the Minnesota Wild's power play had been struggling to cash in on their few chances in the last week or so.

    In their last four games, Minnesota went 0-for-9 with the man advantage, including two losses to big-time teams. Normally, a team like the Wild can ride out a four-game slump. However, needing to get a win against a top Washington Capitals team, John Hynes needed to do something drastic to shake things up.

    On Wednesday, the usually-conservative Hynes went bold, icing a five-forward power play unit. Some of the best, most talented teams have tried this tactic -- the Toronto Maple Leafs and Florida Panthers come to mind as the pioneers -- but the Wild have been slow to the party.

    Under Bruce Boudreau, they were among the last teams to fully embrace having four forwards on the power play. Dean Evason always felt confident enough in Jared Spurgeon to have him as a defensive safety blanket. As for Hynes, Spurgeon, Brock Faber, and Declan Chisholm have all had 50-plus power play minutes.

    You can understand a fully-healthy Wild getting tempted into a five-forward unit. Having Kirill Kaprizov, Joel Eriksson Ek, Mats Zuccarello, Matt Boldy, and Marco Rossi all on the ice? No one would bat an eye at that. But Hynes pulled that lever with Kaprizov and Eriksson Ek on the shelf, putting in Freddy Gaudreau and Marcus Johansson on the top unit.

    That raised eyebrows, or it would have, if it hadn't worked. 23 seconds into Minnesota's second (and final) power play chance, Gaudreau tipped Boldy's point shot to send the puck past Charlie Lindgren to tie the game. It was a necessary step to secure a crucial two points by knocking off the President's Trophy-leading Capitals. Gaudreau even iced the game by notching an empty-net goal.

    When Gaudreau first got to the Wild, he was plucked out of obscurity by Evason, whose long relationship with the player came from their days with the AHL's Milwaukee Admirals. Evason staked some of his reputation on Gaudreau, telling Michael Russo in August 2021, "I can attest to him... being a real, real good player, but a real good teammate as well."

    After a 44-point season, Evason got to take a victory lap. 

    "I think my feelings personally on Freddy are well-known by now and I think it's an organizational feeling as well," the coach declared the following September. "You could play Freddy anywhere."

    But when Evason got fired amidst a slow start from many Wild players -- including Gaudreau -- it put Gaudreau into somewhat uncharted territory. Gaudreau was a late-bloomer, making the NHL full-time at 28, under a coach who had a unique relationship with him. How would it work under Hynes, who had no connection to Gaudreau at all?

    As Gaudreau's struggles compounded, it didn't work. During the 2022-23 season under Evason, Gaudreau averaged 16 minutes and three seconds per night for Minnesota. During Gaudreau's final 37 games in his first season under Hynes, that average time on ice fell to 13:24. Early this season, Hynes put Gaudreau on fourth-line duty, with him averaging just under 14 minutes a night in October, a month in which he went scoreless until the final game.

    His struggles under Hynes led to widespread speculation that the Wild might seek to give him a fresh start under the coach who had 1000% faith in him. However, no such move materialized, and Hynes, Minnesota's front office, and the fans all should be happy about that right now.

    It’s the State of Freddy Hockey now. Goals have been tough to come by in St. Paul this March, and Gaudreau's been one of the only reliable sources of them. His six scores in March leads the team, and his eight points are behind only Matt Boldy, tying him for second on the Wild. On a squad that's struggling to keep up trying to elevate the team in the wake of an absurd string of injuries, Gaudreau is one of the few players seeming to gain strength as the season wears on.

    And whether Gaudreau sees it this way, he's proving that he's no one-coach wonder. Hynes is leaning on Gaudreau like he never has before and is finding why Evason had such trust in the player.

    Since the start of February, Gaudreau is averaging 17:16 per night -- more ice time than Gaudreau's peak season (16:16) under Evason. During that span, Gaudreau is fifth among Wild forwards in 5-on-5 time, fifth in power play time, and by far their top penalty-killing forward.

    When defending a one-score lead with a 5-on-6 against the best goal-scorer of all time, Hynes had Freddy Hockey out there to stop Alex Ovechkin from tying the game. 

    As Evason said, Hynes is finding he can play Gaudreau anywhere. 

    Of course, some of this increase in playing time is out of necessity. During February and March, Ryan Hartman missed time due to suspension and Eriksson Ek has been out for over a month. If Gaudreau was simply eating minutes, maybe that's not a perfect indication of trust. But Gaudreau is stepping up, and as the five-forward power play showed, Hynes is looking for ways to get him into the game.

    It's working, and Gaudreau is suddenly in sight of setting a career-high in goals. He scored 19 two seasons ago, which means he needs just two in his final nine games to not just hit a career-best, but crack the 20-goal mark for the first time.

    More importantly, the perpetual underdog is helping an underdog Wild team claw out points as they grow closer to clinching a playoff spot.

    Last night saw him help Minnesota pick up a huge regulation win against Washington. Earlier this month, he notched two points in a 4-3 win against the Seattle Kraken. He scored the only tally in a 1-0 shutout of the Boston Bruins.

    Combine those big-moment scores with his always-solid two-way game, and Gaudreau is showing he's a player capable of earning the trust of any coach. 

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    Great article Tony.  All this for a guy making $2.1m a year.  I think Freddy is a guy that is vital to a team.  In a year or two if some of our young players blossom, he might be down to the 4th line again, but I would take him over any of the other players we have had on that line the last few years.  

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    40 minutes ago, SkolWild73 said:

    Great article Tony.  All this for a guy making $2.1m a year.  I think Freddy is a guy that is vital to a team.  In a year or two if some of our young players blossom, he might be down to the 4th line again, but I would take him over any of the other players we have had on that line the last few years.  

    I was super down on Freddy after last season and was scratching my head at the term he got for his extension but if we can get this years Freddy for the remainder of his contract that's one hell of a bargain.

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    Yurov's KHL team lost without him in their 2nd playoff game, this one 3-2 in OT, putting them down 0-2 in their best of 7 series.

    If they don't win the next game, it might be possible he doesn't get into any games for the playoffs, but I think he's getting close to returning.

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    45 minutes ago, Imyourhuckleberry said:

    Yurov's KHL team lost without him in their 2nd playoff game, this one 3-2 in OT, putting them down 0-2 in their best of 7 series.

    If they don't win the next game, it might be possible he doesn't get into any games for the playoffs, but I think he's getting close to returning.

    I'll have to double check but I thought he was on the roster today.

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    20 minutes ago, Enforceror said:
    1 hour ago, Imyourhuckleberry said:

    Yurov's KHL team lost without him in their 2nd playoff game, this one 3-2 in OT, putting them down 0-2 in their best of 7 series.

    If they don't win the next game, it might be possible he doesn't get into any games for the playoffs, but I think he's getting close to returning.

    I'll have to double check but I thought he was on the roster today.

    Actually, I think you're right.  I tried looking at the stats during the game and I didn't find his name, but they might have only had players listed at that time who had registered a statistic in the 1st period. I see now that he had 2 hits in the game.

    My mistake.  Hopefully Yurov gets stronger and delivers some points in the upcoming games.  If not, could be a short playoffs for his team.

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    I've been singing Freddy's praises all year, and am happy he's continuing to shine late in the season.  He was kinda known as, "that shootout wizard."  But he's doing what he can this year to erase the bad...BAD taste last year brought.  He's not the "star" player by any stretch.  What he is is a guy who does good at everything and lives under the radar in a good way.  

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    3 hours ago, RedLake said:

    In Buuim we trust producing offense on PP1

    A goal and 2 assists in their 5-1 win over Providence to open the Frozen Four?

    It's a nice start! I believe it puts him back on pace to hit 50 points again if they can play a few more games, but Boston College will be a tougher opponent on Sunday.

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    12 hours ago, Imyourhuckleberry said:

    It's a nice start! I believe it puts him back on pace to hit 50 points again if they can play a few more games, but Boston College will be a tougher opponent on Sunday.

    Where do you draw the line at the 50 points? For me, I think he's already there because I'm counting the 6 in the WJCs. I think it's perfectly fair to do that, as those guys were the best of their peers. So, to me, he's at 52 points for the season.

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    Gaudreau did get the bounce back season that some of us thought he'd have once he got fully healthy again. We haven't had many shootouts, so that aspect of his game hasn't shined, but he has stepped up when few have with everyone else injured. $2.1m doesn't look like such a bad deal now. 34 points so far for that contract has to be considered pretty good value. Even Johansson is up to 27 points now. 30 points at around $2m is adequate for a forward, I would think. 

    The nice thing about having Freddy, even as a 4th line player is that he can move up and down due to injuries. He's that type of depth every club needs. He's adequate in the face off circle and provides that RHS we seem to be lacking. While most have thought his contract will not age well, it appears with the cap increases coming that it will. Freddy also has shown he's a pretty durable player.

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    CBJ did us a favor last night, taking away the 2nd point from the Canucks in a shootout. Utah fell in OT too, which probably pushes them out of the playoff picture. Jets had their way with the Devils and hopefully softened them up for us, but, Devils played Jake Allen last night and saved Markstrom for us. 

    Also, it appears that we are at 45/50 contracts, with 3 more ready to go but off the books. I think the goalie got signed to a PTO in Iowa, but won't be playing 9 games to kick in the ELC contract. Wutzke is only 18.

    It appears that some enlightenment has come from the Jiricek injury. He suffered a lacerated spleen. I'm not sure how long that takes to heal. Chisholm is listed as day to day with an estimated return time off today. April 6th for Kaprizov and Ek (via puckpedia). 

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    So, last night started the WHL playoffs. 

    • Medicine Hat, a 1 seed won, Ryder Ritchie chipped in a roughing penalty
    • Prince George a 4 seed won 7-6 with Riley Heidt getting a goal
    • Calgary also won with Kalem Parker chipping in apple

    These stats didn't show up on Elite Prospects last season, so we kind of have to go 1 by 1. 

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    2 hours ago, mnfaninnc said:

    Where do you draw the line at the 50 points? For me, I think he's already there because I'm counting the 6 in the WJCs. I think it's perfectly fair to do that, as those guys were the best of their peers. So, to me, he's at 52 points for the season.

    That's not unreasonable to consider, but I was only looking at NCAA points. He had 50 points in 42 games last year. He has 46 in 39 games so far, so very close.

    Those 6 points in 7 world championship games were huge though, particularly that last assist for the championship winning goal.

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    On 3/29/2025 at 11:15 AM, mnfaninnc said:

    It appears that some enlightenment has come from the Jiricek injury. He suffered a lacerated spleen. I'm not sure how long that takes to heal.

    If memory serves, Mark Stone had a lacerated spleen last season.  Hard to say how long it will take, though it seems that sort of injury has a way of magically healing when the playoffs start.

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