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  • How Long Can the Centers Hold For the Wild?


    Image courtesy of Matt Blewett - Imagn Images
    Tony Abbott

    For most of the Minnesota Wild's existence, they've been what broadcaster Jeff Marek would often call "a donut."

    Why? "No center."

    It's not the sweetest way to put it, perhaps, but it's an accurate assessment of why the Wild tend to get burned to a krisp or kreme'd in the playoffs. Once the first round hits, they've had to match either Mikko Koivu or Joel Eriksson Ek down the middle against the likes of Jonathan Toews, Nathan MacKinnon, Mark Scheifele, Roope Hintz, and Ryan O'Reilly.

    Nevertheless, the Wild hoped to enter the season with their deepest stable of centers in team history. Marco Rossi had a strong 2024-25 campaign, Eriksson Ek was as reliable as it got, Ryan Hartman shone bright in the playoffs last year, and Danila Yurov's arrival injected some much-needed youth and upside for the lineup.

    There was a lot of optimism, but the first quarter of the season had the Wild looking... like a donut.

    Of the Wild's four centers, only Rossi started strong out of the gate, scoring 12 points in his first 12 games. Eriksson Ek scored just his third goal on Sunday and has 13 points through his first 21 contests. Hartman notched two goals on Opening Night... and has just two goals and five points through 19 games. Yurov has had to fight to stay in the lineup, having as many healthy scratches as points, with five apiece. 

    But it could always get worse, as we learned this week.

    Rossi, who had been battling a lower-body injury since Game 2, finally went on injured reserve and is week-to-week. The same terrible fate of being week-to-week has also befallen Hartman. Eriksson Ek remains a rock in the top-six, but Yurov had to go from the fourth line to taking center stage between Kirill Kaprizov and Mats Zuccarello on Wednesday night. Yakov Trenin, who took just 48 faceoffs all of last season for Minnesota, drew third-line center duties.

    Throw in Ben Jones, and you're talking about a quartet of centers who combined for six goals and 20 points in a combined 63 games entering Wednesday's tilt with the Carolina Hurricanes.

    But somehow, someway, the Wild were able to make that work in a 4-3 shootout win against the Canes. It was very rarely pretty. After building a 2-0 lead, the Hurricanes did what they do best: build up insane shot quantity. They peppered Jesper Wallstedt with 45 shots on the night, which was just enough to chip away at a 3-1 lead in the final minutes. But when you're down two centers, banking two points is good, no matter how it happens.

    The only question is, how long can this continue?

    Let's assume Rossi and Hartman are back on December 4, two weeks from Thursday. During that time, the Wild are going to have to get through a schedule that's much tougher than what they've faced lately. Grinding out extra-time wins against Carolina and the Vegas Golden Knights are noteworthy, of course. But the 7-1-1 run that brought Minnesota back into the playoff bubble came against a generally weak stretch of teams.

    The Vancouver Canucks, Nashville Predators, San Jose Sharks, and Calgary Flames are the dregs of the Western Conference. Even the first-place Anaheim Ducks are a young team for whom the Wild have their number for years, winning 19 of their last 20 games against them.

    Vegas and Carolina only mark the beginning of the schedule ramping up. They'll have to go on the road to face the Winnipeg Jets and Edmonton Oilers. The Colorado Avalanche will come calling. Even if you think the first-place Pittsburgh Penguins and surprisingly not-terrible Chicago Blackhawks are smoke-and-mirrors, the former still managed to give the Wild a 4-1 beatdown at home on October 30.

    And notably, the Wild will have Eriksson Ek, Yurov, Trenin, and Jones facing off against Sidney CrosbyEvgeni Malkin, Schiefele, Connor Bedard, MacKinnon, Tage ThompsonConnor McDavid, and Leon Draisaitl over the next two weeks. Uh-oh.

    So, how do they survive? It's not sustainable, but riding a red-hot goaltending duo of Wallstedt and Filip Gustavsson lifted them past Jack Eichel's Golden Knights and Sebastian Aho's Hurricanes. Continuing to be stout on the back end will also be critical. It's important to note that even as Carolina dominated the shot share, Minnesota did a reasonable job keeping the Hurricanes to the outside.

    They're also going to need to watch Yurov grow up fast, and luckily, we saw him thrive on Wednesday. Finally getting a shot at a top-six role after being buried on the fourth line for most of the season, Yurov looked at home between Kaprizov and Zuccarello.

    He had just one shot on goal but got another huge chance that missed the net, and he registered two assists. The first one was especially encouraging, as he sent a backhanded pass to Zuccarello that surely made Kaprizov proud.

    But make no mistake, Rossi and Hartman still leave two massive holes on a team that was arguably a donut to begin with.

    The Wild have already had to go on a run to save their season, but the degree of difficulty is getting turned up on more than one front. Now the training wheels are off, the competition is harder, and the injury road is rockier. As good as Matt Boldy and Kaprizov are on the wings, Jonas Brodin and Brock Faber are on the blueline, and Wallstedt and Gustavsson are in net, the center has to hold if the Wild are going to keep making a playoff push.

     

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    13 minutes ago, MNCountryLife said:

    I try to provide an honest assessment.  In that I have to admit that Johansson had a great weekend.   He engaged himself in all aspects of the game.  He was all Jekyll.  There was not a single aspect of his game that I disliked.  Hats off to him.  He played very well.  The guy has skill and is a very capable top 6 player.

    I hope he keeps it up.  The Wild are a better team when we get this version of Johansson.  I hope he can keep Hyde boxed up.  

    MNCL, I love the Jekyll and Hyde metaphor.  As a certified long time NoJo hater waiting for this seasons Gypsy spell to reverse and NoJo to go back to Mr Hyde I’ll offer this counterpoint.  Maybe NoJo doesn’t revert back to wet noodle NoJo.  Although if be lying if I said I didn’t want to see some water ski back checks before season ends (drinking game?) Maybe the one year contract keeps him engaged all season.  While this is a damning indictment of his professionalism and his spine, maybe he remains a serviceable middle sixer this season

    Edited by Pewterschmidt
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    On 11/20/2025 at 10:12 AM, Dis-allowed display name said:

    I don't care if Yurov earned his chance to play with the top line or not because of injuries to other players, but I hope he gets a decent enough run to prove that he should not be on the fourth line.  I would like him to get a fair shot to prove he should be top six.  Let Ek be on the checking line.  The top six needs a little youth and speed.  He will still have some bumps in the road, but let him play some real minutes with skilled players instead of having to be a grinder.

    Might be too much to ask to get NoJo out of the top-6?

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    1 hour ago, MNCountryLife said:

    He engaged himself in all aspects of the game.

    Which is completely the opposite of what he was the last 2 seasons. Credit to him for playing well. However, you can’t blame me for expecting his good play coming to an end soon.

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    15 minutes ago, FredJohnson said:

    Which is completely the opposite of what he was the last 2 seasons. Credit to him for playing well. However, you can’t blame me for expecting his good play coming to an end soon.

    Memo to NoJo: fans will forgive, but won’t forget

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    21 minutes ago, Pewterschmidt said:

    Memo to NoJo: fans will forgive, but won’t forget

    (Psst…Just between you and me, I won’t forgive him until he does this for a full season.)

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    20 minutes ago, FredJohnson said:

    (Psst…Just between you and me, I won’t forgive him until he does this for a full season.)

    And in non-contract years.  The scale always seems to tilt more Hyde in non-contract years.  Even last year he was playing like he was expecting no resistance to getting re-signed and was guaranteed a spot.

    This year he is playing like he is trying to earn playing time.

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    1 hour ago, raithis said:

    And in non-contract years.  The scale always seems to tilt more Hyde in non-contract years.  Even last year he was playing like he was expecting no resistance to getting re-signed and was guaranteed a spot.

    This year he is playing like he is trying to earn playing time.

    To be fair...he's on a pretty cheap contract. 

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