Jump to content
Hockey Wilderness Zone Coverage Property
  • It's Time For the Wild's Pressure To Create Some Diamonds


    Image courtesy of Matt Blewett-Imagn Images
    Chris Schad

    The Minnesota Wild’s Christmas extravaganza came up short this summer. After emerging from the bulk of Zach Parise and Ryan Suter’s contract buyouts, the Wild looked around and realized it was worth overpaying for a player that wouldn’t move the needle and settled on a trade for Vladimir Tarasenko and added Nico Sturm in free agency.

    Ultimately, this could be the most effective approach for general manager Bill Guerin. But the pressure is mounting. The Wild haven’t been out of the first round of the playoffs since the 2014-15 season. A large chunk of the returning core has been responsible for three straight 2-1 leads that were choked away in recent playoff series.

    These are signs that remaining status quo isn’t good enough to make a run in the Western Conference, and the best way to break the cycle is to create some diamonds.

    For those of you who aren’t gemologists, diamonds are formed from carbon atoms that bond under immense pressure and heat deep within the Earth’s mantle. While Grand Casino Arena isn’t likely to reach the 2000-degree temperature required to make this happen, Minnesota’s playoff failures have turned up the heat.

    Usually, the general manager would be the first figurehead to feel the heat. But Guerin has survived thanks to Minnesota’s elite farm system.

    Wild fans know the names. Zeev Buium made his NHL debut during last year’s playoff series against the Vegas Golden Knights. Jesper Wallstedt has been considered the Wild’s goalie of the future. Danila Yurov is making his trek from Russia, and they traded a big enough haul for David Jiricek that would make Jason Pominville blush.

    While Minnesota’s farm system was ranked second by The Athletic’s Scott Wheeler last February, it has yet to make a significant impact in St. Paul. Guerin and Judd Brackett's first-round picks, only Marco Rossi has emerged from Iowa to secure a major role. The Wild drafted Matt Boldy only months before hiring Guerin in 2019.

    Part of the reason is that the Wild have had a competitive team through most of that time. Guerin likes the team that he’s constructed, and he’s rewarded players with lucrative contract extensions. While Mats Zuccarello, Marcus Foligno, and Ryan Hartman have contributed to Minnesota’s success, their extensions have blocked the path of younger talent, making it more difficult for them to break into the NHL.

    Even Rossi had a difficult path to NHL minutes. The ninth-overall pick in the 2020 NHL Draft rode up and down I-35 until he stuck in the NHL. Although he posted a 60-point season last winter, he was demoted to the fourth line in the playoffs and has been the subject of trade rumors.

    Other players have followed Rossi’s path. They acquired Jiricek in a massive trade with the Columbus Blue Jackets, but he spent most of last season either in Iowa or a press box.

    Liam Ohgren was the 19th overall pick of the 2022 draft but was mothballed behind Marcus Johansson. 2023 first-round pick Charlie Stramel is hoping to build off a solid first season at Michigan State, and the Wild are hopeful Buium can make an immediate impact next year after they scratched him in favor of Jon Merrill in the playoffs.

    The labor has yet to produce fruits, but it’s not like the Wild haven’t mined impact talent. Boldy overcame a midseason slump to become a franchise-building block for Minnesota last season. Brock Faber has become an elite defenseman after coming over in the Kevin Fiala trade. Even a modest trade, like the 2022 deal for Jacob Middleton, gave Minnesota a top-four player on the blue line, and it’s helped the Wild make the playoffs despite their cap situation.

    Still, the Wild need more. Part of this falls on the players who need to take a step forward. Buium could be a key piece in Minnesota’s search for offense after 54 points in 65 collegiate games at Denver. Yurov could also be an intriguing addition if he can make the jump from the KHL and adapt to his move to center. Jiricek and Ohgren could also be breakout candidates, but they’ll need some help to see the ice.

    That's why John Hynes bears a lot of responsibility next year. Hynes knows he needs to win this season and may not have patience with mistakes from young players. But we’ve already seen the ceiling of the current roster. While it may be tempting to throw Johansson out there, it could be at the expense of Ohgren, who could be approaching “go-time” at age 21.

    The other players may not inspire a full-fledged youth movement, but could help the Wild get over their playoff drought or become pieces that they could ship for a bigger move at next year’s trade deadline. No matter what they do, Minnesota needs to unearth its talent to relieve some of the pressure it’s facing this season.

    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 4
    • Thanks 1

    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments

    Featured Comments

    GM should definitely be on the hot seat this season (7th season).  Then coach & aging vets (Spurg, Brod, Zuccy, Foligno, Hart, Trenin) should feel the heat this season if we're unable to make it out of the first round of the playoffs.  If Hynes and his staff can't coach-up Ohgren and Yurov to surpass the likes of JoJo, then buh-bye.

    • Like 3
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    This might not be a popular statement, but the Wild should really try to move Zuccy or at least definitely not extend him.  Top 4 wingers in my opinion should be Kaprizov, Boldy, Tarasenko and hopefully Ohgren or someone brought in via trade.  Zuccy isn’t big and isn’t a bottom 6 player at all.  If Rossi isn’t traded, there is also a chance Yurov moves to a top 4 winger.  I agree the Wild have too many smaller players.  I would like to keep Rossi over Zuccy.

    • Like 4
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    It is up to Ohgren to prove he is more than a warm body on the 4th line.  Quibble about Mojo, but he offered more at the time than Ohgren did in either stint.

    "Too good for the AHL" has to morph into, "I'm going to be a factor in this game night in night out.". Players like Khusnutdinov and Ohgren won't be coddled into "progress" when a team is dead set on winning games.  If you can't provide more than a fast, and defensive, but otherwise unremarkable 30-pt depth forward, that's on the player.

     

     

    • Like 1
    • Confused 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    If Tarasenko can't find chemistry with someone like Kaprizov, Boldy, Zuccy, Yurov, etc. in the top six and have a bounce back year, he'll be one and done with the Wild, or moved at TDL.

    Spurgeon and Brodin have had trouble staying healthy, that's two of the top four.  Brodin is currently injured, how's he going to stay healthy for playoffs especially after the olympics.  It may be time for one if not both depending on how this season goes for them.  Hopefully Buium and Jiricek take some of the load off of them, but that's up to Hynes.

    Zuccy should be in his last year, but probably won't be, however, he continues to impress me with what a high-IQ player he is on the ice, same with Rossi.

    Foligno's will be 34 yrs old this season, a great leader, but his style of game doesn't age well, he was at least somewhat healthy last season.  Between him and Trenin, I'd rather have Foligno, but having both players seems redundant with limited roster spots.

    The Wild can't go back to the country club days.

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

    3 hours ago, WildNotMild said:

    This might not be a popular statement, but the Wild should really try to move Zuccy or at least definitely not extend him.

    I like Zuc, he plays consistently good hockey.  But I agree with you.  He lost a step and isn't top 6 anymore.  I'm hoping he retires.  I would have liked that extra $4M for a potential signing.

    • Like 2
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    15 minutes ago, MNCountryLife said:

    I like Zuc, he plays consistently good hockey.  But I agree with you.  He lost a step and isn't top 6 anymore.  I'm hoping he retires.  I would have liked that extra $4M for a potential signing.

    I believe he said he was going to see how this year goes and possibly retire next year. I'm guessing he'll go two more. I still think moving Rossi to wing and having "coach Zuc" mentor him would pay dividends.

    • Like 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    11 minutes ago, Enforceror said:

    I believe he said he was going to see how this year goes and possibly retire next year. I'm guessing he'll go two more. I still think moving Rossi to wing and having "coach Zuc" mentor him would pay dividends.

    Move Rossi to wing, extend his stick 6 inches and call it a day...

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

    I’m not getting my hopes up with our highly rated prospect pool. We had one back in early 2010s as well and none of them planned out for shit.

    however, I guess it’s better than a poorly ranked prospect system 😂

    • Like 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Unfortunately for the Wild I don't think Hynes has the coaching chops to take a team on a deep playoff run.  

    Putting Rossi on the 4th line and giving Buium a sniff and then going back to Merrill reeks of coaching for his job, rather than coaching to win hockey games. 

    Conventional wisdom wins when you have the most talented roster.  When you don't have the most talented roster you need something unconventional to win and stale, conservative, cowardly coaching isn't it. 

    Play Buium and Rossi and win or lose...at least they gain valuable experience.

    Benching them and losing is a waste of an opportunity.

    Fire Hynes and hire.... DeBoer?

    Edited by Patrick
    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...