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  • Jacob Middleton’s Contract Comes With New Expectations


    Image courtesy of Jerome Miron-Imagn Images
    Robert Brent

    Of all the Minnesota Wild's offseason moves this year, re-signing Jacob Middleton was among the most controversial. He has warts in his game, but that isn't a huge issue when he's making $2.45 million. His new contract, which pays him $4.35 million annually, will make his drawbacks far more difficult to overlook. 

    The defender's new contract kicks in in the 2025-26 season, but he'll be burdened with the expectations of that cap hit this year. In many people’s minds, Middleton will have to live up to a new set of projections to be worth his new deal. 

    It will be difficult for the Wild to get value on Middleton’s $4.35 annual salary, but they’ve already signed the deal. Therefore, the Wild must figure out how to best utilize their asset with a new set of expectations.

    2023-24 Season Shows Reasons For Concern

    People who don’t like Middleton's new contract have reason to feel negatively about the deal. The defender played a solid season for the Wild in 2022-23 but followed it up last year with a campaign that didn't inspire confidence. 74 pairs of defensemen played at least 400 minutes together in 2023-24. Middleton and Faber ranked 57th in expected goals (xGoals%) and underperformed in several key metrics.

    (Stats provided by Money Puck)

    Screenshot 2024-10-07 at 2.58.19 PM.png

    Faber fared much better with his other common D-partner, Jonas Brodin, making it a concern that Middleton couldn’t produce positive results with the Calder Trophy Runner-up. Based on Dom Luszczyszyn’s player value model, the defender's play doesn’t live up to his new deal.

    Screenshot 2024-10-07 at 3.00.01 PM.png

    Getting the Most Out of Middleton

    The player value model raises significant concerns about Middleton in the later stages of his contract. It also shows a sharp decline between the 2022-23 and 2023-24 seasons. The defender didn’t forget how to play effective hockey in a year. The Wild can position the blueliner to get back to getting value out of him as a player.

    Health

    Ensuring that Middleton has a healthy season should be one of the chief priorities for Minnesota’s training staff. Middleton played 80 games last year, so it may seem like injuries are not a massive issue for the player. However, as Michael Russo reported in the Athletic, he dealt with injuries last year.

    Middleton managed to play through his injuries, but knee issues didn’t help his production and level of play. His most common defense partner, Brock Faber, also played through an injury last season. We shouldn’t make excuses for any player, but the whole defensive squad dealt with injuries last year. 

    Even the players who still skated dealt with nagging injuries. It isn’t hard to imagine that a clean bill of health for Middleton and all of the Wild defensemen would go a long way in producing better results for the bruising blueliner.

    Consistency

    Whenever a player becomes a part of a team’s core, one of the traits that makes them worth a large sum of money is consistency. You need to know a player can produce on a night-to-night basis because their cap hit is too significant to bench or send down to the AHL. Middleton struggled with consistency last season and will need to improve in the coming years.

    “It was an inconsistent year for me, personally, I think, and I’d just like to get back to that (being consistent),” Middleton told The Athletic.  “That’s what I like to do, be a consistent guy on a nightly basis, let you know what you’re getting, and that’s something that I really want to focus on going forward here.”

    One of the most obvious ways to demonstrate this lack of consistency is by looking at Middleton’s offensive output in 2023-24. The defensive-minded defenseman put up 25 points in 80 games last season but did so in hot and cold streaks.

    Middleton had six streaks last year, during which Minnesota’s opponent held him off the scoresheet for five or more games. The Wild aren’t paying Middleton to be an offensive dynamo, but completely disappearing from the scoresheet isn’t ideal.

    The Wild can increase Middleton’s consistency by ensuring the defensive corps has more continuity this season. Middleton played most of his minutes paired with Brock Faber last year, but he also played with two other pairings (Jared Spurgeon and Dakota Mermis) for over 100 minutes. Middleton has to lock down his consistency, but Minnesota can support that by giving the team more continuity.

    Deployment

    The most straightforward way the Wild can return Middleton to form is to return him to a partner he’s had success with. Jared Spurgeon is just the man for the job. While the Faber-Middleton pairing registered relatively poor analytics, Middleton and Spurgeon were the opposite in 2022-23. During that year, 81 defensive pairs hit the 400-minute mark. Middleton-Spurgeon placed 25th in xGoals%.

    Screenshot 2024-10-07 at 3.01.54 PM.png

    They were even better when isolating for defense, placing ninth in xGoals Against Per 60 Minutes. Before Jared Spurgeon’s injury, the Middleton-Spurgeon pairing was also off to a hot start in 2023-24.

    Screenshot 2024-10-07 at 3.02.31 PM.png

    The Wild will spend a lot of resources ensuring Jared Spurgeon stays healthy this season. Minnesota can expect better results out of Middleton if a long-term reunion for the pair is in the cards.

    Outlook on the Future of Middleton’s Contract

    There are many ways the Wild can position Middleton as a more positive player in 2024-25 and beyond, but there are also reasons for concern. 

    Spurgeon and Middleton are productive together, but Spurgeon positively impacts the game regardless of his defensive partner. From 2015-16 until 2022-23, Spurgeon and his defense partner placed top 15 in xGoals% every season. Spurgeon paired up with Ryan Suter, Alex Goligoski, and Middleton. 

    If Spurgeon can get great results regardless of his partner, it seems like he’s the one driving the positive outcomes. Middleton needs to find a way to live up to the contract independent of his chemistry with Spurgeon. 

    Middleton will likely have to find chemistry with another defender anyway. Middleton’s new contract carries him on the Wild through the 2028-29 season. Spurgeon will already be turning 35 this year. It’s unlikely he’ll still be a top-four defender by the end of Middleton’s deal. 

    On the positive side, the salary cap should rise significantly throughout Middleton’s deal. What seems painful now might be inconsequential when the deal is over, even if it doesn’t work out. 

    Regardless of the outcome, Jacob Middleton’s contract will likely be one of the most consequential of Bill Guerin’s roster construction. The new expectations money brings could turn Wild fans against Middleton, or he could prove to live up to the deal and continue to be a fan favorite. 

    Middleton has tools that make him an appealing asset when playing at his best. It will all depend on how the defender can bounce back from last year and whether the Wild can put him in a position to succeed.

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    In order for Middzy to keep from becoming Merrill 2.0 (these players are not disimilar in style of play, skating ability, physicality and size) Midzy will have to learn from Bogo.  Middle's needs to bring more sandpiper and edge to his game and be more intimidating because he doesn't have the skill-set to be a PP QB or even a top 4 d-man without an elite partner (ie Merrill).  And he's only getting older and slower.  I think Midzy has it in him so time will tell.

    I would have like to have seen Midzy flipped for a middle six contributor (Big Kahk>Mids>middle 6 wing) would have been real value creation by Guerin, but I'm not super mad Mids is still here.

    #tarpsoffbro

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    Certainly seemed like they should have been able to extend Middleton in the $3.5M - $4M range, but hopefully he will produce really solid results.

    It is promising that the awful Wild PK last season had some of the best results with Middleton on the ice, and teamed back up with Spurgeon, I imagine we can anticipate more of the same, assuming they can stay healthy.

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    17 minutes ago, Pewterschmidt said:

    (these players are not disimilar in style of play, skating ability, physicality and size) 

    So you’re saying they are similar? That’s not good… 

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    I think if someone like Hunt or Lambos were up to game speed, Middleton would be gone.  The fact is they weren't, and were at best replacement player level.  Brodin and Faber and Middleton/Spurgeon (at their skill level) is pretty damn good.

    Let's say for argument, "ok. but if Buium hits, Middleton is a $4.5m 3rd liner."  You can counter that by any number of things that could happen.  Merrill's gone after this season.  Bogo's gone in a couple years, making room for Buium, Hunt, Lambos, etc. Chisholm may or may not stick (though I'm not betting on it). Spurgeon might sign a shorter term good faith deal like Zucc or Fleury at a lower cap, and Middleton and Spurgeon stay as 3rd pair until the end of both contracts.  Middleton could seek a trade, so that $4.5m is someone else's problem.  We don't know how long Brodin has either.  He's younger than Spurgeon, but not by much.

    Realistically, this is what the Wild face RIGHT NOW.

    Brodin/Faber

    Middleton/Spurgeon

    Bogo/Chisholm/Merrill

    Well, in a year or two, that becomes

    Buium/Faber

    Brodin/Hunt or Lambos

    Middleton/Spurgeon/Hunt or Lambos

    You'd better fucking hope Buium, Hunt, Lambos, etc become something.  Cause if Brodin and Spurgeon retire...

    Buium/Faber

    Middleton/Hunt

    Lambos/Spacek/Masters/O'Rourke (you may even keep Chisholm around...but unlikely)

    Those aren't exactly great options.  Someone like an emerging free agent d-man could always be an option, but the Wild need to set aside money for forward extensions more than anything else.  Middleton is a bottom-pair quality guy being paid like a Top-4 d-man because Spurgeon and he do really well.  He's also there because we have no clue if the defensive guys are anywhere close to ready.  Faber did the Wild a favor.  Buium MIGHT be better, or he could be a name on a dart board.  

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    11 minutes ago, Citizen Strife said:

    Those aren't exactly great options.  Someone like an emerging free agent d-man could always be an option, but the Wild need to set aside money for forward extensions more than anything else.

    Brodin and Spurgeon are both paid pretty well. The Wild should be able to find quality free agents at or below their cap numbers if they retire or are traded.

    Having the top end guys like Faber and Buium will be key to not needing to overspend on free agents down the road.

    The cap will be increasing and the Wild seem to be setting themselves up nicely for the future at defense. Sebastian Soini might even be decent by the time the Wild are moving on from Brodin. Hunt and Lambos aren't that far away from being solid 3rd line guys, at minimum.

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    I'm curious what free agent d-men will be available after this season.  I know Miller is done the year after, but I wonder how much an extension would be if he's making $3-4m now.

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