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  • Marco Rossi Is Looking Like A Top-Line Center


    Image courtesy of Jeff Le - Imagn Images
    Tony Abbott

    The Minnesota Wild's most controversial offseason move wasn't a free agent signing, a trade, or a draft pick. Even if the Wild had the resources to make such a splash, a move like the rumored Patrik Laine trade may still have taken a backseat to a simple lineup card change.

    John Hynes almost rode his top line of Kirill Kaprizov, Joel Eriksson Ek, and Matt Boldy to the playoffs. Playing 375 minutes -- almost all down the stretch -- these three out-scored opponents by a 30 to 18 margin. That plus-12 goal differential was tied with the Toronto Maple Leafs' Auston Matthews - Mitch Marner - Matthew Knies line and the Vancouver Canucks' Brock Boeser - J.T. Miller - Pius Suter line for the ninth-best mark in the NHL.

    That line was such a cheat code that it seemed unthinkable to break it up, even for lineup balance. But Hynes did, moving Eriksson Ek and Boldy to their own line, then ultimately placing 2020 first-rounder Marco Rossi in the top spot between Kaprizov and winger Mats Zuccarello.

    On one hand, Rossi was a highly-touted prospect the Wild likely drafted to handle this exact role. On the other hand, the Wild never seemed to warm up to him fully. Even though he scored 21 goals as a rookie, they didn't seem to see Rossi's ceiling as a top-line center. He had a big opportunity to keep proving his worth.

    Rossi might be soft-spoken, but his first five games have made a huge statement. His five points have him tied with Zuccarello for third on the team, behind only Kaprizov (eight) and Boldy (six). All five of his points have come at 5-on-5, where he sits in sole possession of the team lead.

    Rossi entered Sunday tied for the eighth-most 5-on-5 points in the NHL. There are only two other centers ahead of him: the Vegas Golden Knights' Jack Eichel and the Florida Panthers' Sam Reinhart -- and Reinhart only plays the pivot part-time.

    The secret to Rossi's success? It's more of the same stuff that led to his breakout last year -- and mirrors what led to Eriksson Ek's rise as a goal-scoring presence in the NHL. He can go to the net, find the soft spots in the defense, and good things happen. Look at his shot map (courtesy of Evolving-Hockey), and you'll find that nine of his 12 shot attempts at 5-on-5 have come within 20 feet of the net. Six of them have come within 11 feet or fewer. 

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    However you want to measure it, Rossi is getting high-quality chances at 5-on-5 unlike anyone else on the team and few in the NHL. Natural Stat Trick has him tied for tenth in the NHL with nine high-danger shot attempts at 5-on-5, which matches totals from Eichel, Nikita Kucherov, and Mikko Rantanen. Evolving-Hockey has him in the team lead with 1.90 expected goals in all situations, not just 5-on-5. That's more than Kaprizov and Boldy, despite getting fewer minutes and half the power play time.

    That's impressive, but so is Rossi's performance as a cohesive member of the top line. So far, the trio has out-scored opponents by a 5-to-1 margin at 5-on-5, and while scoring 83% of the goals or so won't continue, their controlling 58.6% of the expected goals share should keep them firmly in the positive. They're also carrying over their success from last season when they out-scored opponents 19 to 13 at 5-on-5. Add that all up, and this top line is up 24 to 14 -- a 63.2% of the goal share that actually (and slightly) bests the Kaprizov - Eriksson Ek - Boldy line from last season (62.5%).

    You aren't likely to see Rossi do the Holy Nordy, did you see that?! kind of plays that Kaprizov and Boldy make, at least not yet. But he's so good at doing small things to keep plays alive, whether it's his positioning, winning board battles, or making a heads-up play to keep the puck in the offensive zone. Watch Rossi's goal against St. Louis, only don't pay attention to the end of the play. Look at everything he does before Kaprizov puts the puck on his stick.

    He pressures Colton Parayko and forces him to dump the puck along the boards to Nick Leddy, who promptly turns it over to Kaprizov. It takes Rossi no time to change directions and get into a shooting position, which he stays in. He hangs in a soft spot nine feet from the net, where he's untouched. Elite hockey sense is going to get you a lot of goals that look almost effortless.

    In some senses, this is five games, a small sample size. At the same time, the Wild drafted Rossi to be a scoring center, and he had that pedigree at juniors and the AHL. He had success with this line last season, and it's unsurprising if he made a major leap in the offseason, considering the tremendous growth he showed after the summer of 2023. We may be watching a legit Top-Line Center taking his final form right before our eyes.

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    8 minutes ago, Tony Abbott said:

    They've faced some big blue lines. You saw Rossi take on Parayko behind the net, he's as physical as it gets. That line thrived against Jamie Oleksiak and Adam Larsson. Winnipeg always brings it. I don't understand how anyone can look at the way Kaprizov/Rossi play and are built and assume that they're these delicate flowers who can't take on tall players. You don't think coaches have thought to throw size at Kaprizov before?

    Tony They are competitive players but everyone can do only what their physical abilities allow them to do. And of course coaches though about this but as of now Wild does not have any other choice if they want to have two competitive line. But i cannot be agree  Rossi-Kaprizov-Zuccarello is even close to Ek-Kaprizov-Boldy. And last year actually proof of this. So let’s wait and see how this will played out 

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    It didn't matter if the Wild played a solid old-school gritty game against Dallas. The stripes wanted to throw out an abuse of power & control the fans & the Wild's high-energy play style... I firmly believe when the X started rocking, the refs had it set in their heads that they were going to eject our players to make an example for just about anything. That is what annoys me about everyone ragging on Hartman for stupid penalties, it wouldn't have mattered what our agitators did because the refs had handcuffs ready before the puck dropped, they didn't want the Wild to play their playstyle, thus "setting the tone" for a wimpass pantywaste team to sandbag until they would get a powerplay sent their way... That whole deal was a Fu($#ing disgrace. "Deflection" My ass, someone should beat that freakn cutesy smile off dime-store Kevin Spacey's face.

    Of course, the Zebra's feel no need to impose such strict control when your clueless fanbase throws hissy fits & starts barraging the rink with beer cans... No just punish the other fanbase.

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    35 minutes ago, Tony Abbott said:

    No, almost 90% of his 5-on-5 minutes have come with Kaprizov; 85% have come with Zuccarello. Any other time with other forwards is probably from on-the-fly changes and the first shift after a power play expires.

    I think it was just the first game Rossi centered Thing 1 and Thing 2

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    Any concern about Rossi depends on the points he has at the end of the season.

    40-50: no to little improvement; Guerin either cuts his losses or gets a short bridge in term and price.

    50-60: suitable increase in production that likely keeps him here, and he either settles for the Ek bargain, or pushes for the Lundell money ($5-6m)

    60-70: Unlikely, but overwhelmingly positive, and you push for Beniers/Boldy money ($7m)

    70+: that's an absurd 30 pt improvement in one year, near PPG, and you sign him to "fuck you money." He's likely that 1C going forward, and would be hard to convince anyone otherwise.

    I pegged him at 55-60 pts, and would be happy with that, Kap line inflation or not.  Rossi proves somehow better than that, then I'm over the moon.

     

     

     

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    24 minutes ago, Pewterschmidt said:

    I think it was just the first game Rossi centered Thing 1 and Thing 2

    That could be right.  With Trenin and Foligno assisting on Rossi's goal to start the scoring in Columbus, I had thought maybe he was getting more shifts with them that game, but I was unable to watch that one.

    If that was simply a line change, it was exquisite timing for Rossi to enter the zone from the bench, get the puck back to the corner and cut towards the net.

    https://www.nhl.com/video/min-at-cbj-recap-6363506769112

     

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    6 hours ago, mnfaninnc said:

    this should make ODC happy.

    This is key to the Wild’s success this year. If not things could go south quickly. ( At HW I mean.) 😂 

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    1 hour ago, Tony Abbott said:

    No, almost 90% of his 5-on-5 minutes have come with Kaprizov; 85% have come with Zuccarello. Any other time with other forwards is probably from on-the-fly changes and the first shift after a power play expires.

    Thanks Tony! I appreciate it and these articles. I live out of state and don't see but a couple Wild games per year.

    RPCJ.gif

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    4 hours ago, TheGoosesAreLooses said:

    All of these four have a very good chance to raise their value substantially this year and getting ahead of it and keeping those contracts low is the key to getting that big free agent.

    The Wild need to get these contracts done asap. These younger players are super important to the team’s future. They are developing nicely and have some upside as well. I feel like BG likes to keep his options open, but IMO he sometimes chooses the wrong ones. 

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    My idea would be to put a muscle guy with Rossi and Kaprizov  ,  I mean Yzerman had no problem with Probie  on his line, use a talented puck handling D-man with them  ,  Zucc can slide with the 2nd line   ,  

    Heres another idea ,  switch the 2nd line and make that the first line so that Kaprizov , Rossi ,Zucc  follow up the momentum created off of them  instead of following the 4rfh  where there is less momentum  .   

     

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    25 minutes ago, Dango said:

    My idea would be to put a muscle guy with Rossi and Kaprizov  ,  I mean Yzerman had no problem with Probie  on his line, use a talented puck handling D-man with them  ,  Zucc can slide with the 2nd line   ,  

    Heres another idea ,  switch the 2nd line and make that the first line so that Kaprizov , Rossi ,Zucc  follow up the momentum created off of them  instead of following the 4rfh  where there is less momentum  .   

     

    My answer to everything right now:

    Needs more Lauko.

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    17 hours ago, Tony Abbott said:

    They've faced some big blue lines. You saw Rossi take on Parayko behind the net, he's as physical as it gets. That line thrived against Jamie Oleksiak and Adam Larsson. Winnipeg always brings it. I don't understand how anyone can look at the way Kaprizov/Rossi play and are built and assume that they're these delicate flowers who can't take on tall players. You don't think coaches have thought to throw size at Kaprizov before?

    Tony, to me the Kaprizov/Rossi pair needs to be kept together. Where I think you can make improvements is with Zuccarello. Last 2 games, he has kept up fine and been a factor, but I suspect age will catch up with him. If he can't shoot gaps and drive nets, this line is in trouble. I'd suggest putting Ohgren in Zuccarello's spot at times and see how he works there. Maybe just a couple of shifts a game to start with to give Zuccarello a rest (or, perhaps in blowouts to really give him a rest). 

    At this point, we've got Zuccy for a couple of more years in contract, but we should now be grooming his replacement. Whether that's someone like Ohgren or Yurov, I don't know. I mentioned Ohgren because I believe he is a very good puck retriever and that line could use that. 

    Another possibility is double shifting the Kaprizov/Rossi pair and including Ohgren that way. I believe both players have the lungs for it.

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    I'm sure I'm the outlier here but I haven't been all that impressed at all with the top line.  I've seen a few random shifts throughout the first 5 games here that looked like they might eventually get it together but for the most part hasn't looked all that cohesive to me.

    To me, the success that Rossi and the top line has had is mostly opportunistic.

    Playing better teams is going to change that and we are going to need a top line to generate chances with a little more control IMO.

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    For the "wait until he plays against bigger teams" crowd:

    Rossi scored his goal fighting for space around the net against Aaron Ekblad (6-foot-4) and Nikko Mikkola (6-foot-6)

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    I felt it was premature when Tony banged the "put Rossi with Kap already" drum.  I'm finding it harder and harder to disagree.  They just have this knack for scoring, and Rossi isn't just a playmaker: he's getting goals the hard way, and it really balances the line really well.  Kap is usually the dual threat, Zucc is just an assist merchant: but man: they are all getting goals.

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    Sure I'll take the opportunity to dump on Guerin. Rossi and Gus would both be wearing a different jersey right now if Guerin had his way.  Guerin is far more lucky than he is good. He didn't get Laine and he had to keep Gus and Rossi.  One day the luck will switch sides.  

     

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    11 hours ago, Citizen Strife said:

    I felt it was premature when Tony banged the "put Rossi with Kap already" drum.  I'm finding it harder and harder to disagree.  They just have this knack for scoring, and Rossi isn't just a playmaker: he's getting goals the hard way, and it really balances the line really well.  Kap is usually the dual threat, Zucc is just an assist merchant: but man: they are all getting goals.

    Yet Zucc has been scoring goals too (although I generally would agree).

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