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  • Rasmus Kumpulainen Can Take The Next Step In Finland


    Image courtesy of David Reginek-USA TODAY Sports
    Kalisha Turnipseed

    Rasmus Kumpulainen is one of the Minnesota Wild’s sleeper prospects and has the potential to contribute to a Stanley Cup team. Kumpulainen signed his Entry-Level Contract (ELC) with the Wild last March and is ready to take the next step. 

    The Wild need to develop Kumpulainen into a second power-play unit contributor who can play on the Wild’s new GREEF line with Rieger Lorenz and Charlie Stramel. Wild general manager Bill Guerin may have been on to something when he approached the podium and selected Stramel ahead of Gabriel Perrault. Still, building a new GREEF line is a way to salvage the Stramel pick. Perhaps Riley Heidt will make us forget about Perrault? The Wild will have another GREEF line who will emulate their style after Joel Eriksson Ek, Marcus Foligno, and old friend Jordan Greenway

    Kumplulainen played in Finland in his draft year, producing 34 points in 41 games for the Under-20 Pelicans of the Under-20 SM-sarja. He only played one season in North America, scoring 56 points in 58 games for the OHL’s Oshawa Generals in 2023-24. His 56 points finished fifth in scoring (0.97 points) behind Dylan Roobroeck (1.06 points), Beckett Sennecke (1.08 points), Connor Lockhart (1.16 points), and Calum Ritchie (1.60 points). 

    Kumpulainen's time with the Generals during the 2023-24 season marks a turning point in his development as a prospect. His effective scoring and ability to adapt to the OHL suggest he possesses the tools necessary to continue his upward trend. If Kumpulainen maintains this trend, he'll continue to climb up the prospect rankings due to his strong offensive instincts and two-way ability. This season, he can translate his OHL success to future success in Finland. 

    Kumpulainen is returning to Finland to play in the Liiga for 2 years, which will set him up for success when he comes stateside to play for the Iowa Wild in the AHL. Kumpulainen can polish his game by playing against grown men in a professional league. 

    Can Kumpulainen continue to develop as a top-five scorer in Finland? Expect him to play at least top-six minutes there because he's already familiar with the European game. However, Kumpulainen will need to gain more consistency on the score sheet to have a breakout year. The Athletic’s Scott Wheeler describes Kumpulainen as a 200-foot player who can be a puck-possession monster. Kumpulainen naturally uses his 6-foot-3, 200-plus lbs. frame to shield off players while possessing the puck. 

    Not many European players who were drafted 53rd overall made the NHL. Rasmus Andersson (2015), Filip Hronek (2016), and Vasily Ponomarev (2020) are the most recent 53rd overall draft picks who have broken into the NHL. However, Ponomarev hasn't played a full season yet, while Andersson and Hronek are polished NHL veteran defensemen. 

    We’ll use Ponomarev as an example because he's a forward. The Carolina Hurricanes selected Ponomarev while he was playing with the Shawinigan Cataractes in the QMJHL. He posted 49 points in 57 games, which was third in scoring. Ponomarev had an excellent showcase for Under-18 Team Russia, scoring 12 points in 12 games. He only played 2 games but scored 2 points. 

    Carolina traded Ponomarev to the Pittsburgh Penguins in the Jake Guentzel trade, and Ponomarev is ready to establish himself behind Sidney Crosby, arguably the best player of all time.

    Ponomarev has played only two games for the Hurricanes but has scored in both. Ponomarev's production will likely regress, but he could be an impact middle-six forward in the NHL. Ponomarev saw time between the QMJHL and the KHL for development time before playing AHL minutes and having some success. Kumplulainen could do the same. 

    Kumplulainen's game should impact the Wild’s bottom-six due to his puck possession game, which will help Stramel score many dirty goals. Lorenz and Kumpulainen can facilitate the cycle game and punish opposing defenders. That line can take the physical burden off of other lines.

    Kumplulainen will work on getting faster to become a more effective two-way center before returning to North America to earn a spot on the Iowa Wild roster. He will likely earn his call-up during his sophomore season in Iowa when Marcus Foligno, Freddy Gaudreau, or Ryan Hartman get banged up. 

    Kumplulainen has the chance to become a middle-six contributor for the Wild. He can help on the power play and adapt his game after Mikko Koivu if injuries become a team problem and he gets called up. Ideally, he'll slot behind Joel Eriksson Ek, Danila Yurov, and Marat Khusnutdinov, making an impactful bottom-six to provide some clutch scoring. 

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    I can agree with Kalisha that the point in drafting Stramel and Kumpulainen was to bring in that big line that is similar in construction to the GREEF line. I think Guerin wants one of those lines on the team that can wear down an opponent's top line and bottle them up. However, do we know much about that line scoring? No.

    I would hope that Kumpulainen does not play top 6 minutes in Finland, but plays that 3rd line center role where he gets top minutes. He already is really good in the dot, so he'll likely be out for D-zone faceoffs. The line construction is a 3rd line role. Sure, they may get more minutes than a typical 3rd line, but that is what Guerin is looking to create. 

    So, what's the beautiful thing about Kumpulainen heading to Finland for 2 years? The clock on his ELC does not start ticking until that's over. That pushes everything back a little. Same thing with Stramel, playing in the NCAA pushes the ELC back a bit. Yurov has the same thing, but next season I'll bet he gets his bonus clauses. (that was a fair ask by him too)

    I don't know if these guys can recreate GREEF, but I think they can have an identity of a big strong shutdown line that gives another team fits.

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    On 8/6/2024 at 4:51 PM, mnfaninnc said:

    I can agree with Kalisha that the point in drafting Stramel and Kumpulainen was to bring in that big line that is similar in construction to the GREEF line. I think Guerin wants one of those lines on the team that can wear down an opponent's top line and bottle them up. However, do we know much about that line scoring? No.

    I would hope that Kumpulainen does not play top 6 minutes in Finland, but plays that 3rd line center role where he gets top minutes. He already is really good in the dot, so he'll likely be out for D-zone faceoffs. The line construction is a 3rd line role. Sure, they may get more minutes than a typical 3rd line, but that is what Guerin is looking to create. 

    So, what's the beautiful thing about Kumpulainen heading to Finland for 2 years? The clock on his ELC does not start ticking until that's over. That pushes everything back a little. Same thing with Stramel, playing in the NCAA pushes the ELC back a bit. Yurov has the same thing, but next season I'll bet he gets his bonus clauses. (that was a fair ask by him too)

    I don't know if these guys can recreate GREEF, but I think they can have an identity of a big strong shutdown line that gives another team fits.

    I think you got it, drafted some smaller skill guys but also needed that size, that's exactly where Kump and Stramel come in. Ohgren isn't that small either at 6'1" 187 (yes can add weight) but that could be a good grinding line with some skill to add. Now just need 1 or 3 big blue line guys, or guys that like contact and play above weight class (See Dumba and how he would be a heat seeking missile at times). Pushing some of the young contracts off/waiting until they are ready to make the jump could be a great thing. Zeev, Yurov, Kump, Stramel, Wall all on rookie deals as older contracts fall off or get shipped out could open up the flexibility we have all been wanting.

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