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  • Riley Heidt Can Make Marcus Johansson Expendable


    Image courtesy of Anne-Marie Sorvin-USA TODAY Sports
    Kalisha Turnipseed

    Riley Heidt will try to earn a roster spot in camp this year. The problem is that the Minnesota Wild have handcuffed themselves with several contracts that are difficult to move, and Heidt will be competing with Liam Ohgren and Marat Khusnutdinov for meaningful minutes. Ohgren and Khusnutdinov had polished their games by playing professionally in Europe, unlike Heidt, who thrived playing junior hockey. 

    Heidt’s WHL production may not translate immediately to the NHL. However, if he brings a well-rounded game, it might be enough to convince general manager Bill Guerin to find another team for Marcus Johansson, who currently doesn’t fit Guerin’s image of a hard-working sandpaper team. 

    The Athletic’s Scott Wheeler weighed in on Heidt’s NHL readiness. Wheeler is cautiously optimistic about Heidt making the leap to the NHL. He’s transitioning from the WHL to the NHL, so it makes sense for Wheeler to temper expectations, and Heidt may benefit from another season dominating the WHL. Still, it would be better if Heidt goes to Europe for a year to polish his game professionally, as Marco Rossi did in Switzerland before facing heart complications

    Heidt had mixed opinions about his inconsistent game, especially from Team Canada head coach Dave Cameron. That explains why Team Canada snubbed him this winter. Despite his impressive stats, Cameron evaluated the rest of Heidt’s game, which didn’t meet his expectations to win a gold medal.

    After bottling those emotions and putting on a better showing at the Summer Showcase for Canada, Heidt made the roster and plotted his revenge tour. Heidt was physically engaged, which continues to impress coaches along with his offensive skills. Heidt’s physical tools can help him adapt to the NHL game quicker than his production, which is why Heidt can make Johansson expendable if he makes the team. 

    Johansson’s strengths are limited. His speed in open ice makes him a threat in transition, and he sometimes outskates defenders around the perimeter. However, Johansson doesn’t possess the grit that will last through a season, let alone a playoff series, making him a passive player. Thus, he’s prone to taking shifts off and doesn’t always look physically engaged. Therefore, Johansson wouldn’t be suited for a bottom-six role due to his inability to engage physically and play a shutdown game. Conversely, Heidt’s likely better suited for a third-line role. 

    However, Heidt could play in the middle-six and power play minutes on the second unit with Mats Zuccarello, Rossi, Ohgren, Ryan Hartman, and Khusnutdinov. That cast of players should help Heidt produce depth offense. Heidt plays a similar style to Hartman: He can agitate opponents and get under their skin at any moment. If anything, Heidt can benefit from playing with  Hartman to become a pain for opponents to face and generate offense. Playing with someone like Heidt can help Hartman stay more disciplined because he’ll have a playmaker on his line. 

    To make Guerin move on from Johansson, Heidt must show promise like Rossi did during last year's training camp. Heidt doesn't need to score in every game during the preseason, but he should score timely goals where it makes a difference. Guerin can make Johansson expendable either via trade or buyout. He no longer serves the team's identity. 

    The Wild will play the Winnipeg Jets, Dallas Stars, and Chicago Blackhawks during the preseason. Heidt will likely face defenders like Josh Morrissey, Miro Heiskanen, and Seth Jones, who will be assigned to shut him down. How will Heidt adjust to facing agitators and power forwards like Adam Lowry, Jamie Benn, and Tyler Bertuzzi? How about facing top goaltenders like Connor Hellebuyck and Jake Oettinger? Heidt must display some kind of well-rounded ability that Johansson doesn’t possess. Heidt will face his biggest challenge yet. 

    After failing to make Team Canada, Heidt began to round out his game. He’s trying out for the NHL to play with men, which is the opposite of the Summer Showcase. We’ll witness weaknesses in his game, but we’ll also see his scoring promise that should encourage the Wild to play him nine NHL games during the regular season. Will he show promise like Boston Bruins’ Matt Poitras, a similar player, which made him stay with the team? If the Wild send Heidt back to juniors, he will be motivated to break his scoring record after a helpful NHL stint. 

    Wheeler highlighted Heidt’s intelligence, which suggests confidence in his ability to develop and succeed at higher levels. He advocated for a supportive and strategic approach to his career progression. Overall, Wheeler has hope for Heidt's future while recognizing the challenges he must overcome to reach his full potential in professional hockey.

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    3 hours ago, mnfaninnc said:

    I've been telling everyone that his market value had tanked and we could pick him up cheap. That Montreal didn't need retained salary probably helped their situation.

    Yeah, I certainly didn't think it would be quite that low. It's a large contract, but it's not a huge term. I would have thought someone would have a player/contract they'd like to swap for him without requiring much/any salary retention.

    The Wild couldn't trade for him without salary retention unless they were trading 4+ players due to their cap situation and no movement clauses.

    Laine is still young and could potentially put up over 130 points in the 2 years of his current contract, particularly if they put him on the line with Nick Suzuki. Understanding that the Wild were unlikely to get involved, I didn't spend much time considering places for him to go, but I'm not surprised Montreal was interested--just surprised at the low cost to them in adding him.

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    4 hours ago, mnfaninnc said:

    If he hasn't been in the A, but is on his jr. team, why can't you call him up? While I would think him leapfrogging over A players is a bit odd, I still think you can do it. Even the Wild recalled Ek when he was in Sweden to come back for the playoffs and they burned an ELC year on him.

    I think you are right in that they could pull him from juniors. I just don't think they would.

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    I think Heidt has been working on the things Wild development asked him to all through last year. I think he showed an ability to improve and I presume that proved something. He had a nice season. 

    The odds are slim for him to jump to the NHL ahead of all the other guys. Some who have NHL experience or even a Cup ring.(NoJo) 

    I think Heidt is a good player but do the Wild need him? Not exactly, they've got depth amongst prospects a little older than him. 

    I'd bet against him sticking in the NHL cause MN is not a bottom-dwelling rebuild. He's good enough to play without pressure for SJ or CHI but for MN amongst vets trying to make the playoffs, or get another contract, I think it's a serious jump. Not impossible but I'd not really like to bet on anything til after a few pre-season games or the first 3-4 games of the regular season.

    Seth Jarvis, Josh Doan, and some other guys have done well taking a big step. It really depends on the attitude and poise he has against NHL competition. Rossi needed more time. Fair to guess Heidt could end up spending one more year in the WHL. 

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    "Guerin can make Johansson expendable either via trade or buyout. "

    the ship on buying Johansson out this season has sailed.

    Per puckkpeida, 

    Buyout Period

    Buyouts can start on the later of June 15 or 48 hours after the Playoffs end, and the buyout period ends June 30 at 5pm Eastern.

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    9 hours ago, Imyourhuckleberry said:

    He has great speed, which allows him to get in on the forecheck to cut off clearing attempts by defenders, and he’s strong enough on his skates to win board battles against bigger defencemen.

    Keep in mind that this description is against jr. players who are larger defensemen, not the monsters in the N. This would mean about 65% of N defensemen. I don't think "strong enough" here cuts it.

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