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  • The Wild Should Trade Up For Cayden Lindstrom


    Image courtesy of NHL.com

    The Minnesota Wild's biggest need in the draft is a prospect who can play in the NHL immediately. Pending next week's lottery, they hold Pick 13 in the 2024 Draft, and the pressure is on the Wild front office. They'll need to take a page from the Vegas Golden Knights’ win-now playbook to retain Kirill Kaprizov. In order to do that, they should do what it takes to trade up the draft. The highest the Wild could realistically trade up is to third overall, which is currently owned by the Anaheim Ducks. 

    Anaheim is a good trade partner because they already have two first-round picks in this year’s draft (No. 24) and the flexibility to move up and down the draft board as they wish. The Wild are close enough to the top ten to pull off a trade. The Ducks are rebuilding its depth and prospect pool. They have building blocks in Mason McTavish, Troy Terry, Trevor Zegras, and Leo Carlsson

    Trading up in the draft isn’t easy, especially into the top three. The Chicago Blackhawks and San Jose Sharks have the best odds to win the lottery to pursue Macklin Celebrini or Ivan Demidov. Celebrini and Demidov are projected to be the top two picks in this year’s draft. If the board shakes out like that and the Wild can aggressively move up, who might be their ideal target? 

    Danila Yurov is projected to arrive in 2025-26. Fans are disappointed to hear that the next Russian phenomenon won’t join the Wild next season. However, they get to watch another center with star potential to add to Minnesota’s center depth. The Wild should target Cayden Lindstrom from the WHL’s Medicine Hat Tigers. 

    Lindstrom is NHL-ready, which makes him a very safe pick, but he possesses high-end skill with unpredictable speed. Minnesota wants to get bigger at center, and they may be shopping Marco Rossi to add size. Lindstrom is the opposite of Rossi. His draft-year statistics (27 goals, 46 points in 32 games) aren’t as good as Rossi’s, but Lindstrom is dynamic and physical. Imagine if New York Rangers left wing Chris Kreider played center, and you have an idea of what Lindstrom could be for the Wild. 

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    The Wild need an impact player, and Lindstrom is showing first-line potential right now. Better yet, his stock will continue to rise because he plays a mature, NHL-ready style. NHL.com’s William Douglas quoted Medicine Hat head coach Willie Desjardins, who had this to say about Lindstrom's game

    He’s gifted athletically, he can really shoot a puck and he’s got great speed. He can overpower guys. He passes the puck like a pro and he’s hard to play against. He’s [an even] better person. He can take criticism. He smiles. He’s excited to be at the rink. He knows where he wants to go, and he’s driven to his goals.

    The Wild wanted Charlie Coyle, who boasted a 6-foot-3 frame, to use his size to be a game-breaker, but he never was a dynamic offensive player at center. Lindstrom has a higher offensive ceiling than Coyle. He has captain potential, leading by example like Brock Faber, who has also proven to been an impactful player and leader. Faber won't be an offensive juggernaut, but he's an elite two-way defenseman. Lindstrom will likely become an elite two-way center who can be Joel Eriksson Ek's successor as a dynamic force in the middle-six.

    If the Wild are trying to become bigger, faster, stronger, Lindstrom checks every box. Lindstrom’s breakaway speed is impressive for his 6-foot-4 frame, able to break away from defenders more often than not. His skating style on the transition game kind of reminds me of Connor McDavid (Edmonton Oilers), Nathan MacKinnon (Colorado Avalanche), Jack Eichel (Golden Knights), and Dylan Larkin (Detroit Red Wings). Lindstrom’s able to shake defenders with his acceleration and top speed. He can come out of nowhere and burst past defenders to be in alone on goaltenders. 

    Lindstrom can further improve by working with Andy Ness, who helped Rossi transition to NHL speed. Given that he's a natural power forward, Lindstrom can make the most of Ness's experience to take his game to a different level. Lindstrom playing with NHL power forwards should help him take the next step when he debuts in the NHL. Lindstrom should be able to handle NHL competition without the production. Once he gains experience, his game will unleash and give the Wild another power center. 

    Drafting Lindstrom will give the Wild more size down the middle. If Yurov (who's 6-foot-1 and playing center in Russia) can stick down the middle in the NHL, Minnesota can utilize Eriksson Ek, Yurov, and Lindstrom to create three scoring lines. Lindstrom gets to play a third-line role behind Yurov and Eriksson Ek, but will be relied upon to provide secondary scoring like Eriksson Ek used to be, and will undoubtedly get power play minutes. Lindstrom won’t face the pressure of being a primary contributor immediately, but can immediately provide the depth Minnesota is desperate for. 

    The Wild’s Stanley Cup window officially opens when Yurov arrives in 2025-26. Kaprizov, Eriksson Ek, and Matt Boldy are the Wild’s current top line, and they should able to complete their top-six with a big, strong supporting cast that includes Lindstrom, Yurov, Liam Ohgren, and more, which fits the vision of how Guerin wants to build the Wild. With that kind of support in the middle six, an aggressive trade up for Lindstrom could ensure Kaprizov stays in a Minnesota Wild uniform for the foreseeable future.

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    While that would be nice, how would we even do that?  I doubt 13, Rossi, and Gus alone would pull that off.  You're asking for a next years first to even get a sniff at 3rd.

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    I’m really happy for T wolve fans. I had no idea how special ant is. Hearing  current and former players talk about him like he’s the next MJ is cool. I haven’t watched b ball since the Jordan era . I’m definitely into watching ant now. To think minny might be sitting on the next MJ is so great for minny.  I’m also impressed how they play as a team not individuals. 
        The wild need to draft an ant. A guy who wants to kill everything in front of him  and the talent to do so. . He’s got  the it factor. MJ’s compete level. Wild need that. 

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    Ant got my curiosity rolling w the Wolves. JJ w the Vikes , Now just do what it takes to appease Kirill.   We haven’t had that kind of HOF talents since Puck 

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    Kalisha, you read my mind perfectly! It must be reiterated, Lindstrom hurt his hand this season and missed significant time. This is why his stats are down.

    I have seen Lindstrom available anywhere from 3 to 10 on mocks. I suppose he is a little lost in the shuffle with his injury in some, and those big defenders are very enticing. 

    He and Saliyayev are my 2 targets. So, we're going to need to trade up.....or get ping pong luck, which we are due.  Jumping up to 3 would be huge!

    I believe that Kalisha was suggesting #13 + Rossi = #3. That would give the Ducks a 1-2 punch of Carlsson and Rossi at center, I'm not sure where Zegras plays. 

    I'd be ok with that, but I'd really want to try and pry Brady Tkachuk out of Ottawa first. It would be nice for the ping pong balls to give us 3 and trade for BT. For me, that would be like Christmas.

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    Bettman owns us big time for screwing us on the Parise suter contracts. They were already done when that rule came out, why punish us?

    So pull out that green Foosball with a wild symbol on bettman!

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    Tankathon has us taking some size. Silayev D man from Russia. 6 foot 7 inches, 207lbs! God dang lol. Yakumchuck would be a sweet pick for the name alone, 6' 3" right shot d man

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    The Wild are not so desperate for a particular player that they should overpay anything. I mean, trading up by a few spots with a perfect win-win, or in the 2nd round is possible but still uncommon.

    The Wild sitting where they're at in the draft can get a nice player. I just hope it's not a little Euro, elite Swede, or guruism where the Wild pass on the obvious or get weird and take a falling player.

    Brackett blunders have been debunked apparently, but I'm not going off Hockey-Writers or analytics. I'm using my eyeballs and brain for conclusions. Undecided yet. I think the Wild should take Hage if he's available I could see Philly taking him. You gotta think Iginla will go to Calgary at 9th. MN "should" have a really nice group of options at 13th.

    Gotta figure the top 10 includes obvious guys like Celebrini, Levshunov, Lindstrom, Buium,(so hot right now) Parekh,(rising), Dickinson,(Big D from OHL/Toronto area) and maybe Iginla if Calgary goes that route. That's seven NA guys and I figure, Demidov, Silayev, and either Jiricek or Helenuis or both could be gone by the time ten picks have happened. For me Buffalo, and Philly are the wild-cards along with teams reaching off the board so to speak.

    It could be good to trade up but at what price because MN could easily end up with a Yakemchuk, Hage, Catton, Connelly, Greentree, Eiserman, Parascak, Sennecke, Jiricek, Hemming, or elite Swede Brandsegg-Nygaard which is the one I'm thinking Brackett loves. My theory had been that he likes elite Swedes or Finns because they have double-letters in their names just like Judd. His last elite Swede however was Ogie who conspicuously has no double-letters like Brakett. I'm optimistic if that is a thing for JB, he'll go with Catton, or better yet Connelly or Greentree who each have double double-letters going with the consonant or vowel flavors.

    😁 

    My point is, the Wild will be fine paying nothing to anyone and get their value at 13th just as well.

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    3 minutes ago, Protec said:

    My theory had been that he likes elite Swedes or Finns because they have double-letters in their names just like Judd. His last elite Swede however was Ogie who conspicuously has no double-letters like Brakett. I'm optimistic if that is a thing for JB, he'll go with Catton, or better yet Connelly or Greentree who each have double double-letters going with the consonant or vowel flavors.

    😁

     

    Just think Olli Joelovi... This one's for you debunkers out there.

    😆

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    People like Boldy, Suzuki, and Caufield have been gotten around 13-15, so you're going to hope on a higher end guy or even a middle as a floor.  If a bigger D like Yakemchuk is still there, grab him.  Even Greentree or Brandsegg-Nygard to beef up the winger position, or Eiserman for a pure shooter if he drops somehow.  Helenius or Jiricek screams grabbing someone redundant.  The Wild don't need centers.  The Wild don't need smaller defenseman.  What they need is secondary scoring or someone how can smack people around so other teams stop secondary scoring.

    Silayev would be a dream scenario, but I doubt he's going to be there.  I would ok taking Iginla too, but man.  Calgary can't ask for a better pick to fall into their laps.  I kinda want either him to go there for us to get him if he's the option.

    Edited by Citizen Strife
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    Also, if Silayev or Yakemchuk isn't an option, there's apparently a 2nd round D called Pulkkinen mocked in the 40s that could be an backup plan.  6'6" 216 lbs screams GIMME

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    23 minutes ago, Protec said:

    The Wild are not so desperate for a particular player that they should overpay anything. I mean, trading up by a few spots with a perfect win-win, or in the 2nd round is possible but still uncommon.

    Here's how I'm seeing it, the rebuild is over, it's time for the development. Go get the guy you want. Why not try and get a guy who is 6'3" 215 (in jrs.), who skates great (a definite Brackett trait) and has a Tkachuk like compete level? So you have to pay to get him, so what, it's a targeted pick on a player of need, not position. 

    I also love the big Russian, and a 1-2 pick of him and Pulkinnen would be most welcome, but right now, I think the most franchise changing move would be Lindstrom and not because he can be inserted right away.

    Previously, on "Building the Wild" we have seen Brackett taking the best player available. This started with Rossi who is turning into a very nice pick. It also had us getting a franchise goalie and several good defensive prospects. The vision for this was having a Wall in goal, and a larger, but puck moving defense that was strong enough to defend, but smooth enough to be 2-way defenders. These guys could be rolled out and accomplish the same thing regardless of pairing. 

    Then we focused on the forwards and we have a vast array of talented forwards almost arriving. The roster hasn't yet turned, but it is about to. Now we need to fill out what we don't have. And one thing we don't have is a center who can play like Lindstrom. He immediately helps the collective 23 with his effort and ability. When the guard rails which are the buyout penalties come off, then we need to address some other area we do not have. And, next season, with money left over, perhaps we can convince Skjei to come home too? 

    I see us needing to change our mindset and start instead thinking about the present and not the future. It's time to make our move, next season will be the last of the futures on the roster, '25-26 starts the NOW. This will be the opening of "contender" time.

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    3 minutes ago, mnfaninnc said:

    Here's how I'm seeing it, the rebuild is over, it's time for the development. Go get the guy you want. Why not try and get a guy who is 6'3" 215 (in jrs.), who skates great (a definite Brackett trait) and has a Tkachuk like compete level? So you have to pay to get him, so what, it's a targeted pick on a player of need, not position. 

    I also love the big Russian, and a 1-2 pick of him and Pulkinnen would be most welcome, but right now, I think the most franchise changing move would be Lindstrom and not because he can be inserted right away.

    Previously, on "Building the Wild" we have seen Brackett taking the best player available. This started with Rossi who is turning into a very nice pick. It also had us getting a franchise goalie and several good defensive prospects. The vision for this was having a Wall in goal, and a larger, but puck moving defense that was strong enough to defend, but smooth enough to be 2-way defenders. These guys could be rolled out and accomplish the same thing regardless of pairing. 

    Then we focused on the forwards and we have a vast array of talented forwards almost arriving. The roster hasn't yet turned, but it is about to. Now we need to fill out what we don't have. And one thing we don't have is a center who can play like Lindstrom. He immediately helps the collective 23 with his effort and ability. When the guard rails which are the buyout penalties come off, then we need to address some other area we do not have. And, next season, with money left over, perhaps we can convince Skjei to come home too? 

    I see us needing to change our mindset and start instead thinking about the present and not the future. It's time to make our move, next season will be the last of the futures on the roster, '25-26 starts the NOW. This will be the opening of "contender" time.

    For me, it's all about the cost. Trading Gus & 13th for example to move up a little bit really isn't worth it. Gus plus something more and 13th to move way up seems like a strong pay to get a player who's not certain to play in the NHL immediately when you could trade assets for a current NHL player.(a more developed player.)

    Add on top of that the pressure, timing, and uncertainty around the draft and how each selection plays out and it seems pretty complicated. High-risk, high-reward can be good, but if Fluery got hurt, now Wallstedt is gonna be under pressure to be an NHL 1A tendy overnight. Think about that before we trade Gus for a better 2024 18yo prospect.

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    If we knew what Yurov, Khusnutdinov, Ohgren, etc brought, I'd be more inclined to shoot for a "time is now" push...but no.

    The Wild have this

    1. Elite game changing player (Kaprizov).

    2. A serviceable if not at times dangerous top line (Ek/Boldy)

    3. A potentially elite defensive/two-way #1 D (Faber)

    4. 40-50 pt forwards (Rossi/Hartman/Zuccarello)

    5. High-end yet aging and injury-prone defensive defense (Brodin/Spurgeon).

    6. Younger middle-six (Ohgren/Khusnutdinov)

    7. Inconsistent goaltending (Fleury/Gus)

    8. Suitable spare parts but lacking in areas or aging out (3rd pairings/Middleton/Mojo/Gaudreau).

    The Wild are a 1 line team with 3 great defenders (two on the older side), and a bunch of what ifs. I am not convinced on anything other than they are a bubble team with "some" skill to beat up the truly bad or get lucky against the best "sometimes."

    Those "sometimes" labels keep me leery.

     

     

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    I think they should just stick at #13. Some stud is going to fall there.

    Whether that's a sub-6' top-line talent or a blue liner with some size. 

    Its a good spot to be in this draft class. Just stay there and see who falls. 

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    4 hours ago, Backwoodsbob said:

    Personally I would be looking at a good sized "D" man. I feel the defense is a weak spot. IMHO

     

    This team is riddled with weaknesses. A good C with size or a big talented D would be my pick.

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    3 hours ago, Protec said:

    elite Swede Brandsegg-Nygaard

    Brandsegg-Nygaard is from Norway and was born there. He played a lot of hockey in Norway but also played in some Swedish leagues. If we were going to go after a Center I would really like Hage. He’s a great player and scouts seem to have a hard time coming up with any negative things about him.

    if we took brandsegg nygaard id be really pissed. There should be plenty of better players available.

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    3 hours ago, Citizen Strife said:

    The Wild don't need centers. 

    The Wild absolutely need centers. You can never have enough of them or big skilled defenders. You can’t bank on Yurov to take the 1st or 2nd C when he’s never even played an nhl game. I do think that he’s as close to a sure thing as there is but maybe C doesn’t work out for him like what happened with Boldy in college. Since this draft is loaded with defenders I’m leaning towards a big d to pick. We really don’t have any of those in the system that look particularly promising. They all seem to be about 6ft

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    What they need is scoring skill, and Rossi went from not hitting the broad side of a barn to a 20-goal scorer in a year.  Dumping that prematurely is a big risk.

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    57 minutes ago, FredJohnson said:

    The Wild Should Trade Up For Cayden Lindstrom

    We're not the Vikings.

    4vrY.gif

    Aaarrrrtexxxx!!!

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    1 hour ago, Mateo3xm said:

    Brandsegg-Nygaard is from Norway and was born there. He played a lot of hockey in Norway but also played in some Swedish leagues. If we were going to go after a Center I would really like Hage. He’s a great player and scouts seem to have a hard time coming up with any negative things about him.

    if we took brandsegg nygaard id be really pissed. There should be plenty of better players available.

    Yes, I only like Norwegian Hobbits...

    spacer.png

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