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  • The Wild Will Regress If They Can't Improve Their Anemic Offense


    Image courtesy of Matt Krohn-Imagn Images
    Tom Schreier

    Even at the tail-end of a seven-game win streak that probably saved John Hynes’ job, the Minnesota Wild can’t help but lose to one of the worst teams in the league for the past 15 years.

    In their last four games heading into tonight’s matchup with the Edmonton Oilers, the Wild: 

    • Beat the Winnipeg Jets 3-0.
    • Scraped by the Chicago Blackhawks 4-3 in overtime. 
    • Had a cathartic 3-2 shootout win over the Colorado Avalanche.
    • Lost to the Buffalo Sabres 3-2 in a shootout, snapping their seven-game winning streak.

    It’s easy to focus on the positives. Jesper Wallstedt had a shutout in Winnipeg, and the Wild beat a divisional foe who had won nine straight games against them! Colorado has more points than any other team in the league! Kirill Kaprizov is an Avs killer, Matt Boldy is looking like Robin to Kaprizov’s Batman, and Brock Faber is scoring again!

    That’s all well and good, but consider that the San Jose Sharks have beaten the Wild twice this year, including immediately before Minnesota’s seven-game win streak. They’re a bubble team looking to break out of their rebuild phase. Chicago also nearly took one from the Wild. 

    Teams like the Sharks and Blackhawks tanked rather than rebuild, sneaking into the playoffs and losing in the first round, as the Wild did during the worst of their cap penalties. San Jose and Chicago are led by dynamic superstars, Macklin Celebrini and Connor Bedard, and they will likely have more dynamic talent come up through their system because they’ve been drafting higher than the Wild.

    Chicago eliminated the Wild in the second round of the playoffs in 2013-14 and 2014-15. San Jose represented the Western Conference in the 2015-16 season. Once they realized that their old cores had aged out, they tanked and rebuilt while the Wild dithered in the first round with no chance to truly contend because of the Zach Parise, Ryan Suter buyout penalties.

    The Blackhawks and Sharks likely will be waiting for the Wild by the end of Bill Guerin’s five-year plan, threatening to eliminate them from the playoffs as bona fide contenders.

    What about the Sabres? They haven’t made the postseason since 2010-11, and they have the fewest points in the Eastern Conference this year. The Wild chalked that loss up to an emotional letdown after beating Colorado the day before.

    “It’s hard I think from a mental aspect, but that’s the challenge in this league to come from a game where there’s hype before the game, two of the best teams, two of the hottest teams in the league, and you’re amped up and then the next time you gotta play a team that doesn’t look good in the standings,” Nico Sturm said after losing to Buffalo.

    “But as you saw today, there’s no easy teams in the NHL. We all know that, but that’s a challenge in this league to show up 24 hours or less sometimes when your emotions come from the highest highs to the lowest lows. 

    There’s no easy teams in the NHL, but there are teams that win more often than they lose and vice versa. Then there’s the Wild, perpetually stuck in the middle. 

    They can tell themselves that they’re on the Avs’ level after beating them in a shootout to win their seventh-straight game. But they’re not. Colorado scores 4.12 goals per game and gives up 2.08 – that’s a winning formula.

    Meanwhile, Minnesota scores 2.85 goals per game, slightly more than the Philadelphia Flyers (2.83), San Jose Sharks (2.81), and Columbus Blue Jackets (2.80). The New York Islanders and Detroit Red Wings (2.88) score more than the Wild. So do the Vancouver Canucks, Utah Mammoth, and Buffalo Sabres [italics] (2.96). 

    Philadelphia, Columbus, and Buffalo are some of the worst teams in hockey. The rest reside on the bubble with Minnesota. The Wild may have won seven straight, but they’re only a .500 team now (14-7-5, or 14-12 in other sports). They’re likely nothing more than a bubble team and probably will lose in the first round again. 

    Even if the Wild win a playoff series this year, they don’t look like a true contender. Their stellar goaltending is masking their lack of scoring. Marcus Johansson is their third-leading scorer, and he’s 35, liable to regress, and shouldn’t be part of Guerin’s five-year plan. Faber is their next-highest leading scorer.

    Losing to Buffalo isn’t a mystery or a fluke. It’s the product of Minnesota’s lack of offense and a harbinger for what’s to come. Cathartic victories and epic letdowns. The Wild can beat anyone on any given night, but they can also lose ot the worst teams in the league. They’re not talented enough to sustain success.

    The Wild are always stuck in the middle because they refuse to leave it.

    Think you could write a story like this? Hockey Wilderness wants you to develop your voice, find an audience, and we'll pay you to do it. Just fill out this form.

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    5 hours ago, mnfaninnc said:

    OgZ in the S, Yurov in the K, Buium in the NCAAs, and The Wall partly in the S, but also in the A. 

    Get this to rhyme and you might consider taking a run at “ Best New Rap Artist.” Quite remarkable actually. 

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    2 hours ago, MNCountryLife said:

    Canucks, Preds and Flames all looking to unload talent for a high price.  I would think that BG would be tinkering with the roster to bring in a top 6 winger.  With only $3m to $4m of cap space he may need to be creative to pull it off.

    Re CAP dollars - let's consider 

    • Vlady - waiver gets us out of the 4.7MM or whatever is left
    • Rossi has 5MM

    seems like we could be players for a high end player? is there one available now?

    Canucks, Preds and Flames should be in the sell mode and maybe STL too, but i'd wait and keep an eye out East

    TOR, CBJ, NYR, NYI, DET, BUF you just never know how far some of these teams fall (I'll even add OTT and BOS)

    The only issue is the parity of the East - where two WC teams sit at 31pts and then 5 teams are trying to catch them and are all within 3 pts.

    I am hoping someone starts sliding so that we can have a better choice.....i am not too thrilled with the current options from the four teams in the West. but i don't know if we'll have any choice - the East is just a slug and maybe they'll all do nothing and hold on to their roster?

    If possible i'd prefer these (again IF possible - hold the pitchforks!)

    Pasta > Tkachuk > Larkin > Tage > Panarin > Marchenko > Horvat > Tuch > Kyrou > ROR > Stamy > Zucker!

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    32 minutes ago, OldDutchChip said:

    Pasta > Tkachuk > Larkin > Tage > Panarin > Marchenko > Horvat > Tuch > Kyrou > ROR > Stamy > Zucker!

    Given KK's lucrative contract for the next several years, we need to strategically consider his next Zucci sidekick for the long term.  Although not thrilled about waiting to see who tanks mid-season 2025-26 table scraps, however this is not a bad list to consider.  I'm thinking we're still missing 1-2 spark plugs for PO play.

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    3 hours ago, MNCountryLife said:

    Danila Yurov out tonight.  🤕

    That is too bad.  The young man has been playing well.  I wonder if it was that blocked shot on the foot that did it last game.

    Russo reported today that Yurov's injury actually happened playing the Blackhawks, so 2 games ago. He did go with the team on the road trip however and it didn't sound like he'd be out very long.

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    Since its a game of chaos and tough guys dancing on ice, the Wild are on pace for a deep playoff run. The goal tending isn't going away any time soon. But yeah, score more goals and win more games. Easy to do 👀🍾

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    Buffalo didn't beat Gus with a single shot. Both goals bounced off of bodies after he had made a save. Zuccs "catch attempt" was the flukiest of flukes. 

    The Wild have had all of their centers for ZERO games this year. If Rossi hadn't been hurt we wouldn't be talking about scoring depth. 

    This entire article is desperately negative.

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    When your goalies are on fire and your D is healthy, like the Wild are now, you can win low-event, low-scoring games.  When the Wild get Rossi, Yurov, Foligno, and even Hinostroza back from the injured list, our scoring should improve.

    I'd file this under "Signs of a deep team that can win with multiple styles", rather than a sign of impending doom. 

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    22 hours ago, MNCountryLife said:

    I've mentioned before that we don't have a legit 2nd line.  Or more to the point.. we don't have 6 players that are legit top 6.  Yurov has played well and Zuc is proving that he can still play.  What happens if we move Rossi to wing when he returns.  Kirill, Yurov, Zuc / Rossi, Ek, Boldy is not a bad top 6....Is that a legit top 6 lineup?  It's close... or more to the point... getting close.

    I‘ve always wanted to see Boldy at Center. He is responsible defensively and already on the PK1 line, can hold his own on faceoffs, and has the size and skills to excel in the middle and be a true #1 Center

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    1 hour ago, Fortis said:

    I‘ve always wanted to see Boldy at Center. He is responsible defensively and already on the PK1 line, can hold his own on faceoffs, and has the size and skills to excel in the middle and be a true #1 Center

    I've thought about that as well with Boldy.  He has all the tools.  My concern is that Boldy can score and the wingers in our system typically have more scoring oppurtinities.  Would his scoring decline if placed at center?  We don't have a lot of goal scorers on the team... 

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    On 12/3/2025 at 8:47 AM, Patrick said:

    This entire article is desperately negative.

    That pretty much sums up all Tom's articles.  He also likes to touch on the same topics over and over again, generally ignoring lots of evidence to the contrary just to state his narrative.

    I don't want every article to be a glowing assessment of the team, but finding ways to beat the same dead horses over and over again is not good writing.

    The worst part about Tom's articles is seeing this at the end and realizing that Hockey Wilderness thinks finding new ways to complain about the same things is worth paying someone for.  If he is the bar, the bar is pretty low.

    "Think you could write a story like this?"

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    The Wild need to send out NoJo and either Ogie or Jiricek for Keefer Surewood. 

    They might wanna get another young defenseman in case Hughes leaves. 

    NoJo gotta go-go.

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