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  • What Do Scouts Say About New Wild Defenseman David Jiricek?


    Image courtesy of David Kirouac-Imagn Images
    Tony Abbott

    By now, all Minnesota Wild fans are aware of the shiny new toy in the State of Hockey: defenseman David Jiricek. The Wild paid a hefty price to acquire the No. 6 overall pick from 2022 (and a fifth-round pick), sending Daemon Hunt and a first, second, third, and fourth-rounder to the Columbus Blue Jackets. For that kind of price, it makes sense that fans would expect something special from Jiricek.

    Will Minnesota get that kind of player?

    We could discuss his limited NHL track record, his shining performance in the 2023 World Junior Championships, or his extensive pro experience in Czechia and the AHL. But that does not quite convey the experience of watching him play regularly.

    Fortunately, Jiricek has been on the radar long before 2022. He debuted in the Czechia Extraliga -- the country's highest pro level -- on January 26, 2020, barely two months after turning 16. Jiricek has had scouts' attention for a while, but how have their opinions developed alongside Jiricek through the years? Let's track it in four phases, starting with...

    2021: On the Rise

    We first see Jiricek's name cropping up, at least on public scouting reports, in the back half of 2021. Early prognosticators of the 2022 Draft seemed to have Jircek as a consensus top-15 pick. NHLEntryDraft.com even had him going to the Columbus Blue Jackets in their early mock draft. Great job! Their report? 

    The Czech rearguard is a two-way presence that skates very well for his size, showing a promising ability to break up plays, control the rush, or turn the puck up the other way.

    At the end of September 2021, Bob McKenzie of TSN released his 2022 draft list, and Jiricek debuted at No. 10.

    Jiricek is viewed as a throwback, hard-rock shutdown defensive defenceman, an ultra-aggressive big hitter with a mean streak who is a strong skater. Scouts love all that bite but are still debating his offensive ceiling/limitations.

    Though released much later to the public, Elite Prospects had been monitoring him in April 2021. David St-Louis wrote of him during the Under-18 Worlds:

    He kills rushes with backward skating and has some lateral mobility. He is physical. Very. Finishes every check.... He's an interesting player for sure.

    Just six months later, Jiricek made a much bigger impression on St-Louis. From October 2021 in Extraliga: 

    Jiříček is going high in the draft. His tools clearly project as above-average (he’s a 6-foot-3, mobile, righty), and he cares about the defensive game... he can match shifty attackers with his four-way mobility. He is also physical, able to pin even pro attackers already. Impressive.

    So, at this time, Jiricek is seen as a big, mobile defender with upside as a shutdown defender. Then the offense starts coming. He scored five goals and 11 points in 29 games at Extraliga. Those don't sound like huge numbers. Still, no one has ever come close, before or since, to that kind of production for a draft-eligible defenseman in the Czech league

    A big part of that came from him pushing the tempo as often as humanly possible. Wrote Elite Prospects' Mitchell Brown in an October 2021 scouting report:

    "I like how he doesn’t just make the simple play once he gets the puck. He beats defenders, looks for teammates cross-ice, and uses space before shooting." EP colleague J.D. Burke agreed at the time, saying, "[He] doesn’t connect on a lot of his plays -- the stretch passes, the activations off of the blue line and the deceptive feeds into the slot, and the pacey efforts to move the puck – but he’s trying them, and that counts for a lot."

    While noting that Jiricek "could be a pain in the ass on NHL ice" someday, Josh Tessler of SmahtScouting gave a lot of love to the rugged defenseman's surprisingly crafty hands. "Jiříček has excellent timing at cradling the puck and uses his elusive stick-handling ability to maintain possession of the puck for his team to keep the offensive momentum alive."

    Jiricek's star would only rise from there.

    2022: Draft Day

    For almost every NHL player, draft day is the high-water mark of your potential. No one's seen you play North American pro hockey. You can be anything -- an All-Star or a Hall of Famer. Heck, you can even be an all-time great soccer player. The hype train runs wild, the superlatives fly, and we all lose our minds a bit.

    And at this point, Jiricek's potential is through the roof. After the Blue Jackets drafted him, his agent pegged him as Shea Weber, and his Czech teammate, former NHL defenseman Jakub Kindl, compared him to Aaron Ekblad, the former No. 1 overall pick and Calder Trophy winner. Scouts weren't rushing to disagree, either. Even the normally conservative Corey Pronman believed he was most similar to three-time All-Star Alex Pietrangelo (No. 4 overall in 2008) as a prospect.

    There were only two opinions about Jiricek leading up to the draft: You loved him, or you looooooved him. No major outlets had him outside the top-10 of his class, and few had him out of the top-five. 

    Here's the accompanying scouting report from Scott Wheeler, who merely loved Jiricek, ranking him sixth in his final 2022 Draft ranking:

    [He has] one of — if not the — hardest point shots in the draft. It’s a bomb, and he does a really good job keeping it on target and a few feet off the ice... he’s a confident, active, engaged three-zone player who has all of the tools you look for in a top defender. As he continues to smooth out and polish his game, it’s hard to imagine he doesn’t become, at the very least, a top-four guy.

    And that's from a comparatively tepid perspective. Sam McGilligan (from scouting publication McKeen's Hockey, whom a young Judd Brackett wrote for) was over the moon for him.

    For me, Jiricek stands out as such a unique player that you can't find anywhere in the draft. If I go back another year, I still can't find someone like him. He's a bit of a unicorn.

    The obvious draw to Jiricek's game becomes crystal clear after just a few minutes of watching him -- his unprecedented aggression.... Calculated aggression means constantly applying pressure to the opponent, forcing fast decisions to avoid being smashed by the Czech freight train.

    And if that seems like a lot, Elite Prospects might have been even higher. The outlet ranked him second overall in his draft class and in the top five of several skills, including:

    • Best Defensive Defenseman (first)
    • Best Neutral Zone Defender (first)
    • Highest Floor (second)
    • Best Offensive Defenseman (third)
    • Hardest Hitter (third)
    • Best Transition Defenseman (fourth)
    • Highest Ceiling (fifth)

    EP's player comparable was Moritz Seider, who also won the Calder Trophy. Their ultimate conclusion?

    There’s a durable defensive foundation in place that will carry him to a top-four role at a bare minimum, even if his play with the puck doesn’t come along for the ride... You’re looking at a 6-foot-3, right-shot defenceman who can do just about everything at a low-end top-pairing level through the height of his career.

    But unlike most players, Jiricek's high-water mark as a prospect wasn't the draft.

    2023: Top Of the Worlds

    Jiricek could go directly to the AHL for his first season after being drafted, a luxury not afforded to many players in the first year after their draft. But already a seasoned pro at age-18, Jiricek could seamlessly handle the transition to North American hockey.

    He set the record for most AHL points for a defenseman in their Draft+1 season, piling up 38 in 55 games. It was an impressive campaign, topped off by a dominant Under-20 World Junior tournament.

    The goal above helped Team Czechia to the Gold Medal Game against Canada (where they lost in OT), earning their first medal at the U-20 tournament since 2005. Jiricek was especially dominant, scoring three goals (on 30 shots, ranking sixth-most among all players) and seven points in his seven games. Jiricek had a plus/minus of +10, getting tagged with just one minus on the tournament. He was the obvious pick for Best Defenseman of the 2023 World Juniors.

    Jiricek faced players already having massive success in the NHL: Connor Bedard, Logan Cooley, Dylan Guenther, Logan Stankoven, Luke Hughes, and more. He not only acquitted himself, but the data shows that Jiricek was an absolute beast in all three zones.

    image.png

    Wrote EP's Lassi Alanen after the tournament:

    He was a commanding factor both offensively and defensively. He had the highest shot volume in the entire tournament, forwards included, and also set up scoring chances at an above-average rate. Defensively, he killed plays both in in-zone setting and while defending against the rush.

    At The Athletic, Wheeler ranked him as the ninth-best prospect that summer, with Pronman tagging him as the 20th-best Under-23 player/prospect in the NHL. Pronman had him eighth among defensemen behind Rasmus Dahlin, Seider, Owen Power, Noah Dobson, Jake Sanderson, Hughes, and Bowen Byram.

    "Jiricek has been one of the most impactful teenage defensemen I’ve seen in the AHL in recent years," declared Pronman. "He’s showing a whole other level of offense this season.... Everything, except for his footspeed, points to a big minutes NHL defenseman.

    EP was still massively high on him, ranking him as their seventh-best NHL prospect, and top defenseman. "When he steps on the ice, the game belongs to him," their profile read.

    Hard to beat that.

    There was just one group that wasn't so all-in on Jiricek...

    2024: The Struggle (Colum)Bus

    Jiricek's path to Minnesota started in 2024, though no one knew it then. The top young defenseman made his displeasure known after Columbus sent him down to the AHL in January. “I played good hockey in the NHL," he said. "I’m an NHL player right now. That’s my opinion, that I should be in the NHL right now."

    Jarmo Kekäläinen (who Jiricek outlasted in Columbus, for what it's worth) might have seen it differently, but plenty of scouts took the player's side. Sportsnet's Jason Bukala went scorched-earth on Columbus' management:

    The Blue Jackets seem to forget what they have in this prospect. Jiricek can beat goalies at any level with a clapper or snap shot from range. He’s a power play threat waiting to happen. He has always produced offence along every stop in his development.

    St-Louis re-entered the picture to lend his support: 

    "At the very least, Jiříček looks like an NHL player," he wrote. "His confidence knows no bounds. He plays the same creative and hyper-aggressive game in the NHL as he did in the AHL last season, in the Czech league before that, and in his junior days. That’s a massive positive for his development, as he’s constantly testing his limits and pushing them, becoming more and more skilled as he advances in levels."

    And that's perhaps where the core of the conflict lay between Jiricek and the Blue Jackets. Maximizing Jiricek means allowing him to play a high-risk style. But when he messes up, it's more dangerous than it might be for other players.

    St.-Louis explains why: 

    Most daring defencemen usually have the skating ability to repair their mistakes.... Jiříček doesn’t have that kind of safety net, that recovery ability. Either [his daring plays] work spectacularly or they fail in the same fashion. And it’s the same defensively.

    The failure to launch, it turns out, brutally affected his stock with the Columbus organization. However, it didn't fully take the bloom off the rose outside of it. Pronman downgraded Jiricek on his U-23 rankings before the season from 20th to a still-strong 47th: 

    The long-term projection on Jiricek remains promising given his toolkit. I like his defensive edge and thought he showed he could be a great two-way player at other levels. His feet aren't the best and he struggled adapting to the NHL pace.... With time I think he'll be an all-situations top-four defenseman.

    But, like with many players, the hype dies down eventually, and the NHL starts to reveal warts in one's game. After a vigorous defense of Jiricek in January, Bukala was a bit more muted in his assessment on November 18: 

    As much as I appreciate what Jiricek can produce offensively he also needs to provide better-than-average defensive detail to find a regular role at the NHL level.

    St-Louis' scouting report from November 29 also puts his weaknesses into greater focus: 

    A weakness even in his draft year, Jiříček’s skating hasn’t improved over the past few seasons. While he can speed up the ice to catch up to the play... his pivots lack fluidity. His decision-making with the puck and defensive awareness have been equally problematic.

    Of course, St-Louis points out that there's still a ton to like: 

    Despite his ever-present weaknesses, Jiříček remains one of those rare right-shot defencemen capable of tilting the ice for his team.

    And, of course, in Minnesota, there's really one scout whose opinion matters most: Brackett. And the Wild's head scout is sold on him. "David Jiricek still has some things to work on, obviously," e told The Athletic's Michael Russo. "[But] he wants the puck.... He has an ability to get into spots where he can utilize it and support the rush. He plays definitive in his D zone."

    Brackett also provided immediate optimism by going on the record with his belief that his skating won't be the limiting factor as Columbus thought. "He is an average skater, but it’s good enough," he assured Russo. "You’re not going to look at him and go, ‘Oh, jeez!’ It’s good enough."

    Now that everyone has weighed in, and the Wild put their money where their mouths were, it's time to start seeing if Jiricek can live up to the faith so many have had in him throughout the years.

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    Interesting how nearly every early scout on this guy had skating as a strength.  Now it's not?

    I have only seen the available clips and can't really guage it, but it's not sticking out as a glaring issue.   

    I am excited for the transaction.  The Wild need someone who likes to punish on the ice.  Plus, that hammer of a shot.

    Get Mr. Ness to work.

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    We've seen the difference between AHL speed and NHL speed.  However, you can counterract that in ways.  Trenin and Foligno aren't fast guys, but they are defensively sound and hit people.  Rossi isn't the fastest center, but always seems to have a knack for clutch points.

    I don't think anyone is expecting a Brodin, Spurgeon, Faber, or Buium smooth skater.  They are giving Jiricek a chance to be "different." If he disrupts and plays fearlessly, that can be an ice tilting player.  Those reports tell me he isn't all offense.  It's just a part he can play.  If he has the willingness to use his strengths and hide his weaknesses, he could be a Middleton type, but even younger.  No one accuses Middleton of being the strongest skater or defensive wizard, but look at this guy this year.  He has his place next to a more defense oriented guy and doesn't shit the bed unlike last year.

    Jiricek has the size and apparent confidence to be a game changer.  Unless he's Ryan Reaves slow, he should get a leash.

     

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    I think the best part of getting him is that, for us, he doesn't HAVE to be that smooth skating defenseman who can keep up with a Connor McDavid or a Connor Bedard like he did for Columbus. We have those players already.

    What we don't really have is a blueline bomber since we shipped out Addison for being bad at defense. So, for now, Jiricek can focus on the positive aspects of his game while continuing to work on the weaknesses behind the scenes and, hopefully, during the offseason. 

    Honestly reading about his struggles at the NHL level reminds me a LOT of what Marco Rossi went through. And he's turned out pretty okay with a little more experience so far...

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    As MNCOUNTRYLIFE stated awesome article….And the evolution of the player continues. Super excited about adding a player already a couple of years from draft without trading players from the present team. 

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    2 hours ago, Citizen Strife said:

    We've seen the difference between AHL speed and NHL speed.  However, you can counterract that in ways.  Trenin and Foligno aren't fast guys, but they are defensively sound and hit people.  Rossi isn't the fastest center, but always seems to have a knack for clutch points.

    I don't think anyone is expecting a Brodin, Spurgeon, Faber, or Buium smooth skater.  They are giving Jiricek a chance to be "different." If he disrupts and plays fearlessly, that can be an ice tilting player.  Those reports tell me he isn't all offense.  It's just a part he can play.  If he has the willingness to use his strengths and hide his weaknesses, he could be a Middleton type, but even younger.  No one accuses Middleton of being the strongest skater or defensive wizard, but look at this guy this year.  He has his place next to a more defense oriented guy and doesn't shit the bed unlike last year.

    Jiricek has the size and apparent confidence to be a game changer.  Unless he's Ryan Reaves slow, he should get a leash.

     

    I don’t think it’s necessarily his straight line speed that makes people nervous.  As you said, numerous players can function without high-end straight line speed.  It’s his backwards skating and and ability to move laterally therein to not get blown by. Not being able to get yourself in position as a d man is a big deal and isn’t a function of how fast you can skate from end to end.  It’s not only technique, either.  There’s a minimum athleticism and anticipation requirement.  

    Thats just what I’ve read/heard.  I’m not a scout, obviously.

    Rossi and Foligno both train their tails off and have more than adequate mobility to defend their position and be solid offensive contributors.  But, it’s a completely different skill set and both would like not be good d men.

    Since the Reeves baseline came up, maybe they could find a role for Jiricek as a 4th line enforcer as all else fails (joke).

    The more I hear about him, the less I like the price we paid.  It seems like all he really has going for him that can currently translate to the NHL is a bit of size and a bomb of a shot.  I don’t really care about being right shot much if you can’t skate and move the puck.

    Worst case scenario, maybe he’s just a middle pairing guy who needs to be paired with a defensive and skating savant like a Brodin to cover his tail while  he unleashes his shot and gets some occasional run on the PP.

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    We will see where this guy goes over the next 9 months.  Will he step in and push Merril to the press box or will he go to Iowa and work on some things and play next year in the seven man defensive rotation.  

    Next year it is assumed we have Brodin, Spurgeon, Faber, Middleton, Bogo, Buium, Jiricek and possibly Chisholm in the mix.  I would be totally happy with that stable of defenseman.  Before the trade we had Hunt as a maybe and Chisholm as a lock.  Getting Jiricek was an upgrade. 

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    Sounds like Guerin better get Faber’s  skating coach working with this “stud”. A lot of draft capital to give away on a “maybe top 4” Dman…hope we have have a “defenseman whisperer” similar to O’Connell and QB’s.

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    I absolutely love the addition of Jiříček. He's gonna completely transform our blue line, starting next season. The Middleton-Faber pairing is great. Buium and Jiříček are offensively minded D-men who take risks. Well, we've got two elite veteran defensive D-men able to cover for linemates' risky plays in Brodin and Spurgeon. 

    Middleton - Faber, Buium - Spurgeon, Brodin - Jiříček, that's one hell of a blue line. With Bogosian or Chisholm on the bench.

    On the powerplay,  Buium can step in and quarterback the top unit right now. On the second unit, Jiříček could send clapbombs from the half wall, with Faber or Spurgeon distributing from the blue line.

    Yeah, I love it.

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    12 hours ago, Citizen Strife said:

    We've seen the difference between AHL speed and NHL speed.  However, you can counterract that in ways.  Trenin and Foligno aren't fast guys, but they are defensively sound and hit people.  Rossi isn't the fastest center, but always seems to have a knack for clutch points.

    I don't think anyone is expecting a Brodin, Spurgeon, Faber, or Buium smooth skater.  They are giving Jiricek a chance to be "different." If he disrupts and plays fearlessly, that can be an ice tilting player.  Those reports tell me he isn't all offense.  It's just a part he can play.  If he has the willingness to use his strengths and hide his weaknesses, he could be a Middleton type, but even younger.  No one accuses Middleton of being the strongest skater or defensive wizard, but look at this guy this year.  He has his place next to a more defense oriented guy and doesn't shit the bed unlike last year.

    Jiricek has the size and apparent confidence to be a game changer.  Unless he's Ryan Reaves slow, he should get a leash.

     

    Jiricek, Buium, and Faber. That blue line could, repeat, could, be a dominant force for a decade if those three live up to their potential.

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    This can be a side effect of super hype by the scouts up to and after the draft. The danger lies in the player buying into all the hype. Then when things don't pan out like the scouts projected the player can't believe it's on him, that he needs to work on things. It must be the coaches or the team philosophy. Then the scouts start to walk back their hype and point out his weaknesses. Because they don't like to be wrong either. 

    Thus Jiriceks comment that he is a NHL player and should not be down in the A. He is not going to be any happier down in the Wild's A than he was with the Columbus A. Perhaps the change of scenery is all he needed. If not he could prove to be uncoachable. One of those players who is always disgruntled about his role, his ice time, I'm not on PP1 and so on.  Maybe Billy got his Laine after all. 🤔

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    11 hours ago, Beast said:

    The more I hear about him, the less I like the price we paid.  It seems like all he really has going for him that can currently translate to the NHL is a bit of size and a bomb of a shot.  I don’t really care about being right shot much if you can’t skate and move the puck.

    It wasn't that bad of a price though? You could consider Hunt a 1for1 if Jiricek only plays 3rd pair.

    The 1st rounder would be in the 20's, 3rd & 4th in 2026 have very little chance of being a fulltime contributor especially in a top 6 role, the 2nd rounder is in 2027. I think it was Judd that said you don't find players like Jiricek in the 20's and Billy said something along the lines of it would've cost a lot more to trade for the 6th pick. I honestly don't think it was an overpay. Russo rumored there was a team offering 2 1st's and there were 4-5 other teams in the hunt as well.

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    2 hours ago, MacGyver said:

    This can be a side effect of super hype by the scouts up to and after the draft. The danger lies in the player buying into all the hype. Then when things don't pan out like the scouts projected the player can't believe it's on him, that he needs to work on things. It must be the coaches or the team philosophy. Then the scouts start to walk back their hype and point out his weaknesses. Because they don't like to be wrong either. 

    Thus Jiriceks comment that he is a NHL player and should not be down in the A. He is not going to be any happier down in the Wild's A than he was with the Columbus A. Perhaps the change of scenery is all he needed. If not he could prove to be uncoachable. One of those players who is always disgruntled about his role, his ice time, I'm not on PP1 and so on.  Maybe Billy got his Laine after all. 🤔

    Yes this is the gamble Guerin made.  
    Cam Barker was a third overall, so I’m not going to talk about jirizy being a 10 yr veteran.   Let’s see this guy play.  Based on the reports I’m expecting Klingberg (before he came here).  Offensive minded, not too physical so I’m not expecting pronger, with a big shot (already tired of the clapper hype).  Dumba was great at blasting clapper’s into shin pads.  Let’s see him play already, so the usual suspects don’t go full Ogzy on the hype only to realize this player is at least a couple years away

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    39 minutes ago, M_Nels said:

    I think it was Judd that said you don't find players like Jiricek in the 20's

    Honestly I’m not giving two shits about what Brackett thinks.  Only thing he’s proven is his ability to talk a good game.  His results give me no confidence in his ability to identify talent.  His value add is finding nhl’rs past the top 15 picks and he hasn’t shown the ability to do that at all. 

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    I think we have enough defensive stalwarts of our 6 that I think we give a big opportunity to Jiricek. He can be the new (and improved) Dumba; big hits, big shots but has some warts defensively. Stick him with Brodin or Spurg to learn the ways of gaps and stickwork and he will be passable defensively later in his career. 

    With the way we are playing now, we were looking at a late 20's 1st anyway. Iowa is already plumb full of prospects to the point where we need some experience down there to help teach the guys. I agree with MnFan that the coaching needs to be looked at down there. We have a ton of raw talent in the AHL that can't seem to put it together.

    I hope we can keep Declan at the end of the year. He has really upped his game this year and rounded things out to be a complete player. At only 24 he has a good chance to be part of the future as well. 

    Just imagine a blue line 5 years from now that look like;

    Buium Faber

    Declan Jiricek

    We have taken 12 defensemen in the past 4 drafts, (almost all at the 4th round or later) hopefully we can fill the third pairing with some of those picks. 

    Future looks bright!😎

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    49 minutes ago, Pewterschmidt said:

    Honestly I’m not giving two shits about what Brackett thinks.  Only thing he’s proven is his ability to talk a good game.  His results give me no confidence in his ability to identify talent.  His value add is finding nhl’rs past the top 15 picks and he hasn’t shown the ability to do that at all. 

    I'm not saying his word is gospel but if the rumors of other teams offers are correct he wasn't the only one who thought that way.

    That's the thing about this "competitive rebuild" we haven't had high picks and picks in the 15's-20's usually aren't superstars.

    His 1st rounders since he's been here are:

    2020: Rossi at #9 (same draft as Khus and Hunt) missed at Lundell unfortunately

    2021: Wally at #20, Lambos at #26 (Bankier is a sneaky one here at #86) the only other 1st round stud is Johnston but we needed a G, guess you could say Knies and Stankoven are considered misses

    2022: Ohgren at #19, Yurov at #24 (Haight at #47) nobody after them has even played 50 games

    2023: Stramel at #21 (non-NHL whipping boy it seems) (Heidt #64) nobody after him has played even 10 games

    2024: Buium at #12 only one after him has played 4 games and a 5th rounder that has played 7 for COL

    Point is, it's too early to judge his results with the Wild. I suppose I could go back through VAN's drafts but I just did the Wild's. 

     

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    27 minutes ago, M_Nels said:

    2020: Rossi at #9 (same draft as Khus and Hunt) missed at Lundell unfortunately

    Rossi vs Lundell.  Maybe Lundell could have provided returns earlier and he'll definitley be a better playoff performer (already proven with a Cup) but I like Rossi's trajectory so I'll call this one a push (I'm giving Brackett a pass on this one b/c Guerin has been trying to move Rossi since he got here so Guerin would have preferred Lundell.)

    24 minutes ago, M_Nels said:

    2022: Ohgren at #19, Yurov at #24 (Haight at #47)

    Too soon to tell on this draft

    25 minutes ago, M_Nels said:

    the only other 1st round stud is Johnston but we needed a G, guess you could say Knies and Stankoven are considered misses

    Yes, these are absolutely misses.  Especially if Wally goes full Wall-E.

    Thanks for this detail M_Nels.  Would love to see the VAN drafts

     

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    2 minutes ago, Pewterschmidt said:

    Yes, these are absolutely misses.  Especially if Wally goes full Wall-E.

    Thanks for this detail M_Nels.  Would love to see the VAN drafts

    This is the thing about the misses is they were both 2nd rounders so many other teams missed as well.

    VAN while he was there (slow at work today haha):

    Boeser #23 nonetheless

    2016 was a big miss it seems, their #5 isn't in the NHL anymore and Tkachuk was the next pick

    Pettersson #5

    Hughes #7

    Hoglander in the 2nd (1st rounder wasn't much)

    They had higher picks and got some superstars, Boeser was a huge find at #23. Not sure what happened in 2016, don't follow the Nucks so there may be other circumstances. 

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    17 minutes ago, M_Nels said:

    This is the thing about the misses is they were both 2nd rounders so many other teams missed as well.

    VAN while he was there (slow at work today haha):

    Boeser #23 nonetheless

    2016 was a big miss it seems, their #5 isn't in the NHL anymore and Tkachuk was the next pick

    Pettersson #5

    Hughes #7

    Hoglander in the 2nd (1st rounder wasn't much)

    They had higher picks and got some superstars, Boeser was a huge find at #23. Not sure what happened in 2016, don't follow the Nucks so there may be other circumstances. 

    I'll give him Boesser offset by the 2016 whiff.  I cannot give too much credit for hitting on #5 and #7.   Not much insight required there.  All right now I'm going to look at the VAN drafts.....

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    6 hours ago, Jakub K. said:

    I absolutely love the addition of Jiříček. He's gonna completely transform our blue line, starting next season. The Middleton-Faber pairing is great. Buium and Jiříček are offensively minded D-men who take risks. Well, we've got two elite veteran defensive D-men able to cover for linemates' risky plays in Brodin and Spurgeon. 

    Middleton - Faber, Buium - Spurgeon, Brodin - Jiříček, that's one hell of a blue line. With Bogosian or Chisholm on the bench.

    On the powerplay,  Buium can step in and quarterback the top unit right now. On the second unit, Jiříček could send clapbombs from the half wall, with Faber or Spurgeon distributing from the blue line.

    Yeah, I love it.

    Nailed it. I think this is Billy's vision as well. Spacek probably continues to be slow-cooked down in the A until Spurgy hangs them up and then he takes that roster spot. 

    Unfortunately Chisholm is on a one-year deal so I'm not sure we'll see him stick around past this season. Once Buium makes the jump, he's the 7th D at best. 

    I wouldn't be surprised to see us trade him off at the TDL tbh. He should net us a solid return, either as part of a package deal or to recoup some of what we give up to make additions. 

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    So our defense is shaping up nicely, we have options/depth.

    Would love to address our 2nd line (forwards) but I suppose we'll need to wait for cap space and/or Yurov to come here and meet/exceed his hype. 

    As far as Wally goes, I'm not too worried about him. He got the rug ripped out from underneath him this year. I'm wondering if him being recalled from Iowa has something to do with getting him back on track. If so, it's dangerous but could be something we need to do to avoid our next years' goalie getting too far into negative headspace.

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    1 hour ago, Pewterschmidt said:

    I'll give him Boesser offset by the 2016 whiff.  I cannot give too much credit for hitting on #5 and #7.   Not much insight required there.  All right now I'm going to look at the VAN drafts.....

    Brackett's Vancouver Draft Track Record:

    Aside than a #5, #7 overall which an untrained monkey could have picked, are there any steal-of-the-draft's in this Brackett history?

    2016

    image.png.42c215fc9e7ab491141fca415c98ab57.png

    2017

    image.png.3f1cc896e4363c8c7f2ac8d3f4c0ca4f.png

    2018

    image.png.173da0a512ee46d57bb9a806a23c8236.png

    2019

    image.png.543f01d32ad7e58d7ee613bf703c9ef2.png

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    1 hour ago, B1GKappa97 said:

    Nailed it. I think this is Billy's vision as well. Spacek probably continues to be slow-cooked down in the A until Spurgy hangs them up and then he takes that roster spot. 

    Unfortunately Chisholm is on a one-year deal so I'm not sure we'll see him stick around past this season. Once Buium makes the jump, he's the 7th D at best. 

    I wouldn't be surprised to see us trade him off at the TDL tbh. He should net us a solid return, either as part of a package deal or to recoup some of what we give up to make additions. 

    I like Chisholm, but I assume Bogo is the 7th D next season because of his NMC. Chisholm probably walks, he's an asset on the ice, I don't think Billy G would trade him away if we're serious about competing this season.

    But yeah, I think eventually the right side of our defense is Faber, Jiříček, Špaček. I really like that, and not just because I'm a Czech myself lol. Buium, Middleton and Brodin on the left, with Lambos/O'Rourke in the rotation. Could be a phenomenal 2027/28 D-core.

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    12 minutes ago, Pewterschmidt said:

    Brackett's Vancouver Draft Track Record:

    Aside than a #5, #7 overall which an untrained monkey could have picked, are there any steal-of-the-draft's in this Brackett history?

    2016

    image.png.42c215fc9e7ab491141fca415c98ab57.png

    2017

    image.png.3f1cc896e4363c8c7f2ac8d3f4c0ca4f.png

    2018

    image.png.173da0a512ee46d57bb9a806a23c8236.png

    2019

    image.png.543f01d32ad7e58d7ee613bf703c9ef2.png

    here's the 2015-2016 VAN draft the year Brackett began as head of scouting

    image.png.7a3dee877cbe15bfe04ecd04aefe58e6.png

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    Just now, Pewterschmidt said:

    here's the 2015-2016 VAN draft the year Brackett began as head of scouting

    image.png.7a3dee877cbe15bfe04ecd04aefe58e6.png

    I see more rough than diamonds over his tenure.  So why are we supposed to buy the Brackett hype.

    HOT TAKE: Brackett leaves Wild to pursue other opportunities (ie restaraunt business) prior to 2026 draft.

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