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  • Zeev Buium’s Impact Goes Further Than the Stat Sheet


    Image courtesy of Matt Krohn-Imagn Images
    Robert Brent

     

    When the Minnesota Wild drafted Zeev Buium at 12th overall, experts and fans lauded the pick as a draft steal. The excitement was well-founded. Buium put together one of the best freshman seasons as a defenseman in recent NCAA memory. His 50 points ranked as the second-best mark by an NCAA defenseman since 2009-10. Buium’s Denver Pioneers also won the National Championship, completing a storybook season.

    With such a successful first year in the college ranks, it’s natural to wonder how Buium could possibly improve in his second season. So far, he's avoided the sophomore slump and is fleshing out his game. Denver is undefeated, and Buium is playing a pivotal role, making fantastic offensive plays like the one below.

    While Buium’s headlines are positive, his impact on the scoresheet lags behind last year’s production. Buium has yet to find the back of the net through 10 games after tallying 11 goals in his previous campaign. While it may be easy to worry about smaller scoring numbers this year than last, Buium’s contributions go far beyond his (still-great!) point totals.

    Buium’s Role Is Maturing

    While discussing Buium’s drop in production is fair, there's no reason to be concerned. He's still producing elite offensive numbers with 10 assists in 10 games. Buium's lack of goals doesn't come from a lack of opportunity. The Wild prospect regularly dominates play and has 17 shots on goal. 

    Still, despite his outstanding play, there are some underlying reasons he's not scoring at the same rate as he did in his freshman season.

    Buium’s role with the Pioneers has grown. He dictates the flow of the game with his vision, skating, and passing. Buium is a mainstay on Denver's top pairing and often quarterbacks the powerplay. The prospect is shooting slightly less this year and is also seeing some of his usage go to Bemidji transfer Eric Pohlkamp. 

    Denver is using Pohlkamp as their triggerman for a lot of their offense, with the blueliner registering 39 shots on goal to Buium's 17. With a two-headed monster in Denver, Buium doesn't need to carry the load to the extent he did last season. The goals and points will come, but Buium has successfully settled into a distributor role. 

    Let's take a look at an example:

    In a straightforward but effective play, Buium enters a dangerous scoring area to draw a defender before making the right play, passing it to an open teammate. A player as talented as Buium might be tempted to take the space he's given and try to cut to the net. Instead, he lets his gravitational pull create an even more significant opportunity for a teammate. 

    The play above doesn’t go on a player's sizzle reel, but maturing as a hockey player often means forgoing those highlight opportunities for a higher-percentage chance. That's what Buium is showing in spades this year. Using not just his skills, but how those skills force opponents to play him, is making things easier for teammates and is the next level for him, offensively.

    Buium’s Skating and Creativity Shining

    One of Buium’s most alluring attributes is his ability to make creative plays with the puck using his hockey IQ and excellent skating ability. 

    “I love to be creative. I love to make plays. Obviously, when you’re doing that, you’re gonna mess up sometimes, but that’s the game. That’s hockey,” Buium said in an NHL.com draft profile. “For me, I love to be creative and try to find space for my teammates and myself, and when the puck is on my stick, I’m pretty confident that I can make a pretty good play.”

    Buium is getting to show that off even more in his sophomore season. In the early goings of this season, Buium is making tons of cerebral decisions that generate high-quality scoring chances. 

    Let’s look at Daniel Gee’s highlight package, head crossover scout at EliteProspects: 

    The reel above is a treasure trove of Buium’s impact plays that result in quality chances for himself or his teammates. He’s gotten incredibly crafty this season, using subtle moves to manipulate defenders and create space all over the ice.

    He’s also adept at getting his shot off with impressive puck control in tight windows. The first play in the reel encapsulates all of those abilities. Buium takes on multiple defenders, keeps the puck through skating prowess and stick handling, and ultimately dishes the puck to an open teammate for a high-quality chance that ends up in the back of the net.

    Buium’s Path Forward

    Buium isn’t putting up the numbers he did last year. However, if he continues to make plays like he has, he’ll start scoring more often. Still, Buium doesn't need to reach his freshman point totals to make progress. Buium may not score 50 points this year, but it's clear from how he's played this year that he has a path toward being an impactful player for the Wild. 

    Before he becomes a contributor in Minnesota, Buium needs to work on some things. He will probably simplify his game further at the next level. Buium is uniquely talented, but relying on plays where he skates through multiple defenders is a low-percentage play in the NHL. The first-round pick is a good defender, but he admits he wants to be better defensively. 

    "I think I'm not a shutdown defenseman, but I do take pride in that game. I want to be a guy that can play those big minutes." Buium said in the NHL.com profile. "For me, the guys at Denver, the coaching staff and players, everyone knows how much work I've put into it, how much effort we put into it. For me, it's just working on it every day and trying to perfect it."

    Minnesota’s front office must be excited about Buium's willingness to work to improve. His offense will likely always be his strongest skill, but Buium's attitude toward improving his all-around is a promising sign. Denver is a great program that churns out high-quality hockey players, and the NCAA has become a factory for producing elite defenders. His play has been excellent so far this season. All the pieces are in place for Buium to go from an exceptional prospect to an exceptional NHLer.

     

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    7 hours ago, mnfaninnc said:

    I have seen some excellent acceleration from MaRat, but I haven't seen much of that blazing speed. It looks to me like he gears down so that his teammates can keep up with him, and he does it responsibly so that nobody is getting past him going the other way. Lauko is a good linemate for him due to his speed. I wonder if Johansson could be useful on this line with his speed too?

    i am actually more impressed with his vision and skill, he is very crafty. just doesn't use a ton of that - and that may just be the necessity of his current role

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    The Wild need to be healthy.

    They also need to replace NoJo. He's been a bum since Guerin signed him the second time. Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, odds are Guerin has a neck-beard fetish and NoJo is his secret lover. I mean, ideal 2nd line winger.

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    15 hours ago, OldDutchChip said:

    Also - thoughts on maybe going after Buchnevich if STL continues to stumble - maybe there's a chance to grab him for Kap? Although they are not too far from us and should they win a few and we loose a few - oh let's not think about that. I think Buch and Ek are nice 2 line Centers. And having another comrade on his line won't be too bad? especially one that is in his prime too. 

    Is this your big center target, or is it one of a few? You've (me too) been on the Tuch bandwagon, but he's not a center. I think you could keep Rossi and bring in Tuch. In fact, a Boldy-Ek-Tuch line may be one that nobody wants to face in the playoffs. But, when it comes down to it, Brady Tkachuk trumps all IMO. 

    Also, I think this needs to be watched:

    Ottawa and Buffalo are tied for 5th in the Atlantic, both out of the WC race by 2 points and behind Philly and NYI for WC positioning (they are also outside the invitation list).

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    15 minutes ago, mnfaninnc said:

    Is this your big center target, or is it one of a few? You've (me too) been on the Tuch bandwagon, but he's not a center. I think you could keep Rossi and bring in Tuch. In fact, a Boldy-Ek-Tuch line may be one that nobody wants to face in the playoffs. But, when it comes down to it, Brady Tkachuk trumps all IMO. 

    Also, I think this needs to be watched:

    Ottawa and Buffalo are tied for 5th in the Atlantic, both out of the WC race by 2 points and behind Philly and NYI for WC positioning (they are also outside the invitation list).

    I would rather we go after Tuch than Buch surely, but Buch is someone i'd pay attn to as STL season goes on. We play them soon, so let's see his game. 

    I think Rossi needs to be included for $ reasons. Not sure Sabres will take junk and their D seems to be set. We'll need to ship some salary. 

    Time may be now to also sell high on Wally - he is not exactly kicking ass (yeah yeah the team may not be good - but we are talking a generational-type-hyped-up prospect that was can't miss??) i think we need to do the opposite of what Nashville should have done with Askarov (not confusing haha) basically they should have kept Askarov and we need to trade Wally. 

    So we have Wally, Zeev, H&H boys, Yurov and Rossi to dangle. Can we make it out with Tuch and Brady? Would trade package surrounding Zeev and Rossi be enough for Brady? Will Yurov and Wally be enough for Tuch? Financials will of course need to be taken in consideration but we are talking about an aggressive push THIS year to go for it. nah prob not.

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    36 minutes ago, OldDutchChip said:

    Time may be now to also sell high on Wally - he is not exactly kicking ass

    This is very premature (that's what she said) BUT, if Wally is a bust then we need to have a serious conversation about Guerin/Brackett's ability to identify talent and draft our team.

    image.png.2ea64507e071c3572886a002e8dc9efb.png

    2021 is a total bust draft if Wallstedt goes full Big Khak

    image.png.8dc19c8f92ed856ec7e42cf0d3407b97.png

    I think Ogz will be a middle 6 nhl'r but expectations are managed.  the rest of 2022 is too soon to tell

    image.png.b5411747fb2c0214189417993df8a5cc.png

    If Stramel makes NHL as a bottom 6 fans will be happy.  RasmuKampu's post draft was something like "Big body, skating needs work, Foligno hands..."

    image.png.07239057877465875cd2c27504c630e5.png

    Zeev is the current savior in waiting

    image.png.e75af5149ee002b018871ac0506b766d.png

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    3 minutes ago, Pewterschmidt said:

    This is very premature (that's what she said) BUT, if Wally is a bust then we need to have a serious conversation about Guerin/Brackett's ability to identify talent and draft our team.

    image.png.2ea64507e071c3572886a002e8dc9efb.png

    2021 is a total bust draft if Wallstedt goes full Big Khak

    image.png.8dc19c8f92ed856ec7e42cf0d3407b97.png

    I think Ogz will be a middle 6 nhl'r but expectations are managed.  the rest of 2022 is too soon to tell

    image.png.b5411747fb2c0214189417993df8a5cc.png

    If Stramel makes NHL as a bottom 6 fans will be happy.  RasmuKampu's post draft was something like "Big body, skating needs work, Foligno hands..."

    image.png.07239057877465875cd2c27504c630e5.png

    Zeev is the current savior in waiting

    image.png.e75af5149ee002b018871ac0506b766d.png

    well Wally is posting an impressive 4.5 GAA and 860 SV%....so.....imagine if Gus wasn't playing his best.....

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    On 11/18/2024 at 12:26 PM, OldDutchChip said:

    So we have Wally, Zeev, H&H boys, Yurov and Rossi to dangle. Can we make it out with Tuch and Brady? Would trade package surrounding Zeev and Rossi be enough for Brady? Will Yurov and Wally be enough for Tuch? Financials will of course need to be taken in consideration but we are talking about an aggressive push THIS year to go for it. nah prob not.

    I just can't see us trading The Wall, Yurov, Rossi, Buium. I love having Tuch, and think we could get him closer to the deadline. He has another year at $4.75m.

    Brady I think we have to overpay for. This means that if Ottawa goes through a dry spell where they fall back to the lower end of the pack, Guerin needs to hound the Ottawa GM and wear him down.

    I don't think it will take just prospects here, and Ottawa will need to take back some salary like Johansson and maybe Freddie. They are set at G, and have paid a ton for their D. So, I'm thinking some responsible forwards might be the way to go. What does blow it up look like to them? They've got several nice pieces that are young and playing in Ottawa, but their farm system is trash. If we could sneak out Lassi Thomson who looks blocked and loaned, I think he could fit in here. 

    Since Rossi played his jr. hockey there, I would think they'd have familiarity with him and the fans will remember him there. This could be important in a rebuild. 

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    12 hours ago, mnfaninnc said:

    I just can't see us trading The Wall, Yurov, Rossi, Buium. I love having Tuch, and think we could get him closer to the deadline. He has another year at $4.75m.

    Brady I think we have to overpay for. This means that if Ottawa goes through a dry spell where they fall back to the lower end of the pack, Guerin needs to hound the Ottawa GM and wear him down.

    I don't think it will take just prospects here, and Ottawa will need to take back some salary like Johansson and maybe Freddie. They are set at G, and have paid a ton for their D. So, I'm thinking some responsible forwards might be the way to go. What does blow it up look like to them? They've got several nice pieces that are young and playing in Ottawa, but their farm system is trash. If we could sneak out Lassi Thomson who looks blocked and loaned, I think he could fit in here. 

    Since Rossi played his jr. hockey there, I would think they'd have familiarity with him and the fans will remember him there. This could be important in a rebuild. 

    I just can't see us trading The Wall, Yurov, Rossi, Buium.....going to have to include at least one in the mix 🙂 If Wall and Rossi goes to Sens for Tkachuk - i'd do it.

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    I would too, and then I'd try and get someone like McKenzie Blackwood next season. He should be inexpensive, and can carry the load when hot. The Vax really spiraled him.

    But, isn't Ottawa happy with Ullmark?

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