Wild Players Frustrated with Current State of Affairs

Coming into the season, Minnesota Wild fans had a lot to be excited about. The team signed All-Star forward Thomas Vanek (277g-279a—556pts) in the off-season.

In addition, the Wild returned much of their team that advanced to the second round of the 2014 Stanley Cup Playoffs.  There was a lot of enthusiasm surrounding the 2014-15 Wild team. Before the season began, I had them going deep into the 2015 Stanley Cup Playoffs.

That enthusiasm is starting to fade, and fast.

(Brace Hemmelgarn-USA TODAY Sports)
(Brace Hemmelgarn-USA TODAY Sports)

Currently, the Wild 16-12-2, 34 points,  sit in 10th place of the Western Conference standings and if the 2015 Stanley Cup Playoffs started today, the Wild would be watching from the sidelines. The Wild are currently four points out of the final wild card spot. For comparison sake, after 30 games last season the Wild were 17-8-5, 39 points.

Minnesota Wild beat writer Michael Russo sums it up best in one of his latest blog posts. “It has been a month now since the Wild has won consecutive games. Tonight, it lost consecutive games for the first time since Nov. 8 and 11 and is a mediocre 5-5-2 in its past 12 and a yucky 2-2-2 in its past six at home. I think that’s the definition of middling.”

Some of the players have begun to express their frustration with the current state of affairs.

It’s extremely frustrating,” Jason Pominville said.

Zach Parise echoed Pominville’s comments, “”There’s frustration for us right now.”

“We’ve got to stop losing,” Parise said. “Stringing a couple wins together is the only way to get out of it.” (Pioneer Press)

Wild forwards underperforming

So far this season, there’s been a few top-six forwards that have failed to live up to expectations for the Minnesota Wild. If the Wild are going to be successful in the second half of the season, these players are going to have to pick it up and start contributing on the score sheet.

In my opinion, one of the biggest disappointments on this team has been play of forward Charlie Coyle (2g-9a—11pts).  Coyle signed a hefty contract extension in October. To date, Coyle has yet to show he’s worth the money the Wild spent on him.  Coyle has scored a measly (0g-3a—3pts) in the last 15 games.

Equally unimpressive, has been the play of forward Mikael Granlund (3g-10a—13pts) Last season, Granlund gave us glimpses of greatness, but this season he has been consistently inconsistent. During the month of December, Granlund has scored (0g-3a—3pts) and is a (-5).

Thomas Vanek came to the Wild with much fanfare, so far he’s been an utter disappointment. Through 30 games, Vanek has scored (4g-14a—18pts). Those are pretty anemic numbers for a forward that’s scored almost 300 goals in the National Hockey League. During the month of December, Vanek has scored a mediocre (2g-2a—4pts) in seven games. Vanek is also a (-4) during the month of December.

I have seen fans on twitter referring to Vanek as Danny Heatley 2.0.  Personally, I think that’s a little harsh since Heatley has been injured for most of the season and scored (0g-0a—0pts) in five games.

Thomas-VanekThe Wild lack toughness

Finally, one of the areas that the Wild are struggling in is team toughness. The Wild have a lot of talent upfront, but they lack grit and team toughness. The Wild are also getting pushed around on the ice by the bigger teams like Anaheim.

I want to be clear, I am not suggesting that the Wild need to sign a “tough guy” that sits on the end of the bench and plays four minutes a game. The Wild are in need of skilled player that plays a hard, tough game and sticks up for teammates when needed.

The Wild will get some of that needed toughness back. Matt Cooke returns to the lineup after missing 22 games with a Hip Flexor injury. Cooke’s physical presence and penalty killing was missed by the Wild during his absence.

In conclusion, the Minnesota Wild are underperforming at the halfway point, and if they don’t pick it up they’re going to be left on the sidelines when the 2015 Stanley Cup Playoffs begin. There’s enough blame to go around. The Wild need to find a way to win as a team and stop performing like a bunch of fractured parts.

4 thoughts on “Wild Players Frustrated with Current State of Affairs”

  1. I don’t care what Milbury says. He doesn’t hide his favoritism…Vanek always lit the Bruins up when he played out east. His east coast bias is only rivaled by his co-workers on the NBC (East coast ) sports channel. The Wild have plenty of problems right now. Goaltending and coaching at the forefront in my opinion

  2. MJ that’s a good point, Mike Milbury called Thomas Vanek efforts feeble the other night on NBCSP. I think he’s playing a lot of mediocre hockey and getting paid very well for a poor effort.

  3. Vanek needs to be benched. He is the epitome of laziness. I was in Phoenix for the game this week and he was horrible. Mike Milbury called him out after the loss to the Bruins on national TV the next game. That should wake anybody up but Vanek will still be doing cirlces tonight against Nashville I bet. Bench him a game to wake him up. I feel bad for the players that bust their balls skating hard only to see Vanek coasting by the blue lines. Pominville needs to change sticks or socks or underwear, anything to change his luck. Koivu needs to start playing angry. He plays so much better when he is pissed off….saw it one time and he dominated the game. He was knocking people over left and right and was hard along the boards. Coyle needs to get angry too. Those guys are big players that play small especially Koivu.

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