Wild think offseason additions can help improve decrepit penalty kill
After an NHL season that ends short of a Stanley Cup — and especially one that finished short of the postseason — a coaching staff has to take a hard, cold look at what went wrong.
Certainly that applies to the Minnesota Wild, and it wasn’t hard to find defects, after the team missed the postseason for just the second time in 12 seasons. And while a series of injuries to key players that almost became farce might have defined the team’s 2023-24 season, it wasn’t all about bad luck.
“You’re looking for different ways to make your team better,” head coach John Hynes said this week, “and one of those ways that we felt, obviously, was penalty killing.”
Eight of the 10 teams with the worst penalty kills last season missed the playoffs, and the two that made it to the postseason — Toronto and the New York Islanders — were bounced in the first round. The Wild had one of the NHL’s worst, their 74.5 percent success rate worse than everyone except the Islanders (71.5) and Anaheim (72.4).
To that end, the Wild announced two offseason moves this week, signing winger Yakov Trenin to a four-year, $14 million free-agent deal, and adding former Islanders head coach Jack Capuano to the coaching staff.
“Jack is very, very passionate about the PK,” Wild general manager Bill Guerin said. “He’s always had a good track record with it. So, we’re looking to definitely improve in that aspect.”
You can add Jake Middleton’s four-year, $17.4 million contract extension to that plan. He was already under contract for next season, but will be part of the team that Guerin hopes will enter its prime over the next several seasons.
On a team that lost Jared Spurgeon, Jonas Brodin and Marcus Foligno for long stretches — then traded away Connor Dewar and Brandon Duhaime — Middleton was the most consistent penalty killer last season, leading the team in blocks (161), and was third in hits (148 hits).
Hynes said Monday that Capuano, a colleague on international coaching staffs, will run the defense and work with Patrick Dwyer on reconstructing a penalty kill that gave up 67 power-play goals last season, second only to Anaheim’s 91. Trenin, another big body at 6-foot-2, 200 pounds, averaged 150.5 shorthanded minutes the past two seasons.
“He’s definitely going to help in that department,” Guerin said of Trenin. “It’s something that he’s very good at. We did not have a good year last year on the PK.”
To get better next season, Guerin is, of course, relying on something out of anyone’s control. Injuries threw a wrench into everything last season, and there is no guarantee they won’t happen again. In fact, in the NHL, the season without major injury losses, for any amount of time, is rare.
And then there is the uncertainty surrounding players such as Marcus Johansson and Freddy Gaudreau, who plain underperformed in 2023-24, combining for 16 goals and 29 points in a combined 144 games. You can add mercurial forward Ryan Hartman to that wish list.
Hartman was pretty good last season — 21 goals, 45 points and a plus-4 in 74 games. But when he signed Hartman to a three-year, $12 million extension last fall, Guerin was hoping for more from a skilled player who had career highs of 34 goals and 65 points in 2021-22.
The Wild believe improving the penalty kill is something mostly in their control. They want the Wild to regain the identity of being a heavy team that is hard to play against in all situations. Regardless of the composition of a PK unit, Hynes said, “There’s got to be a mindset on the penalty kill.”
Guerin and Hynes are even thinking of moving talented forward Matt Boldy into the mix. He played some PK for Team USA in international play this spring under head coach Hynes.
“With how dynamic the power plays are, nothing’s ever static. So, you’ve gotta have guys that can make reads and have experience doing it,” Hynes said. “Trenin’s certainly a guy that is a very good penalty killer. So, I think when you have guys that can do it, and then you coach it the right way, it should be a significant improvement for us.”
After playing against Trenin in the Central Division the past few seasons, Middleton is sold on Trenin.
“I think it’s a great signing,” he said. “He is hard to play against. He forechecks like an animal. He finishes every check. Great penalty kill. … I’ve never been on the power play, but I’ve watched him kill penalties. Good at that. I think it’s a good pickup.”
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