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Wild get boost with activation of veteran center
Minnesota Wild center Joel Eriksson Ek. Kyle Ross-Imagn Images

After starting the season with a 17-4-4 record through their first 25 games, the Minnesota Wild have struggled of late with a 5-6-0 record in their last 11. Minnesota needed a boost in a major way and will get one in the form of top center Joel Eriksson Ek, whom the team has activated off injured reserve.

Minnesota’s fall from the top of the Central Division is directly related to Eriksson Ek’s absence. The team has struggled to find a proper solution down the middle in Eriksson Ek’s absence outside of Marco Rossi. The youngster has been nearly a point-per-game player without Eriksson Ek, scoring five goals and nine points in the last 11 games, but the Wild don’t have another legitimate top-six center option behind him.

Eriksson Ek’s scoring has depressed this season when healthy, with five goals and 13 points in 22 games. That 0.59 point-per-game average is nearly a third lower than what he’s been producing the last few years in Minnesota. Still, Eriksson Ek has provided quality play in the faceoff dot and is very responsible on the defensive side of the puck.

The recent injury will likely hinder Eriksson Ek’s efforts to capture his first Selke Trophy, given that he only plays a maximum of 68 games this year. He’s finished in the top 10 of Selke votes the last four years and was averaging the highest on-ice save percentage of his career before suffering the lower-body injury.

Eriksson Ek’s absence also raised some important questions for the Wild. It proved that Minnesota lacks depth down the middle, which needs to be filled if it has any hopes of competing in the tough Central Division down the stretch. The lingering buyout penalties for Zach Parise and Ryan Suter limit Minnesota to approximately $2M in deadline cap space, making things that much harder.

Still, the Wild could trade some salary off the roster, such as Zach Bogosian or Jonathon Merrill, and acquire a player with term, given that Parise and Suter’s buyout penalties effectively end after this season. 

Minnesota has already traded away its first-round pick this season in the trade that brought David Jiricek to the organization, so that will be another limiting factor heading into deadline season.

This article first appeared on Pro Hockey Rumors and was syndicated with permission.

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