Showing posts with label Marco Rossi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marco Rossi. Show all posts

Thursday, February 11, 2021

Updates on Previous Posts

 

Mike Milbury out at NBC Sports…

 Back in August, I posted an article about Mike Milbury and how “he needs to go” after his controversial comments about women (read article here). On January 11, NBC Sports announced Milbury will not be returning for the 2021 NHL season. NBC Sports also announced Mike Babcock will be joining the broadcast team. I don’t think that was a smart move by NBC.

The reason why I say that is that Mike Babcock has been known to be verbally abusive towards players during his tenure with the Detroit Red Wings. Both Chris Chelios and Brendan Shanahan have stated how Babcock had been verbally abusive towards players—with Chelios giving an example of an incident involving Babcock and Johan Franzen during a game and Franzen ended up confirming the incident did take place in a response to CBC (read full article here.) What was NBC thinking when they decided to bring Babcock on? Did they not learn anything after the backlash of Milbury’s derogatory comments about women (among other comments about two NHL players)? Apparently not. I’m not a fan of Babcock as a coach. How long is it going to be before Babcock makes similar remarks to the ones that got Milbury in trouble and what NBC is going to do? Only time will tell on that one…

And no, I’m not impressed with Mike Babcock on NHL on NBC either.  I would rather watch Pierre McGuire than Mike Babcock at this point…

Then, on January 22, NBC Sports announced that its NBCSN cable channel will be shutting down at the end of 2021 and their sports programming is going to be moved to USA Network and to NBC’s Peacock streaming service. That will make things interesting since the NHL’s current TV deal with NBC in the United States ends at the end of the 2021-2022 season…


The Goaltending situation with the Wild…

The Wild’s season opened on January 14th and as expected, Cam Talbot is the Wild’s starting goalie with Kaapo Kahkonen and the #2 goalie. With Alex Stalock now out indefinitely, we’re going to see Kahkonen get starts for the Wild due to the condensed 56 game schedule. So far, he’s 3-3-0 with a 2.86 GAA and .903 SV%. Are we going to see Stalock at all this season? At this point, who knows. There is no indication on how long he is going to be out for (article on situation with Stalock is here) or even what his injury is.

So, for the time being, the Wild are going with the tandem of Talbot and Kahkonen…and I’m perfectly okay with that.


Marco Rossi may NOT be in a Wild Uniform this season…

 After Austria’s dismal performance in the World Juniors tournament in Edmonton, Marco Rossi looked all set to join the Minnesota Wild, the team that drafted him with the 9th overall pick. (My post introducing him is here).

Well, Wild fans are going to have to wait longer to see Rossi in a Wild uniform. Wild fans waited for FIVE years before Kirill Kaprizov joined the team, so we’re used to waiting.

Shortly after joining the Wild in Saint Paul, Rossi was put on injured reserve with an “upper body injury.” Granted, we all know Austria had a dismal performance in the World Juniors, and before that, he only appeared in one game with the ZSC Lions in Switzerland before a league-wide outbreak happened. On January 29, it was announced that Rossi was heading home to Austria for six weeks. I certainly was stratching my head, thinking what exactly is going on. Then the Wild announced the next day that his “upper body injury” was actually complications from having COVID-19 back in November.

Say what? Let me get this straight—Rossi had COVID back in November. He was then cleared by Zurich and then Team Austria to play in the World Juniors in December? That doesn’t seem right and a couple of weeks ago it now comes out he’s had complications? So, why the rush to get him to play? I know he was probably the biggest name on Team Austria and that the World Juniors would have given North American hockey fans a good look at him. Seriously, couldn’t this kid get some time off to rest and recover?

Rossi is supposed to return to Saint Paul some time in March. All I have to say is let this kid get some rest and time off to fully recover. There is NO rush to get him in a Wild uniform in this condensed season


Sources:

Hockey Wilderness: https://www.hockeywilderness.com/2021/1/29/22256584/minnesota-wild-marco-rossi-injury-austria-center-covid-19


Tuesday, October 6, 2020

Marco Rossi, the Minnesota Wild’s 2020 First Round Draft Pick

 

With the ninth overall pick in the 2020 NHL Draft, the Minnesota Wild selected Marco Rossi, a 5’9” center who spent last season with the Ottawa 67’s—amassing 39 goals, 81 assists (120 pts) with a +69 in 56 games—where he won the CHL scoring title and was named the league’s most outstanding player.

The Athletic’s Corey Pronman had this to say about the Wild selecting Rossi:

In Rossi, the Wild get one of the best players in junior hockey last season. He’s a player with tremendous skill and a high compete level. He’s undersized and a good, not great skater. But the skill and compete level are so good that I think he can become a low-end, first-line center in the NHL who can play on both special teams. He becomes a very important part of the Wild’s future and gives them much needed young depth at center.

 

Drafting Rossi in the first round also helps address a serious need by the Minnesota Wild—by eventually having a true first line center. I previously stated in my article posted on September 19 (here) that the Wild have not had a true first line center in quite some time (or for as long as the team has been in existence).  Along with the Wild moving on from now-former captain Mikko Koivu and Eric Staal having been traded to Buffalo, there are two center slots that now need to be filled (which I will address is a future post).

 
I will admit I didn’t know much about Marco Rossi before the draft tonight, but after the Wild selected him in the first round—I looked up videos of him on YouTube and I will admit I was impressed with what I saw in two highlight videos—which are posted at the end of this article Yes, Rossi’s only 5’9”, but he has some amazing stick handling skills. However, from what I have read so far and the videos I’ve seen, Rossi is a player Wild fans can get excited over. Hockeywilderness.com had this comment about Rossi:

 

“The Wild take the gift that was dropped right into their lap. Rossi has elite positional awareness that makes up for his 5-foot-9 frame. You don’t score points in the OHL being bad.”

 

Even as I was writing this and still trying to research Rossi, Scott Wheeler from The Athletic posted his take on the winners and losers from the first round of this draft. He had the Wild ranked first with the selection of Marco Rossi and basically stated that he (Rossi) is ready to play in the NHL.

Well, welcome to the State of Hockey, Marco Rossi.

Can you imagine a line with Rossi at center and Kirill Kaprizov at right wing? 


As I stated earlier, here are links to two of the highlight videos of Marco Rossi:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jRWA90nw4IM&ab_channel=WolfHockey

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gwHAaUFuDIQ&ab_channel=OntarioHockeyLeague

Sources:

Corey Pronman, The Athletic. https://theathletic.com/2089449/2020/10/06/nhl-draft-2020-live-first-round-updates-and-analysis/

Hockeywilderness.com https://www.hockeywilderness.com/2020/10/6/21504816/2020-nhl-minnesota-wild-draft-tracker?fbclid=IwAR2fwzItMAUl9vnjbXpP_VAt6JS2nmKWiPHIPnPusf4nffEY1g_0mVkOIXA

Scott Wheeler, The Athletic https://theathletic.com/2068998/2020/10/07/nhl-draft-winners-and-losers-ranking-every-teams-first-round/?source=twittered

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