On the day Zach Parise was destined to be named NHL Player of the Month , the Wild instead must be satisfied with AHL accolades because of this stinkin' lockout that hit Day 47 today.
Mikael Granlund, the Wild's highly-touted 2010 first-round pick, was named AHL Rookie of the Month after his inaugural month as a North American pro. He is the top-scoring rookie forward in the AHL with 10 points in seven games and is plus-5.
Granlund's riding a six-game point streak into this weekend's series at Oklahoma City (Edmonton No. 1 overall pick Taylor Hall will make his AHL debut) -- highlighted by a four-point game in a 5-3 win against Texas.
Rookie Justin Schultz of Oklahoma City, the former Wisconsin defenseman that chose to sign with the Edmonton Oilers over finalists that included the Wild, was named AHL Player of the Month. So again: The rookie that was Player of the Month didn't win Rookie of the Month. I made note of that on Twitter. Funny tweet to me in response by a guy named @thegreatganzy: "@Russostrib it's like Beyonce losing to Taylor Swift at the VMAs and then winning video of the year."
Also, Nick Petersen, on an AHL deal with the Wild, was named ECHL Player of the Month. He leads the league with six goals and 14 points for Orlando.
Tonight: the Wild, if not for the lockout, would be hosting the defending Stanley Cup champion L.A. Kings before embarking on a six-game road trip tomorrow to Tampa, Boston, the Rangers, Detroit, New Jersey (Parise's homecoming) and Philadelphia. That's a bulk of frequent flier miles I'm missing out on!
I talked with Andrew Brunette today on the phone as he walked his golden retriever around Lake Elmo. Brunette, whose rookie year was my rookie year covering the league (1995-96) and who scored his first-ever goal at Miami Arena with me in the building (1996 with Washington), knows he very well could be done playing hockey.
He said he would still be interested in playing if there was the right fit, but he knows because of the lockout (with a big chuckle), "I've got one foot in the grave and one foot on the ice with the casket slowly creaking to a close."