At the University of Minnesota, high-scoring, hard-working forward Erik Haula got accustomed to running a power play. If he really wanted to last spring, Haula could have pulled one on the Wild, too.
Like former Gopher Blake Wheeler once did to Phoenix, like University of Wisconsin defenseman Justin Schultz did last year to Anaheim, Haula could have become a free agent.
It had been four years since the Wild chose Haula in the seventh round of the 2009 draft. That meant if Haula wanted to pick his team and arguably find a better fit or spot on a depth chart, all he had to do was refuse to sign with Minnesota.
"But he stayed loyal to the Wild," Gophers coach Don Lucia said. "He could have done what Wheeler did, but the Wild's been honest with him, he likes their track record with Finns and this is where he wants to be — Minnesota."
Haula may have been born in Pori, Finland, but at this point, he's basically a Minnesotan. He barely has a distinguishable Finnish accent, went to high school at Shattuck-St. Mary's and he's close to graduating from Minnesota. He also is spending the entire summer working out with Gophers strength and conditioning coach Cal Dietz to put himself in as good a position as possible once the Wild's training camp opens Sept. 11.
"This feels like home," said Haula, wearing a Twins baseball cap. "All my friends are here, and knowing this team so well, it would be a dream come true to put on a Wild jersey some day and play in front of my friends and [Gophers and Shattuck] coaches."
At the U, not only does Haula get to work out with recently signed Wild defenseman Keith Ballard, several other NHLers (Thomas Vanek, Paul Martin, Jordan Leopold, Dustin Byfuglien, to name a few) train at Mariucci Arena weekly, if not daily.
"Plus, [Nick] Bjugstad and Nate [Schmidt], two guys I grew up with that also signed [with Florida and Washington], are there, too, so since we're all basically in the same situation, I think it's the best place for me," Haula said. "We can push each other."