The Wild is trying to cut off a potential sophomore slump before it has a chance to ferment.
Matt Dumba hasn't been awful the first five games this season, but he is certainly not the same defenseman the Wild got used to seeing during a strong second half last season. In only 58 games, Dumba ranked third among NHL rookie defensemen with eight goals, fifth with 16 points and first with a plus-13.
Coach Mike Yeo felt comfortable putting him on the ice in most defensive situations.
Heading into Thursday's game against Columbus, Dumba has one assist in five games and has been, in Yeo's words, careless with the puck and erratic defensively. The defensive pairing of Dumba and Jonas Brodin lasted 3½ games and, in Sunday's loss at Anaheim, Dumba was minus-2 with new partner Marco Scandella.
"For me the biggest thing is the respect for the league," Yeo said after Tuesday's practice. "This is the NHL, it's the best league in the world and you're on the ice against the best players in the world. I feel that his game has been very similar to the first half of the season for him last year, and what we have to do is get his game closer to what it was in the second half of the season."
What Yeo means is Dumba can't afford to get away with sloppiness against NHL players on NHL teams like the Kings and Ducks. This isn't the preseason, where Dumba was often playing against minor-leaguers and took advantage in one game with two goals, two assists and an absurd plus-6 rating.
Yeo wants him to simplify things. Dumba will still be permitted to do things that "catches your eye," Yeo says, but "there's other times where you just have to make a smart, simple play. It's not always how much you give, it's how much you're giving up as well."
Taking blame
Dumba, 21, stood in front of the cameras for five minutes Tuesday and was accountable for his average play. He admitted it needs to get better and also interestingly said he must "respect" the league, an indication he has met with Yeo about his play.