Wild

Digging Into Jason Zucker's Month-Long Slump

Credit: David Berding-USA TODAY Sports

It was Dec. 4 against Vancouver. Jason Zucker had scored a goal late in the second period to give the Minnesota Wild a 3-2 lead. The goal — Zucker’s ninth of the season — went on to be the game-winner for the Wild winger as he celebrated his second goal in as many games.

Since that goal against the Canucks a month ago, Zucker has endured a long drought and has just tallied one goal in the following 13 games. He has moved around on lines during Bruce Boudreau‘s infamous line juggling, with him currently playing alongside Mikko Koivu and Nino Niederreiter — who is also in a bit of a slump.

Should you be concern about this slump from Zucker, who tallied a career-best 33 goals last season?

Let’s see what the stats have to say about this.

First, Zucker is familiar with long scoring droughts. You may remember his 2017-18 season as his best — which it was — tallying the before-mentioned 33 goals. During that season — which netted him a brand-new five-year contract this past summer — Zucker did suffer through a stretch of just one goal over a 16-game period.

Ironically, that also came roughly at the same time as the one he is currently in, as that 16-game stretch took place between Dec. 10, 2017 through Jan. 10, 2018. But once he scored a goal on Jan. 13, he went on to score one goal in four straight games and seven of the next nine games to get his season back on track.

Now that we know Zucker is no stranger to these prolonged slumps, let’s see if he is shooting more or less than he was in previous seasons.

NHL Miscellaneous career statistics
Per Per Per Per
Season Age Tm Lg GP GC G A PTS S
2011-12 20 MIN NHL 6 1 0.00 0.33 0.33 1.67
2012-13 21 MIN NHL 20 2 0.20 0.05 0.25 1.70
2013-14 22 MIN NHL 21 2 0.19 0.05 0.24 1.90
2014-15 23 MIN NHL 51 13 0.41 0.10 0.51 2.43
2015-16 24 MIN NHL 71 10 0.18 0.14 0.32 2.23
2016-17 25 MIN NHL 79 19 0.28 0.32 0.59 2.18
2017-18 26 MIN NHL 82 26 0.40 0.38 0.78 2.71
2018-19 27 MIN NHL 40 8 0.25 0.25 0.50 2.93
Career 8 yrs NHL 370 81 0.29 0.23 0.52 2.37

Zucker’s shots per game are up this season, as it sits currently at a career best of 2.93. During the past 13 games in which he has only tallied that one goal — against Dallas on Dec. 22 — Zucker has increased his shooting rates averaging over 3.6 shots per game in that time.

via Sean Tierney @chartinghockey
via Micah Blake McCurdy, hockeyviz.com

Basically what you are seeing in the above charts is that Zucker is creating plenty of shots from right out front of the net when he is on the ice. Whether it is him shooting or someone else on Minnesota, the Wild are creating a lot of high-danger scoring chances when No. 16 is on the ice. That is what you want from a player even though he is still mired in a slump.

Zucker’s shooting percentage this season — 8.5 — is down significantly from last season’s 14.9.

NHL Standard career statistics
Scor Scor Scor Goal Goal Goal Goal Shot Shot Shot Ice Ice
Season Age Tm Lg GP G A PTS EV PP SH GW S S%
TSA TOI ATOI
2011-12 20 MIN NHL 6 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 10 0.0 16 66 11:02
2012-13 21 MIN NHL 20 4 1 5 4 0 0 0 34 11.8 58 225 11:16
2013-14 22 MIN NHL 21 4 1 5 3 1 0 1 40 10.0 68 273 12:59
2014-15 23 MIN NHL 51 21 5 26 19 1 1 3 124 16.9 193 768 15:04
2015-16 24 MIN NHL 71 13 10 23 12 0 1 1 158 8.2 280 1106 15:35
2016-17 25 MIN NHL 79 22 25 47 21 1 0 3 172 12.8 292 1208 15:17
2017-18 26 MIN NHL 82 33 31 64 25 7 1 7 222 14.9 338 1391 16:58
2018-19 27 MIN NHL 40 10 10 20 8 2 0 3 117 8.5 208 684 17:06
Career 8 yrs NHL 370 107 85 192 92 12 3 18 877 12.2 1453 5721 15:28
Provided by Hockey-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 1/8/2019.

Zucker’s shooting percentage at 5-on-5 (7.16) is not that significantly down from last season (8.68) but still a noticeable dip nonetheless. His shooting percentage this season at 5-on-5 is the lowest of his career, dating back to his debut in the 2012-13 season when he really broke in.

Even Zucker’s power-play shooting percentage (12 percent) is not that horribly down from last year’s (14.2 percent) while getting pretty similar power-play time per game — just a shade over two minutes per game.

But again, if you refer back to where his shots are coming from in the chart above, it is only a matter of time before Zucker busts out of his goal-scoring drought. If you keep getting shots in that area, eventually the puck will start going in again. It is just simply a matter of time.

The bottom line is this: no, you should not be too worried about the goal-scoring drought Zucker is currently under. He is taking more shots and getting great looks, the puck isn’t just finding its way into the net.

If history repeats itself again this year, Zucker could go on a terrific run once he gets that first goal to end the drought.

Stats in this post courtesy of Hockey-Reference.com, Corsica.Hockey, and Hockeyviz.com.


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