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This article was published 17/3/2013 (2740 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

Opinion

BRIAN BLANCO / THE ASSOCIATE PRESS Tampa Bay Lightning defenceman Matt Carle passes the puck past Winnipeg Jets centre Alexander Burmistrov during an NHL game in Tampa, Fla.

Claude Noel's point should have sunk in by now. It's time to find out.

Alex Burmistrov needs to go back in the lineup. It's also time for Burmistrov to show he's capable of learning and maturing as a player.

Burmistrov is talented -- an asset. But not if the coach won't use him. A gifted player, no matter his perceived shortcomings, is useless in the press box.

Noel is also culpable in this little drama. Part of his job is to figure out how to coach Burmistrov. Giving up on him is unacceptable at this stage. There's no limit to the talent Burmistrov owns.

Noel has demonstrated his power to the player. Now it's time to find a way to get what he wants from him. That, or tell the GM it's just not happening and to try to swing a deal to get equal value. Then live with the consequences of moving a first-round pick still on his entry-level contract.

Either way, there must be a resolution, because Burmistrov remains an asset. One to be played or one to be leveraged.

Despite an excellent run on the penalty kill, the Jets need Burmistrov's presence on the PK and in their bottom six forwards. The fourth line has barely played, garnering poor results when it has.

Burmistrov is without question an upgrade in talent from a number of forwards the Jets used in Sunday's 4-1 loss to the Ottawa Senators.

Is he a better team player? That's up to him and now is the time for him to decide. It's pout or play.

Noel has kept his reasons for holding Burmistrov out of the lineup to himself, but it's no leap to conclude it boils down to the talented third-year pro not playing within the coach's structure.

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Noel wants his team to play a north-south style and Burmistrov wants to freelance and zig-zag.

The Jets won the first three games with Burmistrov out and as long as the team is winning it's difficult to mount a case against Noel's choices. The fact the Jets shot up to third in the conference cemented Noel's thinking.

Burmistrov is going to be a pro for a long time but he has lessons to learn. Key among them right now is learning the coach is the boss and playing within the structure he sets down is the way to stay in the lineup.

Either way it's time to find out what Alex Burmistrov is made of.

Put him in, coach.

gary.lawless@freepress.mb.ca Twitter: @garylawless