Viburnum dentatum
Viburnum dentatum (Southern Arrowwood) sold by the local soil and water conservation district as Viburnum rafinesquianum. I bought 25 of them (dormant and bare root) and most survived the transplant, deer, and rabbits. it was when they leafed out that I began to suspect something was not right. Viburnum dentatum does grow in a single place in my county down in the southeast corner according to a very old record by Olga Lakela. According to Minnesota Wildflowers this species is not native to Minnesota. https://www.minnesotawildflowers.info/shrub/downy-arrrow-wood
This photo shows the leaf underside which is clearly glabrous. Compare it to this one of Viburnum rafinesquianum.
Other differences between Viburnum dentatum and Viburnum rafinesquianum are in the fruit (a drupe) which is blue and round in the former and dark blue to black and somewhat flattened in the latter. Also, Viburnum rafinesquianum has a pair of thin stipules at the base f the petiole while Viburnum dentatum does not.
See also
http://wisflora.herbarium.wisc.edu/taxa/index.php?taxon=5369
''Viburnum dentatum'', southern arrowwood or arrowwood viburnum or roughish arrowwood, is a small shrub, native to the Eastern United States and Canada from Maine south to Northern Florida and Eastern Texas.
Like most ''Viburnum'', it has opposite, simple leaves and fruit in berry-like drupes. Foliage turns yellow to red in late fall. Localized variations of the species are common over its entire geographic range. Common differences include leaf size and shape and placement of pubescence.. more