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  • Could David Jiricek Get 'Ohgrenned' After the Wild's Trade for Quinn Hughes?


    Image courtesy of Brad Penner-Imagn Images
    Chris Schad

    One year ago, David Jiricek was the Minnesota Wild’s blockbuster addition. The Wild acquired the sixth overall pick in the 2022 draft in a massive trade that sent Daemon Hunt, a 2025 first-round pick, 2026 third and fourth-round picks, and a 2027 second-round pick to the Columbus Blue Jackets. 

    Jiricek’s cost, draft capital, and 6-foot-4, 204-pound frame made it easy to envision that he would be a staple of Minnesota’s blue line for years to come. But life comes at you fast in the NHL, and it may have given the 22-year-old whiplash when the Wild pulled another blockbuster trade for Quinn Hughes last month.

    A former Norris Trophy winner, it hasn’t taken Hughes long to get acclimated after he arrived from the Vancouver Canucks. But his presence has a ripple effect throughout the organization, and it could impact Jiricek’s future.

    He could “get Ohgrenned.”

    “Ohgrenned” is a reference to former Wild winger Liam Ohgren's situation. At this time one year ago, Ohgren was one of the players, along with Jiricek, who formed one of hockey's best farm systems. That group, which included Zeev BuiumJesper Wallstedt, and Danila Yurov, was supposed to establish roots in the NHL this season. While that trio was able to do it, Ohgren couldn’t take advantage of his opportunity.

    Coaching staff don’t have a vendetta against players that fans sometimes believe, but it felt like the Wild liked but didn’t love Ohgren. Despite showing up to camp in great shape, he didn’t show much in the preseason and lost his job to Marcus Johansson, a 35-year-old winger playing on a veteran minimum contract.

    With no points in 18 games with the Wild this season, it felt like Ohgren was going from promising prospect to an afterthought in Minnesota. That was confirmed when he was part of a package that included Marco Rossi, Buium, and a 2026 first-round pick to acquire Hughes on Dec. 13 and may have foreshadowed Jiricek’s future with the team.

    Like Ohgren, Jiricek hasn’t been able to show he can stick in the NHL. In just over a full calendar year with the Wild, Jiricek has played 24 games, recording a goal and an assist and logging a plus-3 rating. Jiricek showed an ability to create offense earlier in the season, but his game isn’t at a level that can help a team that believes its championship window is right now.

    While Ohgren is one example, Buium is another. At 20 years old, Buium had a solid start with three goals and 14 points in 31 games with the Wild. But like most young players, he was inconsistent, which led the Wild to pursue Hughes as an immediate upgrade to compete with the Dallas Stars and Colorado Avalanche.

    Nobody can argue with the results, as the Wild are 7-1-2 since Hughes arrived in Minnesota. The deal to bring him here, along with last year’s trade for Jiricek, depleted Bill Guerin’s war chest to make another deal. It also may have put the writing on the wall for last year’s prized acquisition, especially if Hughes re-signs next summer.

    It’s impossible to know what Hughes is going to do when it’s time to sign a new contract. Playing for the New Jersey Devils with his brothers, Jack and Luke, has to be appealing. He could also return to Michigan to play for the Detroit Red Wings after playing at the University of Michigan. 

    Both were realistic scenarios before the Canucks traded Hughes to Minnesota. Still, the Wild have the ace up their sleeve: they can exclusively offer an eight-year contract with front-loaded pay and unlimited signing bonuses before the new collective bargaining agreement kicks in next fall.

    Even if that results in Hughes signing a shorter-term deal to potentially hit the market with Jack after the 2029-30 season or Luke after the 2031-32 season, it still creates a short-term problem that Jiricek may not be able to overcome.

    The Wild have paired Hughes with Brock Faber, and it has the potential to be their top pairing for the next decade. Jonas Brodin and Jared Spurgeon have slid down to the second pairing, but are still producing in their 30s. They've also signed Jake Middleton through the 2028-29 season, clogging another roster spot, and Jiricek’s best hope may be to grab that final spot sometime in the next two seasons.

    Even with the possibility that Brodin and Spurgeon will age out, it’s an uphill climb. Zach Bogosian is Minnesota's sixth defenseman. At 35 years old, it wouldn’t be surprising for the Wild to move on when he becomes a free agent this summer. 

    But like Johansson, Bogosian is considered a staple of locker-room culture, to the point that Buium chose No. 24 to honor his former teammate when the Wild traded him to Vancouver. Michael Russo also noted in The Athletic that Minnesota could re-sign Bogosian, which would essentially lock in the top six for the next season or two, depending on the length of the extension.

    This seemingly puts Jiricek in the seventh defenseman role. Still, he’d also have to compete for that spot with Hunt, who, despite being traded for Jiricek a year ago, has been able to stay ahead of him in the pecking order.

    The Wild could wait a few years and see how things play out. But the Hughes trade also showed that they’re willing to mortgage the future to help this team compete for a championship in the short term.

    If Steven Stamkos, Ryan O'Reilly, or even Sidney Crosby become available in the next two months, Jiricek would be the best trade chip the Wild has to get a deal done. They have no picks until the third round of the 2026 draft, and they already traded their 2027 second-rounder to Columbus for Jiricek.

    This may make the Jiricek trade seem like a waste of resources unless the Wild gets a valuable short-term piece back in return. But nobody is arguing with what it took to get Hughes right now, even with his contract status hanging over the franchise entering next summer.

    In the end, Ohgren may be the best example of how the Wild is viewing their roster strategy right now. It could also mean Jiricek's time in Minnesota ends much differently than fans envisioned a year ago.

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    16 minutes ago, ArizonaWildFan said:

     

    I would be hesitant to part with either Gus or Wally this season. Billy may want to add another piece, and the Wild certainly need one, but the options are extremely limited.

    I think you try to move Gus but not until the offseason.  If  by long shot chance you found somebody to swap you a needed top six with Gus in the deal, I supposed you could throw some fertilizer on the flower and roll him out of the retirement home for the playoffs. 

    I mean, he has not had a farewell tour in months.

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    2 hours ago, MNCountryLife said:

    Not sure I understand your comment.  Are you thinking another team will retain a players salary?

    That is correct. And we should go for it when we trade for that NOW talent. I do believe that there are some franchises that will have some difficulties trying to hit the floor. Perhaps a 3 way deal could be done? 

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    1 hour ago, bisopher said:

    Cue the "Objects in mirror are closer than they appear" image, same as Dallas...🙂

    From the looks of things, it appears that Dallas has moved over into the right lane.

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    1 hour ago, hydguy75 said:

    Spurgeon.  $7.57M, Age 36.  On paper this one makes the most sense to move, but watching his finesse Defense disrupt so many passes, shots, etc.  this one is tough to even consider.  BG will most likely let him retire-out here and we'll benefit come postseason. 

    Since the arrival of Hughes, Spurgeon has gotten, well, physical. He's already thrown down 2 much larger wingers on this trip, and against the Kings he did make a couple of physical plays. Factor in that he is the captain and likely saved the season with his players' only meeting, it might just be the right move to keep him. What I'm seeing is a hungry Spurgy, and it's been pretty nice.

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    2 hours ago, hydguy75 said:

    The Moose.  $4M, also UFA next year.  Age 34, his stats this year not as good as expected.  Consider offering him a move to his hometown of Buf, in exchange for Tage or Tuch?  Buf is on a heater right now 9-1-0 in Last 10.  If they lose momentum before TDL, would they consider bringing Foligno back?

    I'm not really worried about bottom 6 players that much.  There are a lot of them and can usually be picked up in FA when needed.  It's the game changers that are hard to get.  Ek always surprises me when we are getting our heads knocked around and suddenly he rises to the occassion and nets a game changer.  

    Now if we could send out a bottom 6er for a guy like Tuck or Tage (like you mentioned) ... wow... that would be huge.

    2 hours ago, hydguy75 said:

    Spurgeon.  $7.57M, Age 36.  On paper this one makes the most sense to move, but watching his finesse Defense disrupt so many passes, shots, etc.  this one is tough to even consider.  BG will most likely let him retire-out here and we'll benefit come postseason

    100% agree on this.  Spurgeon has earned his stripes and I do hope that BG lets him retire in the Wild uniform.  Even in his twilight years the guy is still performing.  I've been impressed with him every year I've watched.  A true pro.

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    9 hours ago, Dis-allowed display name said:

    I am not convinced of all of this "win now" momentum

    Nationally the Wild are top 5. The Hockey Guy had them 2nd in his power rankings for three weeks. Even being that high they only get mid to high teens % to take home the cup. Aves are having an incredible season and they are in the low 20%. That’s the reality of winning what many people think is the hardest to win championship. We are in the conversation for sure but you’re also not alone in being less than optimistic. Personally this is the best Wild team I’ve seen so I’m all in. I will reevaluate after the Olympics and trade deadline. 

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    2 hours ago, MNCountryLife said:

    Now if we could send out a bottom 6er for a guy like Tuck or Tage (like you mentioned) ... wow... that would be huge.

    I get it- we would need to bundle more lures than only Foligno to secure T or T from BUF, so this is only rhetorically answering the question - what assets are available to trade for leveling up?  We quickly running out of assets to trade without going backwards, thanks to a few lopsided deals over the past couple of years. 

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    On 1/5/2026 at 7:16 PM, hydguy75 said:

    Not factoring NMC's, how do we open up cap space without regression in this win-now mode?  

    Zucc $4.1M, UFA, and aging out.  He can still skate fast (enough) to be paired with KK, this season, but what about after?  Eventually we will need to create / buy the KK win-now line.  So do we hit extend to another aging vet, or cut bait and find someone to better align with the KK 8 year contract? ....

     

    I think he'll sign a 2yr once or a two year twice.
    He's repeatedly stated he wants to play as long as he is able to, and feels that he has something to contribute.
    Mid season he's 4th on the team at PPG with 0.79

    Yes, he's just played 24 games so far this season and the injury that kept him out at the start of the season I think was a groin that needed surgery. Fair enough, you get older and your body is starting to fail.
    At that age I already had had back surgery for sciatica, broken shoulder blade an concussion from crashing my bicycle while out training, numerous shoulder and rib injuries from crashing my motorcycle as well playing hockey growing up.

    His second injury this season was a ruptured testicle from friendly fire (Faber I believe) that needed repairing. A freak injury that can happen to anyone and is not age related.

    His third and final thus far was concussion related (probably). Also not age related.

    Over his career he's suffered at least three broken wrists from blocking shots and a cracked skull, also from friendly fire (Ryan McDonagh), neither age related.

    So in summary; he'll sign again 🙂

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    2 hours ago, Thomas said:

    I think he'll sign a 2yr once or a two year twice.
    He's repeatedly stated he wants to play as long as he is able to, and feels that he has something to contribute.
    Mid season he's 4th on the team at PPG with 0.79

    Yes, he's just played 24 games so far this season and the injury that kept him out at the start of the season I think was a groin that needed surgery. Fair enough, you get older and your body is starting to fail.
    At that age I already had had back surgery for sciatica, broken shoulder blade an concussion from crashing my bicycle while out training, numerous shoulder and rib injuries from crashing my motorcycle as well playing hockey growing up.

    His second injury this season was a ruptured testicle from friendly fire (Faber I believe) that needed repairing. A freak injury that can happen to anyone and is not age related.

    His third and final thus far was concussion related (probably). Also not age related.

    Over his career he's suffered at least three broken wrists from blocking shots and a cracked skull, also from friendly fire (Ryan McDonagh), neither age related.

    So in summary; he'll sign again 🙂

    Slapnutz

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