Things got interesting in Minnesota Wild Land over the past couple of weeks. Coming off a 7-1-1 run out of the break, Minnesota nosedived into a three-game losing streak where the team appeared lost on the ice, committing the same mistakes shift after shift. They didn’t look like they were playing in the same system. Kirill Kaprizov was a nonfactor over those losses, until, boom, he notched a hat trick to get them back on track (3-0-1 in their last four games). The Wild lacked consistency through their slump, and their opponents outscored them 12-4 during their three losses.
The only positive news during that down stretch, which began on February 27, is that the Wild signed Marat Khusnutdinov to a two-year entry-level contract. Management must trust that he will make an impact in the roughly 15 games he can play, because they burned the first year of his entry-level contract. Scouts say he’s a two-way player with size and scoring touch.
Since the Wild signed Khusnutdinov, they've been busy making moves. The Wild extended Zach Bogosian for two years, rewarding him for his great play this season. By the trade deadline last Friday, GM Bill Guerin sent Brandon Duhaime to the Colorado Avalanche, Pat Maroon to the Boston Bruins, Connor Dewar to the Toronto Maple Leafs, and Nic Petan to the New York Rangers, thereby obtaining a slew of draft picks for the 2026 draft. This was necessary to make room for the young kids who might make the team next season.
That's a lot of changes in a short time. What does it say about the timetables of Minnesota's prospects?
Khusnutdinov gives Minnesota 18 players under contract for next year, per CapFriendly. That makes 12 forwards, 6 defensemen, and a goalie. Supposing the Wild don’t re-sign Marc Andre-Fleury this summer, Jesper Wallstedt is in line to play a backup role in St. Paul, provided he continues his development in Iowa, despite his unconscionable debut in Dallas. The kid is years ahead of his age as a professional and in terms of maturity.
(As an aside, it's still baffling that didn’t they didn’t pull him at any point in the game? It doesn’t sound like it broke his confidence, hearing the post-game quote he gave. “I try to keep it inside of me, try to be professional about when I’m out there,” Wallstedt said. “There were definitely some Swedish swear words that come out when you get off the ice. You have to be pissed, too. It wasn’t good enough. You’ve got to realize that and move on. Put this game in the bag and continue to develop and continue to get better. Be ready for the next opportunity.” But why leave him out to dry for seven goals against in the first place? Come on.)
It also wouldn’t shock anyone to see Danila Yurov win a spot out of camp for next season, should he make it over to camp. Minnesota seems content to leave the star winger to another year of seasoning with Metallurg Magnitogorsk in the KHL. If he does, it won’t hurt him when it comes time to make the NHL.
Liam Öhgren is still playing in the Swedish Hockey League (SHL). He has signed his Entry-Level Contract with the club, and it will be interesting to see how Bill Guerin handles him. Öhgren isn’t putting up jaw-dropping numbers in the SHL, producing .72 points per game. The best guess is that he'll either stay in Sweden for another year, or perhaps the Wild will send him to Iowa, if he wants to make the transition to North America right now. Either way, his best shot at making the NHL will probably come in the 2025-26 season.
Riley Heidt has scored 107 points (34 goals, 73 assists) in 60 games with Prince George in the WHL. If he continues at that pace, he'll hit 117 points in 66 games for the season, which will be the fifth-most points from an 18-year-old in the WHL since 2000. That doesn’t translate perfectly into NHL numbers, but the foundation is there. He'll either have to play in the NHL or WHL next year, but if he keeps improving, he'll be more than ready for the AHL in 2025-26. But it seems like he’s at least a few years out before he joins the big club in St. Paul.
Back in January, Hockey Wilderness' own Kalisha Turnipseed dubbed Carson Lambos the Jonas Brodin heir apparent, and he’s already in Iowa. Despite just three goals and 12 points on the season (54 games), he's progressing well, and getting experience at the NHL level will only improve his game. There's an outside shot of him making the team as the seventh defenseman, or at least, the defenseman they call up if they need a longer-term injury replacement.
With that laid out, we can guess that the Wild's lines next season may look like this:
Kirill Kaprizov - Marco Rossi - Marat Khusnutdinov
Matt Boldy - Joel Eriksson Ek - Marcus Johansson
Marcus Foligno - Ryan Hartman - Mats Zuccarello
Mason Shaw - Freddy Gaudreau - Vinni Lettieri
Jonas Brodin - Jared Spurgeon
Jake Middleton - Brock Faber
Jon Merrill/Carson Lambos - Zach Bogosian
Filip Gustavsson
Jesper Wallstedt
This assumes pending RFA Mason Shaw returns, which seems likely simply because he’s an all-around utility guy. Vinni Lettieri has a two-way deal for next year, so he can hop around from the AHL to the NHL, but right now, he's starting in the NHL.
Let's go one year further out now, to the 2025-26 season. Yurov is probably making the team out of camp once he goes to North America. Flush with roughly $36 million in cap space, the Wild will have some decisions to make. Faber, Rossi, and Khusnutdinov will be due for new contracts, but as RFAs, the team should be able to take care of them. Until those extensions are done, though, Minnesota only has 11 players under contract in 2025-26, so what will Bill Geurin do?
Minnesota might be able to address a key need with a free agent signing or trade, but Kaprizov's situation means they should be careful. He'll be entering the last year of his five-year, $45 million deal, and he'll need an extension that surpasses his $9 million cap hit. Assuming the Wild can sign their RFAs, their lineup can look something like this in 2025-26:
2025-26 Possible Lines
Forwards
Kirill Kaprizov - Danila Yurov - Marat Khusnutdinov
Marco Rossi - Joel Eriksson Ek - Matt Boldy
Marcus Foligno - Ryan Hartman - Mats Zuccarello
OPEN SPOT - Freddy Gaudreau - OPEN SPOT
Jonas Brodin - Jared Spurgeon
OPEN SPOT - Brock Faber
Carson Lambos - Zach Bogosian
Filip Gustavsson
Jesper Wallstedt
There are some opportunities for Öhgren, Heidt, or anyone else to take one of those open spots, but who? And how much playing time will they get? Can they send Hartman or Foligno or Zuccarello to the fourth line? Will Lambos be able to climb into the defense's top four, or will the Wild have to address that need externally? No matter what happens, it'll be fascinating to see how this all plays out over the next 18 months.
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