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  • Faber’s Extension Highlights Wild’s Commitment To the Blue Line


    Image courtesy of Brace Hemmelgarn-USA TODAY Sports
    Robert Brent

    The Minnesota Wild and Bill Guerin completed a significant transaction when they signed star defender Brock Faber to a long-term contract extension. The University of Minnesota product will be a cornerstone for years to come and is already a vital player. We've already discussed Faber's contract extension regarding its value, but there's another way to view the newly-inked defender's deal.

    When the Wild and Faber signed on the dotted line, the team showed its commitment to building through high-quality defenders. Faber’s contract isn't the first time the Wild have shown dedication to their blue line; it's just the latest example of an apparent strategy to spend a notable portion of team-building resources on their defenseman. 

    A History of Financial Commitment

    Brock Faber's extension may be the biggest story of the offseason, but it isn't the first time Guerin has chosen to spend big-time money to extend a defenseman. One of Guerin's first moves as general manager was inking Jared Spurgeon to a seven-year extension worth $7.575 million average annual value (AAV). The year after Spurgeon extended, blue line mainstay Jonas Brodin earned a new contract worth $6-million AAV for seven years. Before Faber's extension this offseason, Guerin extended Jake Middleton for four years, paying him $4.35-million AAV. 

    All these extensions add up to one thing. The Wild are already banking on four defensemen to be worth significant money. When Faber and Middleton's contract extensions kick in during the 2025-26 season, the Wild will have $27.65 million committed to their signed defenseman. Aside from the Boston Bruins, that's more than any team in the NHL has devoted to their defense that far in the future. They also rank seventh in dollars committed per player, devoting an average of $5.53 million to their signed D-men.

    With Spurgeon and Brodin aging, the team can divest itself of the money they’re spending on defensemen via trades. However, Bill Guerin has already shown a penchant for spending ample financial resources on his defense. 

    Using Draft Capital

    If you’ve ever seen a nature documentary, you may know that sea turtles lay their eggs on land. A sea turtle will lay over 100 eggs, ensuring that some baby turtles make it after hatching and embarking on the treacherous journey to the water, even if most don’t. Minnesota has treated drafting defensemen in the same way under Guerin. 

    Under Guerin’s stewardship, Minnesota has selected 32 prospects in the NHL Entry Draft. Of those 32 players, 14 are defensemen. Drafting a defenseman with 43.75% of a team’s picks is the second-most in the NHL during that time. Since the 2020 draft, only four franchises have used more than 40% of their draft picks on defenders, while the league average is 31.6%. The Wild hope that if they spend enough draft capital, some of their prospects will eventually become impact players or at least play significant NHL minutes.

    The benefit of investing such a significant amount of draft capital in defense is hard to measure. The league, fans, and media met the Wild's choice to take Zeev Buium with critical acclaim. If he lives up to his potential, Minnesota could have another franchise cornerstone to pair with Faber. It's too early to tell, though. 

    Similarly, Carson Lambos is the other first-round blueliner Guerin drafted during his tenure, and he has yet to see NHL minutes. We're projecting a possible breakout year for Lambos, which would begin to justify Minnesota’s decision to spend so much draft capital on defenders. 

    D-men typically take a bit longer to develop than forwards, so we won’t know how many of Guerin's proverbial turtles will make it to the NHL for a while.

    Evaluating Roster Construction

    The pattern is clear: Bill Guerin and the Minnesota Wild are strategically building the team with an emphasis on the blue line. Identifying patterns and trends has some merit, but the real value comes in evaluating whether these trends represent a positive outlook. What’s the opportunity cost of the Wild constructing their roster this way? Does allocating roster resources in this way usually have a good outcome for other rosters with a similar makeup? 

    The most obvious consequence is not being able to spend money on other parts of the roster. Minnesota’s forward group could become shallow. Matt Boldy is already earning a significant salary ($7 million AAV), and the Wild must offer Kirill Kaprizov considerable money to extend him. Guerin and Co. will likely be happy with their blue line and top-end forward talent but must do some bargain-bin shopping elsewhere. However, this is all theoretical. Comparing the results of teams with similar makeups is the best way to project whether this philosophy of roster construction has the potential to yield positive results.

    Defense Wins Championships…?

    Winning the Stanley Cup is the ultimate measure of success in the NHL. Let's look at the last four teams to hoist Lord Stanley's Cup, including critical factors that make up their roster construction. The factors we'll look at include how much each club spent on their forwards, defensemen, and goaltenders – and the cap percentage that money represented. Because we're looking at the Wild through the lens of what resources they've allocated to their defense, it's also essential to include each team's highest-paid defender.

    *Note: The data used is the team’s cap space post trade deadline

    2024 Florida Panthers

    • Forwards: $49,776,667 (59.6%)
    • Defenseman: $21,986,667 (26.3%)
    • Goaltenders: $11,100,000 (13.3%)
    • Highest Paid Defender: Aaron Ekblad ($7,500,000, 9%) 

    2023 Vegas Golden Knights

    • Forwards: $44,347,500 (53.8%)
    • Defenseman: $27,994,150 (33.9%)
    • Goaltenders: $8,166,667 (9.9%)
    • Highest Paid Defender: Alex Pietrangelo ($8,800,000, 10.7%)

    2022 Colorado Avalanche

    • Forwards: $44,033,333 (54%)
    • Defenseman: $30,669,167 (37.6%)
    • Goaltenders: $5,500,000 (6.7%)
    • Highest Paid Defender: Cale Makar ($9,000,000, 11%)

    2021 Tampa Bay Lightning

    • Forwards: $45,766,666 (56.2%)
    • Defenseman: $24,237,500 (29.7%)
    • Goaltenders: $10,800,000, (13.3%)
    • Highest Paid Defender: Victor Hedman ($7,875,000, 9.7%)

    Key Takeaways

    While this is just a cursory glance, there are some key takeaways from this data. First, it is common for a Stanley Cup-winning team to spend significant resources on their defense. Florida is an outlier, but the other three clubs spent around 30% of their cap or more on defenders. 

    It also appears that having a bona fide No. 1 defenseman is crucial to a successful team. Makar and Hedman have won Norris trophies as the league's best defenders. Pietrangelo and Ekblad have yet to win the trophy but have finished in the top 10 in voting.

    What does this mean for the Wild? Primarily that it’s possible to succeed while allocating so many resources to their defense. One can argue whether who specifically they've decided to build around is the right choice, but that's an entirely different discussion. We’re talking about team-building philosophy and resource allocation. Brock Faber's contract extension represents a particularly crucial step in this plan because the team has secured what they consider to be their future all-star defender. They'll have to make frugal moves elsewhere on the roster, but Bill Guerin is committed to building from the blue line out. 

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    I will always remember one of Guerin's first interviews when he became GM, or at least around the buyouts.  He said he wanted to build through the draft and from goaltending out.  A lot can be said about how that makes the forward group less of a commitment.  However, that is what keeps you in games.  The Wild have that gamebreaking star in Kaprizov.  The piece they didn't have in the Parise/Suter era.  What they didn't have before.

    What all Wild teams DID have was solid defensive depth or pairs of players you could count on.  When I started watching, you had Burns, Schultz, and Mitchell.  Later on, Brodin, Dumba, Spurgeon, Suter, on now down to Faber.  I can't say if any single one has been that be all end all killer defensive "star," but all have either been pretty good mainstays or great enough that the Wild could always win a game if shit got kinda close.  

    We've seen the Toronto method fail time and time again.  Edmonton only recently got that top two player thing to work (thanks to having a new defenseman breaking out, coaching, and an actual goaltender).  

    I can't trust a Wild team to win 10-7, 5-4, 6-2 with regularity.  However, I think the Wild have enough offense to make things work if games are 4-3, 3-2, 2-1, etc.  That's been the hallmark for years.  Give me more Faber and Buium before giving me some shiny ass goal scoring forward who disappears in crunch time.

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    Also note that Ekblad signed his contract extension in 2016 at 20 years old and the 2016-2017 salary cap was set at $73.10M. It was over 10% of the cap when he signed the deal.

    The Hedman deal referenced was also signed back in 2016. Both would have been top 7 cap hits at the time for defensemen. Hedman was 3rd and Ekblad was 7th in 2017-2018, when the Ekblad extension kicked in, so it's not like either team didn't go heavy on a defense contract at the time.

    Faber isn't top 10 in contract average value right now, but may enter into the top 10 in defensive value if he progresses like they think he can. His contract value projects to less than 9.25% of the cap when the extension begins, assuming the cap increases as has been projected.

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    https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/5672796/2024/08/06/nhl-front-office-confidence-rankings-2024/
    “Guerin and team have a great eye for drafting and taking swings on ‘controversial picks.’ However free agency continues to leave me confused. Decisions around cap flexibility and player contract negotiations have left me concerned about losing our top-tier talent in favor of lower-end talent. Also for an organization that has decently high-end prospects to have a pipeline clogged with weighty contracts stuffed with NMC/NTCs makes me even less confident.”

    “Foligno, Hartman, Fleury, Middleton, Gaudreau … GMBG has really committed to overspending/giving no-trade-clauses on depth players; even if the players themselves are easy to cheer for. Teams that win are teams with high-end talent, which is impossible to acquire/keep if all of your money is tied up on good-not-great players.”

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    39 minutes ago, Pewterschmidt said:

     

    https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/5672796/2024/08/06/nhl-front-office-confidence-rankings-2024/
    “Guerin and team have a great eye for drafting and taking swings on ‘controversial picks.’ However free agency continues to leave me confused. Decisions around cap flexibility and player contract negotiations have left me concerned about losing our top-tier talent in favor of lower-end talent. Also for an organization that has decently high-end prospects to have a pipeline clogged with weighty contracts stuffed with NMC/NTCs makes me even less confident.”

    “Foligno, Hartman, Fleury, Middleton, Gaudreau … GMBG has really committed to overspending/giving no-trade-clauses on depth players; even if the players themselves are easy to cheer for. Teams that win are teams with high-end talent, which is impossible to acquire/keep if all of your money is tied up on good-not-great players.”

    From Russo's Twitter/Athletic Feed: Wild Mgmt (Guerin & Co.) ranked 25th in the NHL in terms of confidence in the mgmt team.

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    2 hours ago, Pewterschmidt said:

    From Russo's Twitter/Athletic Feed: Wild Mgmt (Guerin & Co.) ranked 25th in the NHL in terms of confidence in the mgmt team.

    Outside of locking up Kaprizov, which high end forwards can we not extend? The FHFMG group will be out by the time we really have to extend the high end forwards. We likely aren't getting a big UFA, but we will have plenty of guys on minimal deals.

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    When I was looking at the defense, I think you also have to include the goaltending. The teams who backed down on defense a bit also had the expensive goalies. Riding a tandem of Goose and The Wall (or maybe even trading for Askarov to run with The Wall) would give us years of cheap goaltending where we can fudge a little on defender's salaries. Spurgeon drops off in a couple of years which will be a big opening. That may be when The Wall gets his money.

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    Well, there's a two way street though.  Apparently, the Wild's defensive metrics did improve once Hynes took over and Hynes/Goligoski were switched for Bogo/Chisholm.  I'm curious to see how Gus plays behind the team that Guerin has said, "Get your defensive shit together now."  It's pretty hard to blame anyone else if the team still sucks if the one of the best defensive players in team history, a higher end defensive forward in Foligno, a big beefy PK guy in Trenin, and not forcing Middleton on Faber (I hope) doesn't say,

    "It's not us, it's you."  Gus has all the ingredients he needs to at least get back to, "Just be a fucking starter caliber goalie, please?"

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    17 hours ago, Citizen Strife said:

    "It's not us, it's you."  Gus has all the ingredients he needs to at least get back to, "Just be a fucking starter caliber goalie, please?"

    What would you consider a starting caliber goalie? If Goose goes back to a .910 sv% would that work? I have to say that my expectations are .920 for Goose assuming our defense is healthy, which, with Spurgeon is probably a 40% chance. 

    So, there were reports that Rossi is coming back stronger than last year 😃, has anyone heard anything Lambos and Spacek? To me, those guys needed just as strong of a summer!

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    I can't put an exact percentage on it because of goalie voodoo.  However, both Fleury and Gus hovered around 55th-65th in both SV% and GAA all season.  If one or both of them (hopefully Gus) can be like 20th-25th, at least that is some tangible sign of recovery from one season to the next.  It wouldn't be the best though.

    Ideally, you'd like Wall and Gus to be Top 15-20 to have a great shot at success.  Heck, even one in the top 10 and the backup being 20s-30s is probably viable.

     

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    17 minutes ago, mnfaninnc said:

    What would you consider a starting caliber goalie? If Goose goes back to a .910 sv% would that work? I have to say that my expectations are .920 for Goose assuming our defense is healthy, which, with Spurgeon is probably a 40% chance. 

    Last season, among goalies who played more than 20 games, only 10 of them achieved a .915 save percentage or better, and only 4 of them were at .920 or better. Based upon the current state of the NHL, .920 is a high bar to clear. I'd be fairly happy if any Wild goalies end up at .915 or better.

    It would amazing if Gus were back up at .920, but anything .910 or better should be considered average. Even if you back the games played down to just 10 games, only 21 of 73 NHL goalies achieved a .910 or better.

    As I've mentioned before, Gus had a .906 save percentage after the team traded away Addison, so that would be starter caliber even if it's a little below average starter--Oettinger and Skinner were both at .905 last season. I think he could be at .910 or better this season, especially if the top 4 Defenders are healthy for 70+ games.

    Edited by Imyourhuckleberry
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