Jump to content
Hockey Wilderness
  • Guerin Should Weaponize Waivers To Maximize Roster Flexibility


    Image courtesy of Isaiah J. Downing-USA TODAY Sports
    Adam Overby

    The "State of Hockey" is a prideful slogan coveted by a passionate Minnesota Wild fanbase that’s beginning to simmer with frustration because the dream of hoisting the Stanley Cup has been a shimmering mirage on the hockey horizon since the franchise entered the league.

    The Wild faithful have roared with a passion rivaling the state's frigid winters for over two decades. However, since that first puck drop in 2000, they haven't quite been able to get out of their own way with bad signings and/or secure… That elusive No. 1 center. The cornerstone for every championship team. 

    Secondary scoring has been so inconsistent lately that the front office has been handing out NTC to anyone willing to shoot a puck. The prospect pool has consistently churned out players who are not ready to make an immediate impact, and let's not forget about the anchor every championship team desperately needs: that No. 1 goaltender.

    However, for the first time in the Wild’s “mushy middle mediocre” history, a true franchise superstar talent has emerged, capable of single-handedly stealing games. Plus, they have a GM with the creativity to incorporate boldness into every trade decision and a core talent that has the potential to produce two, if not three, bonafide superstars in this league over the next few years.

    The Wild's future is bright, and the fans can't help but feel the excitement building. This is especially true because Minnesota will get options of coveted prospects at this year's draft instead of settling for the picked-over late-first-round region they occupy.

    For the first time, the optimists are fanning the flames of the pessimists to create a sense of urgency for Guerin to secure their superstar’s future this off-season. But with a limited toolbox, restricted menu, and barren landscape of viable moves for the upcoming off-season, it's triggering anxious anticipation among the fanbase.

    What can the Minnesota Wild and Bill Guerin realistically do to satisfy the franchise's only true superstar, not decimate the locker room, and instill confidence back into the fanbase under these circumstances? 

    For starters, Guerin should make sure the mistakes of last year's early-season contracts that limited the Wild’s trade deadline flexibility never happen again. Every one of those contracts should be framed and mounted in his office as a daily reminder of the power of roster flexibility when the unforeseen happens. 

    Secondly, last week, the New York Rangers’ treatment of Barclay Goodrow established a cold-blooded precedent roadmap for NHL general managers to explore who are stuck with cap hits for guys who aren’t producing on their current roster with “No Trade Clause” contracts. Hand out those NTC clauses all you want, Mr. Guerin. You no longer have to go down with the ship if its engines cease functioning in turbulent waters. 

    The Rangers prioritized cap space over player sentiment by waiving a well-respected champion with a hefty contract. By doing so, they sent a message that championship contenders can shed expensive, even valuable, pieces to create space for upgrades.

    In the cutthroat world of professional hockey, winning isn't everything. It's the only thing. Championship aspirations demand ruthless decisions, and no general manager understands that better than those who have seen the mountaintop from the ice, the bench, or the war room to hoist that coveted Stanley Cup trophy.

    Can Guerin make the challenging calls necessary to reshape the Wild into a contender by weaponizing the process of waivers to free himself from the dead weight on Minnesota’s current roster?

    Absolutely! Will he? Meh….. But should he? Probably.

    The road to glory is paved with tough choices. However, now that we know waiving veterans with no-trade clauses is a viable option to clear cap space and roster spots, let's look at the Wild's options this offseason and next season when we are completely free from “Buyout Purgatory.”

    According to capfriendly.com/freddy, Minnesota will pay Freddy Gaudreau $2.24 million next year whether he plays in the AHL or the NHL. If the Wild bought out his remaining 4-year contract, it would cost them $5,033,033 to buy out the remaining $7.55 million, saving them $2,516,667. 

    According to capfriendly.com/Mojo, the Wild will pay Marcus Johansson $2 million next year whether he plays in the AHL or the NHL. As I wrote last week, buying out Mojo only saves the wild $666,666. They can only buy out one player because there are already two bought-out players on the books, so they are probably better off choosing the waiver route.

    If Guerin puts them on waivers and they both get picked up, that's an additional $9.5 million back on the books over the course of several years. However, the Wild can only use $4.1 million ($2 million for Mojo + $2.1 million for Freddy) next year, giving Minnesota more to work with this off-season. 

    With that kind of money and two open roster spots, Guerin can talk to Sam Reinhart, Jake Guenztel, and Sean Monahan’s agents once they hit free agency this year. Will those players be wearing Wild jerseys next year? Almost definitely not. But Guerin could make a strong case for them to consider Minnesota if he was able to free up the space he clogged up in the first place.  

    Before you start popping champagne corks, Guerin is a “players GM,” and the likelihood of him weaponizing this loophole to send out the contracts he signed is about as likely as Ivan Demidov dressing for the Wild next season.

    But hear me out. Although Mojo is this year's Alex Goligoski, he is gone next year, no matter what. Freddy Gaudreau could either play his way onto another roster by the trade deadline or find his way to another locker room involuntarily. 

    Next year, Marcus Foligno and Ryan Hartman will become the following year’s dartboard scapegoats if they don’t turn things around. Who can see their NTCs counterfeited by exploiting the AHL waiver process?  

    That same year, Guerin and the Minnesota Wild will get over $14.75 million back onto the books after the worst of Buyout Purgatory finally expires. Add another $8 million if Foligno and Hartman get picked up off waivers, and another $2.5 million by letting Marc-Andre Fleury retire without an extension. 

    If Guerin can offload that money, he'd have $24.5 million to build a championship team around a core that includes a superstar, a sniper, a Selke-caliber center, a shutdown blueliner, and a prospect pool that should be in full bloom.

    By the 2026-27 season, if Guerin learns from his mistakes, maximizes roster flexibility, and weaponizes the loopholes available to him, the Minnesota Wild will have the opportunity to use tens of millions to re-sign Kaprizov and fill roster spots previously held by a carousel of “mushy middle mediocre” players who held on long enough to pass the baton to the next regime. That roster would have the potential to be an NHL dynasty.

    Think you could write a story like this? Hockey Wilderness wants you to develop your voice, find an audience, and we'll pay you to do it. Just fill out this form.

    • Like 5

    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    Featured Comments

    4 hours ago, Imyourhuckleberry said:

    If England invaded Maine, telling us that Maine has long wanted to be part of England, which is evident because they still speak English, I'm not going to buy that line of reasoning either. No matter who in Maine suggests(under gun point) they welcome England's soldiers there as they always felt connected to England, I'm not going to believe that is the sentiment of the entire state.

    I don't think this is a good analogy, mainly because England is pretty far away and Russia and Ukraine are neighbors. I think a better analogy would be if British Columbia and Alberta wanted to become part of the US because they didn't like the way the other Ottawa treated them, made reference to it through private channels and our military went up and essentially created a new border while those folks voted on it. The only likely difference here is that they would have started it instead of us. I do believe that Russia did surround Crimea to get things rolling. Whether or not it was rigged, I don't know, either is plausible. 

    What we don't know is how Ukraine treated the Russian speaking Russians that were put within their border when the USSR broke up. I'm not sure how much hostility there was between the cultures. It could very well be that the borders drawn when the breakup happened should have been drawn a little differently? Kiev used to be the home place of the Russians centuries ago before there was a USSR. Probably very few people in the US would actually understand the culture there right now and who hates who and why. We do know that Eastern Europeans have a tendency to hold very long grudges for generations. 

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    2 hours ago, mnfaninnc said:

    I don't think this is a good analogy, mainly because England is pretty far away and Russia and Ukraine are neighbors. I think a better analogy would be if British Columbia and Alberta wanted to become part of the US because they didn't like the way the other Ottawa treated them, made reference to it through private channels and our military went up and essentially created a new border while those folks voted on it.

    I agree that England was a stretched analogy, mostly because Maine was not an official British colony at the time of the revolutionary war, but I thought it kind of worked. Yours might be better, but has less of a personal feel of something being taken away.

    It was a quick thought to help an American consider how it might feel about someone militarily infiltrating and creating unrest in a region of the US, then invading that US state to help resolve that unrest, followed by forcing an election and telling us the results of that election were that we now have just 49 states.

    I don't know the specifics of how the average person in Crimea or Donetsk felt prior to 2014, and I'm not sure how many of those average people would be around now to tell us, or could tell us honestly without risking retribution if they were still residing in the region.

    I cannot recall many land grabs like this in the 21st century, but I understand it was far more common in earlier centuries.  I do know that other countries in the region are training to protect their sovereignty now so that they will not suffer a similar fate.

    I don't think Russia will stop hockey players from coming to the US given the respect it can bring to them internationally to have their home grown athletes competing and succeeding amongst the best in the world.

    I don't think they have the best leadership, and their freedoms are infringed upon heavily over there, but I don't have any dislike for the average Russian person.  Hopefully Yurov will thrive next year for the Wild.

    • Like 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    I'm gonna try to keep this short, but we know Zelensky and NATO have refused peace talks plenty in the last three years. Nazis were at the helm of Ukraine military which is now wiped out so they're kidnapping retarded people and girls into conscription. Zelensky's generals are buying flashy cars and homes. Ethnic Russians in those regions were being shelled by Ukraine going back to 2014. Crimea was lost during Obama cause Dem foreign policy is shit. They voted ~90% for joining Russia which has been encroached upon by NATO ever increasingly AND the US funded at least dozens of biolabs in Ukraine which was also highly publicized as full of Nazis and the most corrupt country plenty by NYT, Vice, etc. going back to 2018. US supplied missiles that require programming and US systems just killed a bunch of civilians at a beach. All of this never would have happened but stolen elections have consequences. President shits-his-pants puppet, can't-talk, smartest guy I know blew up Nordstream pipeline but PUTIN is the great boogeyman. 

    Russian hockey, especially juniors have been screwed while the US & Canada exhibit blatant hypocrisy. Let's face it, Ukraine is a scam that's cost you and I as taxpayers $200B that we don't have. Canadian parliament gives a standing ovation to a Nazi war criminal and in the house of congress they're waving Ukraine flags and having butt-sex while Americans are facing the worst economy and an illegal alien crime wave and grift. Sanctions have made Russia rich, Iran now has money to fund terrorism, and half the world is abandoning the US dollar. 

    The West should be ashamed. Victoria Nuland and Anthony Blinkin are criminals along with many more who have pushed the escalation and refused talks going back to when Putin invaded. If you know the history of that region, it's impossible to argue Ukraine has forever been sovereign or America's oldest, most trusted ally. It's a scam and money laundering mecca. If the mainstream media propaganda factories are telling you to support Ukraine, you should know it's the opposite. 

    "Geopolitical tensions" and Russian hockey players being blocked from competing on the world stage is what you get as a result of corruption. They removed a sitting President in a coups disguised as an election. We've seen what can happen in four years and its ugly. The American Uniparty BS needs to stop or we'll have WWIII before you know it. The Globalists need to GTFO and should be smacked-back to Davos. How's hockey gonna go when nukes are flying? Time to wake up and smell the coffee. They lied about Vietnam,  they lied about Iraq, but I'm sure they're not lying about Ukraine... 🤥

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    It does relate to hockey. 

    If Ruat ssia was allowed to play in the WJC or if scouts could go see players or meet with them, you'd have a totally different last 3-4 years.

    Last year Michkov at 8th. Yurov at 22nd. Maybe that's good worldwide turmoil benefits the Wild? Not the way I'd like to see it.

    If MN could get a pick somehow in the 25-35 range, I bet they could get a sneaky Russian or at least add a solid can-kick towards building for beyond Kaprizov. 

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    4 hours ago, Protec said:

    The American Uniparty BS needs to stop or we'll have WWIII before you know it. The Globalists need to GTFO and should be smacked-back to Davos. How's hockey gonna go when nukes are flying? Time to wake up and smell the coffee. They lied about Vietnam,  they lied about Iraq, but I'm sure they're not lying about Ukraine... 🤥

    I tried to be a little bit more subtle and polite, but this whole thing is a pretty good summary of what's really going on over there, and how much of it isn't being reported along normal media challenges. It's probably why most media isn't trusted anymore and we have to go to great lengths to find this out for ourselves.

    And it does effect hockey. I have missed Russian hockey players at the WJCs and in the international tournaments. It's not because I'm pro Russia, it's because for a real true competition, all the countries that matter should be there. Most would probably have Russia at least in the metal rounds. This conflict is seriously hurting the game and probably a real appraisal of all the draft eligible players. 

    A world at peace leads to so many other benefits. I'd rather participate in those benefits than seeing treasure and blood being spent over fighting for something that really doesn't affect this country. One of those benefits is having the best athletically compete against each other. I just happen to like that.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    5 hours ago, Protec said:

    refused talks going back to when Putin invaded

    Thank you for sharing your Russian state government media news feed with the rest of us.🤔

    Putin definitely lives the Joffrey Baratheon "the truth is what I say it is", and social media makes it easy to have that echoed all around the world now.

    Edited by Imyourhuckleberry
    • Like 1
    • Haha 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    2 hours ago, Imyourhuckleberry said:

    Thank you for sharing your Russian state government media news feed with the rest of us.🤔

    Putin definitely lives the Joffrey Baratheon "the truth is what I say it is", and social media makes it easy to have that echoed all around the world now.

    Bro, you did the meme.  You're telling me it's "Russian disinformation???" 😃

    I just believe the world would be a better place when Russian and American hockey could overlap and be cool. Eyeroll criticism accepted. Greater tensions or WWIII would mean MN drafts more NA guys. I could get on board for that. 

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites




    Join the conversation

    You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
    Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

    Guest
    Add a comment...

    ×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

      Only 75 emoji are allowed.

    ×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

    ×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

    ×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


×
×
  • Create New...