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  • How Do the Wild Clean Up the Mess They've Created?


    Image courtesy of James Guillory-USA TODAY Sports
    Tom Schreier

    Minnesota Wild owner Craig Leipold was certain his team would be winners this season. "I think we're going to have a very competitive team," he said on September 29 after Minnesota’s third preseason game. "We're going to need some of our young guys to step up, and our hope is that they will. We think we got a couple that we believe are ready for the next step.

    "If they do that, I think we're going to have a better team than we had last year."

    A reporter astutely pointed out that the Wild had $14.7 million in dead cap this year because general manager Bill Guerin bought Zach Parise and Ryan Suter out in 2021. For context, Kirill Kaprizov counts $9 million against the cap, Matt Boldy $7 million, and Joel Eriksson Ek $5.25 million. "It kind of is what it is," Mr. Leipold responded. "We've accepted it. We're not complaining about it. We're doing the best we can and moving forward."

    However, Guerin had complained about the cap restraints in May after the Dallas Stars eliminated the Wild in the first round of the playoffs. "I rarely bring this up, but I'm going to bring it up today because it's real, and it's important," Guerin said at his final press conference of the 2022-23 season. "Our players and our coaches deserve a lot of credit because they're fighting with one hand tied between their back because of these cap restraints. We don't apologize for it. We're fine with it."

    Fair enough. Building a winner with nearly $15 million in dead cap space is difficult. But Guerin chose to buy Parise and Suter out. He intentionally has iced a veteran-laden team that has never gotten out of the first round of the playoffs. And he doubled down on it in the offseason by signing Marcus Foligno, Ryan Hartman, and Mats Zuccarello to extensions. That’s on top of Frederick Gaudreau’s five-year, $10 million extension and Guerin committing to Jon Merrill and Alex Goligoski on the blue line. 

    The Wild entered the All-Star Break with 47 points, second-to-last in the Central Division and fourth-worst in the Western Conference. They’re not going to match last year’s 103-point total, and they’re probably not going to make the playoffs. But they have many league-average veterans locked into long-term deals and oodles of dead cap space. Guerin has stuck Minnesota firmly into the mushy middle. They’re too good to get a top pick, but not good enough to compete in the postseason.

    Guerin should have had a contingency plan. If the Wild hadn’t wantonly signed veterans to long-term deals with no-move clauses, they could trade everyone who isn’t a core player. Keep the goal-scorers: Kirill Kaprizov and Matt Boldy. Retain Jared Spurgeon and Jonas Brodin as the top defensive pair. Continue to build around Marco Rossi, Brock Faber, and Filip Gustavsson. But get any value you can for any other player on the roster. This season is a lost cause; best to ensure next year isn’t, too.

    Mr. Leipold’s best quality as an owner is his commitment to winning. He cut matching $98 million checks to Parise and Suter because Chuck Fletcher felt he could build a contender around them. It’s absurd that the NHL punished the Wild harshly for buying those contracts out, essentially upbraiding Minnesota’s ownership for spending too much. But Minnesota knew the rules (or at least, knew the NHL was upset with the league's rampant back-diving deals), and a responsible GM should take a step back during the harshest dead-cap years to reload for when he can spend again. At the very least, he should have an escape plan if things go haywire.

    Mr. Leipold handed Guerin a vintage Pontiac Firebird that was having trouble getting up to speed on the freeway. Experts, or anyone who regularly watches the team, will tell you that the engine has some good components but that Guerin needed to replace some old parts. The transmission might work, and it has power steering, but the alternator and fuel pump are starting to fail. Unless Mr. Leipold mandated that Guerin drive on the freeway, the GM should have taken side roads until he had the cap space to fully replace the faulty parts.

    But instead of replacing the aging components, Guerin superglued the alternator and fuel pump to the engine and hit the gas. Predictably, it started to overheat. Guerin complained last year when the media highlighted the Wild’s inability to get out of the first round, saying that his regime shouldn’t have to repent for Fletcher’s sins. But he inherited Fletcher’s car that couldn’t get up to speed on the freeway. It’s his fault that he tried to get onto I-94 when he should have stayed on Marshall and University.

    The Wild should never enter a season trying to tank so long as they have Kaprizov under contract. But they should have started selling the aging parts while they had value and replaced them with newer components. Extending Zuccarello makes sense because he’s Kaprizov’s linemate, and Kaprizov is the franchise. But Guerin overcommitted to aging veterans, and the organization nearly botched Rossi’s development, potentially costing them their first bona fide No. 1 center since prime Mikko Koivu.

    Things have been chaotic in St. Paul this year. Guerin fired Dean Evason, “mutually parted ways” with his cap guy, and was the focus of an investigation for allegedly verbally abusing an employee. Guerin appears perplexed by the number of injuries the Wild have had, but it’s likely due to their undisciplined play. Still, he seems ready and willing to drive the Firebird onto the freeway, even if the engine looks prepared to give out.

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    I think all we can say right now is Guerin signed off on the extensions thinking the season wouldn't go as balls up as it did.  However, I want to stress that Guerin decided either via mandate or personal choice to drip feed prospects onto the roster rather than open the floodgates.

    I don't know what would have been the smarter move.  A lot of injuries to both rosters have muddied either approach anyway.  Would Walker, Khaira, etc not shit the bed on their callups if they were given full and free reign to NHL time?  If they had been good enough, they would have by now.  Guerin gave Addison every chance to not be a one trick pony, but now Addison is slumming it in San Jose.

    The options next year are forced, but not as locked down as a lot of recent articles suggest.  Dino and Yurov are the two top forward prospects?  Dewar, Duhaime, and Maroon are replaceable.  There's less room for the Bankiers, Milne's, Haight's etc, but again, injuries and other crap will happen next year too.  

    Defense has a few more moving parts, Goligoski, Merrill, Mermis, even Middleton if his asking price to extend is too high.

    Foligno is a great defensive forward, Zuccarello was on pace for 90 pts until injuries, and Hartman has utility and peskiness that can be valuable.  A lot of young guys can be run on ELCs until (like Faber and Rossi) they show they are improvements over what we have.  The hope is the new prospects are just as good (if not better) at adapting to the NHL as Rossi and Faber are.  That's all they are at this point: hope.

     

    Edited by Citizen Strife
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    16 hours ago, wef said:

    We hear talk about building around KK . My concern is his now short contract my not wait for us because of cap issues. Feels like we're standing in wet cement. 

    Yeah I think everyone is, or should be, concerned about whether he resigns. Obviously if he leaves then that takes a lot of wind out of our sails. 

    That said, by the time he's due to negotiate on a new deal, we should see guys like Yurov and Khusnutdinov upgrading the top-6. Wallstedt will be up and have multiple years in the league so we'll have a better idea about where he stands as a starting goalie. Its also possible that the 2024 draftee will be playing for us if he's good enough, whether that's in the top-6 or the top-4 of the blueline. 

    And, bonus, we should be able to add a big addition or two that offseason as well thanks to getting $13M in cap-space back from the dead-caps reducing. 

    Will it be enough to make Kaprizov want to stay? No one will know but it should be our best chance at a cup in the last 3 years if the GM makes the right moves. 

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    21 hours ago, Lovehockey said:

    The 5 year plan is great but it has some problems. The two key defenders - Brodin and Spurgen wil be 35 and 39. So replacement for them needs to be as good (or better) and there is nothing right indicating that it will be . Kaprisov will be 28 why would he want to wait?  Yrov needs to wait for Hartman 3 years? If he is good as he advertised ( and he is doing very well this year in KHL) why he needs to wait? And this list can continue. There is no success with 5 years plans in professional sport unless you are rebuilding. Otherwise people u think will be there will not be and u start again 

    I don't think you quite got my point. Brodin and Spurgeon I did not offset as far as contracts go, but, Hunt will be less expensive on D as will Lambos. All will be playing so there is an offset in cost.

    Same thing with Hartman, Foligno, Zuccarello, and Johansson. As their deals go through the cycle, another player, and ELC player will offset the cost to the team. When their deals fall off, that is when it will be time to pay the guys coming out of their ELCs. 

    So, if you've got Zuccarello at $4.2 for the next 2 years, if we burn Dino's 1st year this year, you've got Zuccarello + Dino for about $5m for 2 years. With Hartman, you've got him at $4m for 3 years. But, you've got Hartman + Yurov at $5m for 3 years. With Foligno, you've got him for 4 years at $4m. Stramel is likely not ready to even head to the A next year, so he'd be in college likely to sign a PTO at the end of next college season and then his ELC kicks in for '25-26. So, you'd then have Foligno + Stramel at $5m for 3 years. 

    If you look at it that way, the team cost is lower even with the extensions. You get the production from 2 players at very reasonable prices. You are also playing with a lot of ELCs which should vastly overperform their contracts. Then, when the others drop off, bridge or longterm deals can come in for the kids. 

    It wasn't about waiting for the contracts to drop off, it was more about pairing them together and then seeing the value. Now, a weird sort of anomaly can occur in this cycle: Line 4 could be more expensive than lines 2 and 3 during this period. While line 4 wouldn't exactly be statistically great, they would offer several intangibles and can move up in the lineup if needs call for it. 

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    14 hours ago, Dango said:

    Maroon to IR, Beckman up for another  cup of coffee  ,  lets pad that resume

    Beckman is now healthy. My hope is that he finally breaks through on the score sheet and looks thicker/wins board battles/front of the net battles.

    I'd like to see an extended look with him. 

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    2 hours ago, B1GKappa97 said:

    And, bonus, we should be able to add a big addition or two that offseason as well thanks to getting $13M in cap-space back from the dead-caps reducing.

    The way this is looking, Faber's extension, Rossi extension and Kaprizov extension should eat into this pretty heavily. What we will have left is salary drop off and Cap Inflation. 

    Faber's is a nice problem to have. Previously, none of us projected a $9m or so cap hit coming out of the penalties for the player, but, it appears as if he's earned it. I anticipate a bridge deal for Rossi and then if he improves, a healthy extension. And, of course, Kaprizov probably gets a $3m raise. 

    On Kaprizov, I don't think that today's roster is going to determine whether or not he stays. I think his projection of our future roster will be the factor, and if we can get Yurov, Dino, Ohgren, Lambos, The Wall, Hunt up to speed, that future looks pretty bright with more assets coming. I really think he'll like playing here.

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    On 2/5/2024 at 12:18 PM, Lovehockey said:

    The main problem is - the prospects need to play. And for the next year as an example Wild will have only 3 spots available for forwards if they decide not sign anyone from the fourth line. And this is what article is indicating - over commitment to average veteran players, holding development of the young players (Rossi) 

    How do you figure that?  Just because we've not been able to afford to have players to scratch this year when our roster has been healthy doesn't mean we will have the same problem next year.

    If Gaudreau or Johansson are getting outplayed by the youngsters, scratch them.  This assertion that there is no room for Yurov or other prospects assumes that every veteran player on the roster is guaranteed a spot in the lineup.  If players on ELCs are challenging and putting some of the veterans on the bench, so be it.

    Unfortunately right now, most of our average veterans are still better than our prospects.  Hopefully that will start flipping the other way as they develop into NHL-caliber players.  The thing is though, you kind of want those average veterans.  You know why?  Because then there is room for the prospects to move past them AND you still have solid NHL players in the event of injury and to keep the prospects (and veterans) working hard for ice time.

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    17 hours ago, Dango said:

    Maroon to IR, Beckman up for another  cup of coffee  ,  lets pad that resume .  

    Man that 10 day break must have been rough for Maroon to go on IR. Did he take a jungle tour or what?

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    3 hours ago, mnfaninnc said:

    The way this is looking, Faber's extension, Rossi extension and Kaprizov extension should eat into this pretty heavily. What we will have left is salary drop off and Cap Inflation. 

    Oh for sure it will. I think Faber and Kaprizov will take up about $20M combined. Rossi, idk, I don't see a lucrative contract in his near future. He's looking much improved but unless his game takes a similar leap next year, I don't imagine he'll be too much of a cap-hit on his next deal. 

    Probably closer to $4.5M than Boldy's $7M would be my guess. 

    That would still leave us with plenty of cap space to work with to stack the team around Kaprizov. And heck, by the time '26-'27 comes along they can always buy-out Spurgy if he's struggling to stay healthy and get a good chunk of space back again. 

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    1 hour ago, Up North Guy said:

    Man that 10 day break must have been rough for Maroon to go on IR. Did he take a jungle tour or what?

    they don't want him injured before the trade deadline

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    1 hour ago, Up North Guy said:

    Man that 10 day break must have been rough for Maroon to go on IR. Did he take a jungle tour or what?

    CONSPIRACY THEORY WARNING: I'm hoping that this is front office gamesmanship to ensure he's healthy at the TDL.  But i did see that he only played 4+ minutes last game...

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    5 hours ago, Pewterschmidt said:

    CONSPIRACY THEORY WARNING: I'm hoping that this is front office gamesmanship to ensure he's healthy at the TDL.  But i did see that he only played 4+ minutes last game...

    I see that Russo says he was hurt in the last game. That was news to me. i like our version better😎

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    19 hours ago, B1GKappa97 said:

    That would still leave us with plenty of cap space to work with to stack the team around Kaprizov. And heck, by the time '26-'27 comes along they can always buy-out Spurgy if he's struggling to stay healthy and get a good chunk of space back again. 

    I disagree with going the buyout option on Spurgeon. I think you go the LTIR route and try to get him healthy for a few games + playoffs. He'll still have some value, especially offensively, and dropping him to the 3rd pairing come playoffs should help his body. 

    I'd plan for maybe 1/2 a season and LTIR the other 1/2. 

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    12 hours ago, Up North Guy said:

    I see that Russo says he was hurt in the last game. That was news to me. i like our version better😎

    I saw him go into the corner and come out of it rather slow as he skated to the bench. I believe he tried one more shift after that and headed down the tunnel. I have to assume it's his left shoulder.

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    20 hours ago, B1GKappa97 said:

    Rossi, idk, I don't see a lucrative contract in his near future. He's looking much improved but unless his game takes a similar leap next year, I don't imagine he'll be too much of a cap-hit on his next deal. 

    Probably closer to $4.5M than Boldy's $7M would be my guess. 

    I agree on these numbers for Rossi, maybe a little lower with his current production this year in his rookie year. But, that still would be an increase of $3.5m which would take a chunk out of the $13m we gain. 

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