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  • Kirill Kaprizov's Contract Delay Might Be A Good Thing


    Image courtesy of Nick Wosika-Imagn Images
    Chris Schad

    The Minnesota Wild’s offseason has been filled with disappointments.

    The pain started last May when the Vegas Golden Knights bounced them in the first round of the playoffs. It continued when Craig Leipold’s Christmas promise turned into a bad Christmas story. Some may have felt better when Marco Rossi signed a contract extension to return to the team, but what Wild fans really want is Kirill Kaprizov to sign a new contract of his own.

    Kaprizov’s status entering the final year of his contract is enough to give Wild fans PTSD. Marian Gaborik left Minnesota in 2009, sealing the fate of former GM Doug Risebrough and sentencing the franchise to a few years of irrelevancy until they signed Zach Parise and Ryan Suter in 2012.

    Negotiations are still ongoing, but it may not be about the bank-breaking deal the Russian star could sign in the near future. Instead, it could be about Kaprizov's desire to win that could make a potential delay worth it if he signs in the weeks leading up to the season.

    Leipold is getting out in front of the anxiety by saying that no team will outbid the Wild for Kaprizov’s services. He recently doubled down by declaring that Kaprizov’s contract is likely to be the biggest in franchise history. It could end up somewhere in the neighborhood of $16 million.

    Most people reading this would wonder where they should sign if offered this type of money. But Kaprizov wants to win and even said it during a May press conference where the main headline was that he loves “everything” about Minnesota. If that comment is true, Kaprizov would be wise to take a step back and wonder if he really can win a Stanley Cup in Minnesota.

    The Wild haven’t been out of the first round of the playoffs since 2015. They’ve blown a 2-1 lead in each of the past three playoff series. Many are bullish on Minnesota's chances thanks to their young core, headlined by Kaprizov and Matt Boldy and complemented by Liam Ohgren, Zeev Buium, and Jesper Wallstedt.

    But you have to ask yourself, did the Wild get better?

    General manager Bill Guerin has plenty of excuses at his disposal. The free agent market evaporated with teams keeping their pending UFAs, and the ones that did required a bidding war where Guerin chose not to participate. He also couldn’t get another team to overpay for Rossi, leading him to sign him to a bridge deal and keep the avenue for a trade open down the road.

    None of these was the “wrong” move. But where Guerin chose to pivot could have Kaprizov and his camp second-guessing Guerin’s offseason approach.

    The Wild dismissed the free agent wing market and chose to buy low on Vladimir Tarasenko. A ghost that haunted Minnesota during its failed playoff runs in the late 2010s, Tarasenko notched over 20 goals just twice in the past eight seasons. However, last year’s campaign with the Detroit Red Wings may have been one of the worst. His 80 games played were the most since the 2017-18 season, but he only managed 11 goals and 33 points.

    Minnesota is also dealing with its usual injury issues. Jonas Brodin will miss the start of the season with a lower-body injury, and nobody seems to know when he’ll return. Jared Spurgeon is a good bet to miss 15 to 20 games annually as he climbs into his late 30s. Even Kaprizov’s friend Mats Zuccarello turned 38 on September 1, raising the question of how old is too old?

    This puts the spotlight on the Wild’s prospects. Buium is the most anticipated rookie since Brock Faber laced up the skates a few years ago, and Wild fans are waiting for Boldy to go from a very good player to an elite one. But a fan base that watched Charlie Coyle, Nino Niederreiter, and Jason Zucker never reach their potential knows that prospects don’t always pan out.

    Can Ohgren dispatch Marcus Johansson for a third-line role? Will David Jiricek break out his seventh defenseman cocoon and validate the massive price Guerin paid to acquire him last season? Can Wallstedt recover from his year from hellCan Danila Yurov be closer to Kirill Kaprizov than Marat Khusnutdinov in his first season transitioning from the KHL?

    If the answer is no to some of these questions, it could force Guerin to get aggressive at the trade deadline and hope that a Mikko Rantanen-level player is available. But that doesn’t always happen, and if Rossi doesn’t turn into Guerin’s best trade chip, he may not be able to reel in the big fish that can turn the Wild from a perennial wild card team to a Stanley Cup contender.

    Kaprizov has already spent five years waiting for the Wild to make the big move, and if they can’t do it in Year 6, hitting the free agent market at age 29 might sound more appealing. But he could also feel good where the Wild are at and sign a medium-term deal to see how things shake out, allowing him to maximize his value and take a little less money to allocate it to other areas of need.

    We won’t know until Kaprizov’s next deal is finalized. But if he’s truly assessing the situation before signing on the dotted line, it will be worth the wait for Wild fans.

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    Minnesota is also dealing with its usual injury issues. Jonas Brodin will miss the start of the season with a lower-body injury, and nobody seems to know when he’ll return.

    Is this a 2nd surgeon conspiracy?

    All reports I've seen(including the linked story) indicate an upper body injury surgery in June that will have Brodin missing the early portion of the season.

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    Why all the concern about the delay? It's pretty obvious that OCL wants to be there for the signing and wants it to be a public PR opportunity. He believes the deal is pretty much done, but Kaprizov still remains overseas. 

    When he comes back, things will get done. Jeez, anxiety runs rampant sometimes.

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    6 minutes ago, mnfaninnc said:

    Why all the concern about the delay? It's pretty obvious that OCL wants to be there for the signing and wants it to be a public PR opportunity. He believes the deal is pretty much done, but Kaprizov still remains overseas. 

    When he comes back, things will get done. Jeez, anxiety runs rampant sometimes.

    Grok says he's been back for a couple days now.

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    95.5M Cap divided by 22 rostered players is $4.34M average per player.  At $15M/AAV it means Kirill is being valued at 3.456 players.  Is Kirill worth 3.5 players.  I'm a YES on that.  But it does pose an interesting question:  Will the Wild have enough left over to backfill a roster that can win in the playoffs.  The higher the salary of Kirill the more difficult that backfill will be.  BG appears to be building a top heavy roster.  Which is fine.  Edmonton is doing that.  But it does mean that the top line MUST produce at a very high level.  Boldy will need to step up and be a top 10 winger in the league.  Ek is a great C but his skill level has topped out.  We will need at least one other player to produce above their pay grade or snag someone at the TDL to put us over the top.  

    And a healthy top line.

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    The Wild dismissed the free agent wing market and chose to buy low on Vladimir Tarasenko.

    I wouldn't consider $4.75M for a 30 point downslope player buying low. The best option this summer was Peterka. Billy should have done whatever it took. Kaprizov might be more inclined to stay, if that happened.

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    7 minutes ago, Scalptrash said:

    I wouldn't consider $4.75M for a 30 point downslope player buying low. The best option this summer was Peterka. Billy should have done whatever it took. Kaprizov might be more inclined to stay, if that happened.

    You're a lot higher on Peterka than I was. The identity of this team is a 200' game with defenders who can do it and forwards that can do it. Peterka did not fit that mold. If you look at the recent draft picks, most of the forwards do fit that mold. 

    If you're going to go after a player, I would suggest the best 200' players we can find. I think a guy like Kopitar would thrive here (as if he didn't in LA). For me, that would be the direction I would try to go, a star who plays an all round game. I wouldn't be just chasing point producers.

    At the end of the season, if you've got 4 lines in the +, you should be doing very, very well.

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    59 minutes ago, mnfaninnc said:

    You're a lot higher on Peterka than I was. The identity of this team is a 200' game with defenders who can do it and forwards that can do it. Peterka did not fit that mold. If you look at the recent draft picks, most of the forwards do fit that mold. 

    If you're going to go after a player, I would suggest the best 200' players we can find. I think a guy like Kopitar would thrive here (as if he didn't in LA). For me, that would be the direction I would try to go, a star who plays an all round game. I wouldn't be just chasing point producers.

    At the end of the season, if you've got 4 lines in the +, you should be doing very, very well.

    Peterka was the only semi gettable player and the best one at that. If all the cupboards were open, then sure, someone better, but they weren't.

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    Leipold is getting out in front of the anxiety by saying that no team will outbid the Wild for Kaprizov’s services. He recently doubled down by declaring that Kaprizov’s contract is likely to be the biggest in franchise history.

     

    But another team can offer (more) success. Better get yer $hit together Billy! Stop (re)signing terdz!image.jpeg.540b35b58df306acab0d1822fe977360.jpeg

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    Imagine how the summer would have been and the feeling toward this team if Kaprizov signed on July 1st.  The entire summer would have been less stressful on all aspects.  Potential free agents would have said you know what Minnesota might be a good spot to raise my kids.  

    Instead we have this dark cloud that is forming on the horizon.  Maybe it will be a tornado maybe it will be sunny skies.  We don't know, but right now get the kids in the basement it might go sideways in a hurry. 

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    4 hours ago, Scalptrash said:

    Peterka was the only semi gettable player and the best one at that. If all the cupboards were open, then sure, someone better, but they weren't.

    Buffalo also turned down better offers than what they eventually got from Utah.  Their wants were particular and getting value for the trade did not matter as much to them.

    They got younger right-handed shot players (a winger and a defenseman) with size and NHL experience that were on expiring contracts and won't cost a ton to re-sign.  Given that there were better offers than that, Buffalo must have been looking for players that ticked these specific boxes.

    Did the Wild have those types of players?

    Jiricek might have been interesting to them a little, but it would have been stupid to trade him given how much the Wild invested in getting him.  That, and he wouldn't have been as NHL-ready as Kesselring is so they still might not have been interested anyway.

    The Wild just didn't have the players to offer.  They would have likely had to do quite the overpay since Buffalo was turning down better offers than what they got.

     

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    22 hours ago, mnfaninnc said:

    It's pretty obvious that OCL wants to be there for the signing and wants it to be a public PR opportunity.

    I thought that I read both OCL and GMBG where at captain's practice yesterday.

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