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  • Minnesota Wild Asset Tierlist: 2026 Trade Deadline Edition


    Image courtesy of Kevin Ng - Imagn Images
    Tony Abbott

    There's no more ambiguity with the direction of the Minnesota Wild. They are buyers at the trade deadline because they should be buyers.

    Sure, the Colorado Avalanche are the superteam of the West, but the Wild entered Sunday tied for the second-most points in the NHL. They have Kirill Kaprizov, Matt Boldy, and now Quinn Hughes, all in their primes. And for some bonus urgency: They're making a combined $24 million for the last season before Kaprizov's contract goes up to $17 million next year.

    A team like that buys. There will be no prospect hugging. There won't be patience. Bill Guerin is going to do his damndest to swing another trade to load up his team, and he should. 

    But what does he have left to make a trade with? Over the past 14 months, Guerin has already surrendered...

    That's what they call a war chest. So, what remains, and what can we expect to see Guerin put on the table for a splashy move? Here's our breakdown of what Minnesota can use to boost its team for the playoffs (and beyond?):

    S-Tier: Untouchable... Unless...

    Jesper Wallstedt, NHL

    The sound you're hearing is the Team of 18,001 suppressing their sudden urge to get sick, and it's understandable to be revolted by the idea of trading Wallstedt. He's a 23-year-old goalie whose .926 save percentage leads the NHL. It's arguable that without his emergence this year, the Wild would never have been in a position to land Hughes in the first place.

    At the same time, one can argue that Wallstedt is a luxury item. The Wild have a workhorse goalie in Filip Gustavsson, under contract for five more seasons. Gustavsson doesn't have Wallstedt's numbers, but his .910 save percentage is well above the league average, and his track record since arriving in Minnesota is strong. He's also shown up in the playoffs, with a .917 save percentage in 11 games.

    Luxury or not, though, Wallstedt has a great thing going, and the Wild are going to want to hold onto him as long as they can. He's under contract for $2.2 million next year, meaning there's no rush to move him, even if they're worried about paying two No. 1 goalies down the road. He's truly an "In Case of No. 1 Center, Break Glass" kind of asset.

    Unless the Wild are replacing Rossi's hole for the long haul, he's still in Minnesota.

    A-Tier: Splash Trade Centerpiece

    Danila Yurov, NHL

    Prying away Wallstedt feels like a pipe dream for other teams; Yurov feels like a more realistic trade target. Yurov's counting numbers as a rookie (six goals, 16 points in 39 games) rate more as "solid" than "Calder-worthy," but he's been solid on both sides of the puck. More offense is on the way. Still, the question for Minnesota is, will that offense come soon enough

    Charlie Stramel, NCAA

    The Wild drafted Stramel after a disappointing freshman season in Wisconsin, and it got worse for him as a sophomore. But since moving to Michigan State, Stramel is back to "bona fide first-rounder" status. Stramel has 21 goals and 53 points in 57 games as a Spartan, and has found success centering top wingers Isaac Howard (in 2024-25) and Porter Malone (presently).

    In the meantime, Stramel's size (6-foot-3, 216 pounds) never went out of style, and a big, right-shot center who should be ready to sign as a pro this summer should be attractive to teams. While being in the same tier as Yurov sorta feels wrong, it's also not difficult to see Stramel be the primary piece that lands, say, a Ryan O'Reilly-type, so he's here.

    Minnesota's 2028 first-rounder (Unprotected)

    Normally, teams value a pick that comes sooner rather than later. After all, a GM who's selling might not be around to make a pick in two years, let alone three! But for a GM with job security, this should be the crown jewel of the Wild's pick stash.

    The Wild are gonna have Kaprizov, Hughes, and Boldy next year, at least to start the season. If a team picks up Minnesota's 2027 pick, that's going to be in the 20's. A 2028 pick is making a bet against the Wild having Hughes during the 2027-28 season. It's hard to imagine the Wild bottoming out next year, but if they lose Hughes and can't build a team around Kaprizov's contract? That 2028 first suddenly becomes a great asset.

    B-Tier: Prime Rental Fodder

    Minnesota's 2027 first-rounder

    The standard price of a good rental will include a pick like this. A lottery ticket in the 20s, maybe the high-teens if a team is lucky.

    David Jiříček, AHL

    It's hard to get a true gauge on Jiříček's trade value. In a vacuum, it probably should be here. Is it that way in reality? It's hard to be sure.

    The Wild went all-in on his potential, and cutting bait after a little more than a year would surely spark the question of why two teams would want to move him before turning 23. Regardless, the bloom is off the prospect rose, and his days as a prime asset are done until he establishes himself in the NHL.

    C-Tier: Decent Rental Fodder

    Adam Benák, OHL

    Benák is showing out as an 18-year-old rookie in the OHL, with the third-most points per game in the league. Having a strong World Junior tournament should have helped his stock, too. Still, he's seven months removed from 31 NHL teams (the Florida Panthers being the exception) passing on him at least once in the 2025 Draft. Benák is probably more valuable to the Wild than as a trade chip, at least now.

    David Spacek, AHL

    Spacek has been a lone bright spot on a bad AHL squad for the past two years. With some power play duty helping the cause, Spacek has 50 points in 107 games during that time. Despite his play, the 22-year-old, right-shot defenseman is buried on the depth chart behind Brock Faber, Jared Spurgeon, Zach Bogosian, and Jiříček. A strong Olympic stretch could get teams interested. 

    Ryder Ritchie, NCAA

    Ritchie has skill, but his stint as an older freshman at Boston University is reading more as decent than a top prospect. A second-half surge could change that quickly, but for now, he's dwelling in this tier.

    Hunter Haight, AHL

    Haight looked NHL-ready in training camp, but a weak Iowa Wild squad probably holds him back. He's tied for fifth in scoring on the Baby Wild, but 12 points in 26 games isn't going to turn a ton of heads.

    D-Tier: Throw-Ins

    Apologies to, in alphabetical order, Riley Heidt, Aron Kiviharju, and Carson Lambos, who each merited a bit of consideration for the C-Tier. Any unnamed prospect is here. As for the remainder of the team's draft capital in 2026 and 2027, this tier includes:

    2026:

    Their third-, fourth-, fifth-, sixth-, and seventh-rounders
    San Jose's fifth-rounder (Calen Addison trade)

    2027: 

    Their third-, fourth-, fifth-, sixth-, and seventh-rounders

    The Wild took two big bites out of their prospect capital with the Hughes and Jiříček trades, for sure. But there's a decent amount left over for another big swing. The assets are there, and the motivation is, too. The only question left is: Who's it gonna be?

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    You remove Wally and Gus will fall down.  Yurov is getting better every single game.  The guy is potentially a better version of Ek.  BG Gave up so much for Jiricek I don't see how he lets that go without looking the fool.  He made his bed with the Jiricek trade.

    When you are 2nd or 3rd in the league in points you could also sit still if the right trade doesn't present itself.  Although I doubt BG will sit still.

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