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  • The Kaprizov Saga Is Putting the Wild Franchise's Credibility On the Line


    Tony Abbott

    The Minnesota Wild are celebrating their 25th anniversary this season. In most circumstances, that's a huge milestone and cause to celebrate. Fans get a chance to remember their past while looking toward a bright future. 

    Unfortunately, that might be all the State of Hockey gets to celebrate on this anniversary. 

    The "25" patch on their sweaters will, to many, represent a quarter-century of irrelevance. That's definitely not charitable. Minnesota has had moments in the sun. Their 2003 Western Conference Finals run, the blockbuster signings of Zach Parise and Ryan Suter in 2012 being the biggest. But even the rosiest view of the Wild's history has to admit that they've often been afterthoughts to the national media, free agents, and most disappointingly, in the playoffs.

    That's what hurts the Wild faithful so much about this week's news that Kirill Kaprizov rejected a would-be record-shattering eight-year, $128 million contract from Minnesota.

    From Day 1, the superstar winger made the franchise relevant in a way no one else has. Not Marian Gaborik, Mikko Koivu, Zach Parise, Ryan Suter, or anyone else. His Calder Trophy win is the only major player hardware the franchise has ever taken home. For lack of a better term, Kaprizov just has that 'it' factor, giving Minnesota rare and desperately needed pizazz. When he's on, the Wild become appointment viewing.

    If this week's news is truly the beginning of the end for Kaprizov, Minnesota will return to irrelevance. 

    That's a fate too terrible for the Wild, and everyone involved knows it. It's why owner Craig Leipold got out ahead of any rumors that Kaprizov might want to go elsewhere and declared, "Nobody will offer more money than us." Putting $128 million on the table showed Mr. Leipold was serious.

    But Kaprizov rejecting that offer plays into the worst fears of Minnesota sports fans: The offer might be serious, but the players don't take the Wild seriously.

    There aren't a lot of winning scenarios from here. The possibility that Minnesota trades the only superstar in their history is impossible to swallow for most Wild fans. But having it go public that Kaprizov rejected a max deal at $16 million per season, and eventually signing him for, say, $18 million, doesn't send a great message to the rest of the league, either.

    $16 million is already $2 million more than the next-highest-paid player in the NHL. Someone will eventually get more than that number, of course, but $128 million is $128 million. It's mind-blowing that an NHL player, even one who was looking to hit a home run and cash in, would turn it down. Just this offseason, superstars like Mitch Marner and Mikko Rantanen took discounts to be on teams they felt would win. Sam Bennett, the reigning Conn Smythe winner, did the same to stay with the Stanley Cup Champion Florida Panthers.

    Intentionally or not, refusing a $16 million AAV but accepting $17 to $18 million sends a signal that Kaprizov isn't impressed with the direction the team is taking. If that's the route he goes, it suggests that all Bill Guerin and Mr. Leipold could offer him -- after four years to prepare the conditions that would entice him to stay -- was money. 

    Unfortunately, it'd be hard to blame Kaprizov if that's his thought process. He's spent five years in the organization, playing at an MVP level, and hasn't been able to advance past the first round. It wasn't for a lack of effort, either. Kaprizov has 15 goals and 21 points in 25 playoff games with the Wild. That 0.60 goals per game mark is the highest among any player in the Salary Cap Era with 25 games or more.

    Hell, reduce that threshold to 10 games, and Kaprizov's still at the top of the heap!

    But even with historic goal production, even with dominant playoff series against the St. Louis Blues in 2022 and the Vegas Golden Knights this spring, it wasn't enough to get them out of the first round. 

    Now, are there mitigating circumstances here? You'd better believe it. The Zach Parise and Ryan Suter contracts bit the franchise at the exact worst moment, hobbling a franchise that should have been in win-now mode with their superstar in tow. It's a tough break, and it is impressive that the Wild have continued to make the playoffs despite their dead cap space woes.

    That doesn't erase the fact that, as much as the team noted that a hand was tied behind their back, as much as they tried to downplay their inability to get past the first round, that lack of success plays into their reputation. They're not serious contenders, not in the eyes of the NHL.

    We saw it on July 1 -- a day that might go down in infamy among Wild fans as "Christmas Morning." With all of Minnesota's new cap space, they were never seriously in the hunt for big fish like Marner, Bennett, Nikolaj Ehlers, or anyone else. Home-grown players like Brock Boeser and Brock Nelson -- historically, reliable targets for the franchise -- elected to stay put rather than join forces with the Wild.

    We know what Minnesota wanted their pitch to be. That they had the roster, personalities, and culture to play winning hockey. That their prospects -- including blue-chippers like Zeev Buium, Danila Yurov, and David Jiříček -- were NHL-ready and primed to take them to the next level. That even after coming up empty this summer, they'd kept their powder dry for the next big superstar to come up on the market.

    It doesn't look like that pitch was attractive to Kaprizov, just as it wasn't alluring for Nelson, Boeser, or any other big fish this summer. Without a buy-in to the pitch, all the Wild had was money, and Kaprizov just said no to that.

    How do you fix that problem? How does Mr. Leipold, the front office, and the organization convince Kaprizov -- or any other top player in the NHL -- that they're an organization to be taken seriously, and not the perpetual also-rans of the league? That's the issue at the root of their biggest crisis in the Wild's 25-year history, and unless they can find a solution, it also threatens to define their next quarter-century.

    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.

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    Kaprizov is here for $9M AAV this season and he knows that he's going to get a serious bump next season, either here or somewhere else. We often hear about players signing a 'prove it' contract, like Rossi. How about Kaprizov not signing now and telling the Wild to 'prove it'?

    This is the final year of his buddy's, Zuccarello, contract. Tarasenko is on a one year deal. If you're KK, don't you play this season out, see how the season and potential playoffs go, see what things look like the following season and then make up your mind?

    Maybe he's telling OCL, GMBG and HCJH by not signing an extension now to prove that they are serious about winning and are willing to do what it takes to win. Regrettably, I don't believe that those three know how to win in their current roles and this could be the end of the Kaprizov era in Minnesota.

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    1 hour ago, ArizonaWildFan said:

    Kaprizov is here for $9M AAV this season and he knows that he's going to get a serious bump next season, either here or somewhere else. We often hear about players signing a 'prove it' contract, like Rossi. How about Kaprizov not signing now and telling the Wild to 'prove it'?

    This is the final year of his buddy's, Zuccarello, contract. Tarasenko is on a one year deal. If you're KK, don't you play this season out, see how the season and potential playoffs go, see what things look like the following season and then make up your mind?

    Maybe he's telling OCL, GMBG and HCJH by not signing an extension now to prove that they are serious about winning and are willing to do what it takes to win. Regrettably, I don't believe that those three know how to win in their current roles and this could be the end of the Kaprizov era in Minnesota.

    If that would be the case, the Wild really do need a trade list from him

    If he starts the season unsigned they need to actively seek a trade.

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    5 hours ago, Willy the poor boy said:

    Mc D deserves to be the highest paid player. KK doesn't. He's delusional if he thinks that.

    This may be true, but the Wilds owner publicly stated Kaprizov would be the highest paid guy. Therefore, Kaprizov would need to wait and see what McDavid gets, before signing his deal.

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    Everyone needs to relax. KAPRIZOV IS STILL UNDER CONTRACT FOR THE UPCOMING SEASON.

    If I were him, I would refuse an 8 year deal too. I think $16 million/year 5 years from now will be “average star” salary, let alone 8 years from now. If he signs a 3-5 year deal before NEXT JULY, his follow-on contract (the one after next) could bring $20 million/year.

    Also, I think the entire NHLPA is waiting to see what McDavid signs for. No player should make more than the greatest hockey player of all time.

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    If you asked me, this is all clickbait garbage to create some kinds of hype for writers during a normally boring stretch with minimal storylines. 

    The Wild are pretty much the same team coming back that was at one point last season the hottest team in the NHL. 

    MAF got a PTO in Pittsburgh, that's cool. 

    Kaprizov is a huge asset for the Wild. I think he'll resign but if things went South and he doesn't that money and trade return would be nice. The Wild should be a better team this year, at least on paper. I liked Fleury as a backup better than Wally. (unproven value) The additions of Tarasenko for nothing, and Sturm via free agency is nice. Hopefully NoJo is in the press box where he belongs and prospects show up with some energy. 

    All this conjecture and unreliable reporting seems silly to me and distracts from the potential MN has this season. Good defense, solid goalie, hopefully healthy season. That by itself has been the biggest problem for MN in the past couple years.

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    A healthy Wild team with Boldy's playoffs ability improved, a better PP, and better center depth with Sturm is hope inspiring. 

    If Wallstedt, Ogie, or Yurov play well, that could be a huge boost allowing the Wild to be better balanced than last year. Improved depth too. 

    Mountain out of mole-hill topic here.

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    21 hours ago, Willy the poor boy said:

    Mc D deserves to be the highest paid player.

    No argument here. I don't expect McJesus to sign an extension anytime soon and probably not before July 1, 2026. The Oilers are in Cap Hell and are a piece or two from winning a Cup.

    For 25/26, Draisaitl is at $14M AAV, Bouchard is at $10.5M AAV, Nurse is $9.25M AAV and they have a Jack Campbell buyout on the books for $2.6M. At the end of this season they will have eleven UFA's (incl. McDavid) and one RFA. The projected cap for 25/26 is $104M.

    Hypothetically, if McDavid signed for $16M AAV now, Edmonton would have $52.35M committed to just four players and one buyout; over half of the cap space. Those four guys haven't brought the Cup back to Edmonton yet and they won't in the future. They will have to add more pieces, depth and goaltending, and they may not have the money to do it.

    Connor may be in the position to make a team-friendly deal involving a serious haircut if he wants to stay in Edmonton and wants to win a Cup. If they win it this year, that's what he does. If they don't, he weighs his options on July 1, 2026.

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    On 9/13/2025 at 12:26 PM, Willy the poor boy said:

    Mc D deserves to be the highest paid player. KK doesn't. He's delusional if he thinks that.

    The NHL pretty much treats Mcdavid as the face of the NHL  and uses him as the poster boy and from that angle he deserves to be the highest paid player  but the NHL has shown 0 respect for the Mn Wild treating them like a minor league team with no value to the league so from that angle the Wild should just pay Kaprizov whatever and not recognize whatever love affair Bettman has with his favorites   or whatever  Bettmans trying to  portray .  Billy should use those size 14s and stomp on Bettman and the NHLs toes and pay Kappy the most .  LOL 

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    On 9/12/2025 at 10:42 AM, Burnt Toast said:

    The St. Louis Blues found a way to break their own playoff drought in a dramatic turnaround season. 2019 Stanley Cup Champions. Small market team also.

    Too bad the Wild didn't benefit as much when they fired Yeo!

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