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  • The Wild Must Risk Everything For Kaprizov


    Image courtesy of Nick Wosika-Imagn Images
    Kalisha Turnipseed

    It's been a boring offseason for the Minnesota Wild. But that’s always how things would be with Bill Guerin approaching the last year of being in cap hell. With Minnesota’s cap restrictions, he can't make any drastic changes to improve the team heading into the 2024-25 season. In a worst-case scenario, that could lead to Kirill Kaprizov’s departure if the Wild can’t convince him they’ll contend. However, what if Kaprizov wants to be patient with Guerin and the Wild? 

    Like the rest of the fanbase, I don’t want to see Kaprizov go. I didn’t want to write about which teams would be interested in him if he chooses not to extend with the Wild. However, someone had to write about the worst-case scenario as we approach the end of his contract. Conversely, what if Guerin manages to extend Kaprizov right before training camp starts, which is unlikely to happen? 

    What kind of contract would Kaprizov sign? Before we predict that, let's remember that the salary cap is going up by $4.5 million, which is crucial because it gives Guerin cap space as he leaves cap hell. It’s time for Guerin to stop over-committing to older players who will take up more cap space and go all in to keep Kaprizov in Minnesota. Guerin must risk everything to keep him. Ultimately, Kaprizov is the definition of high risk/high reward! 

    Charley Walters wrote in the Pioneer Press that Kaprizov expects to secure an extension with a $15 million cap hit. Are you willing to stomach paying Kaprizov $15 million to stay in Minnesota? Some people feel $15 million is ridiculously high to pay any player in the NHL. However, when it comes to keeping the only superstar you’ve ever had, you should consider taking the risk. 

    Let’s look at comparable contracts around the league. 

    Toronto Maple Leafs superstar Auston Matthews signed a four-year, $53 million extension with the Leafs last summer. Matthews only signed for four years. Why didn't he sign an eight-year max extension? It might not matter because the Leafs have made Matthews their new captain, taking over for John Tavares. Brad Treliving will do his best to keep his best player in blue and white. Can William Nylander help encourage Matthews to extend again?

    Nylander signed an eight-year, $92 million extension with the Leafs in January. Nylander did the opposite of what Matthews did. Does Nylander have more optimism that the Leafs will defeat their playoff demons? Will the next four years of Nylander’s contract be a bargain where he’s unlocking a new gear? Remember, Zach Hyman produced his first 50-goal season playing with Connor McDavid. Nylander has significantly more skill than Hyman. There’s no doubt Nylander can produce significantly more goals.

    Elias Pettersson signed an eight-year, $92.8 million extension with the Vancouver Canucks, with a $11.6 million cap hit. If anything, this is a team-friendly deal executed by both parties. Pettersson played injured during the playoffs, which set his game back. Now that he's healthy, he'll be able to help the Canucks make the playoffs and yield better results. 

    Nathan MacKinnon is another example of a team-friendly deal. He signed an eight-year, $100.8 million extension worth $12.6 million annually. MacKinnon is seeking another finals run to secure another Cup. MacKinnon just finished his best season yet, producing 51 goals and 89 assists (140 points) as he's reached a new tier of stardom. MacKinnon finished with 8 more points than McDavid, highlighting his impact as the Colorado Avalanche’s star player. 

    Leon Draisaitl recently extended his contract with the Edmonton Oilers for eight years, $112 million. With a cap hit of $14 million, Draisaitl is officially the highest-paid player in the league. The Oilers showed him they're a contender, and he committed to them. Draisaitl’s contract also sets the tone for McDavid's next contract, which will be astronomical. 

    Now that we've gotten into Kaprizov’s comparables, here are their point-per-game (PPG) totals. 

    • Draisaitl: 1.18 points 
    • Matthews: 1.15 points
    • MacKinnon: 1.14 points 
    • Pettersson: 1.01 points 
    • Nylander: 0.88 points 

    Guess who has more points than these five players? Kaprizov’s 1.19 points puts him ahead of Draisaitl. While it's only 0.01 points, it's still impressive that Kaprizov is producing at a superstar level on a Wild team that lacks high-end young talent outside of Matt Boldy and Brock Faber. Put respect on Kaprizov’s name! To be fair, Draisaitl occasionally benefits from playing with McDavid. While no one should question his skill level, what if Draisaitl played for the Wild instead of Kaprizov? Would he produce similarly? Probably not.

    What about Matthews and the core four in Toronto? The Leafs aren't the same without Matthews, but when you regularly play with Marner and sometimes Nylander on the powerplay, expect to score many points. Matthews is the best goal-scoring forward in the league; he almost scored 70 goals last year. Would Matthews have scored 69 goals with the Wild? Would Kaprizov score 69 goals with the Leafs? 

    MacKinnon's on Matthews’ tail for point production. The Leafs and Avalanche are similar teams, but the Avs have proved they can win in the playoffs. Kaprizov would love to play with the great talent surrounding Cale Makar and Mikko Rantanen. While captain Gabriel Landeskog was injured, the Avs got deep talent. 

    Pettersson is barely a PPG player but still has his best years ahead of him. Pettersson is known more for his playmaking than his goal-scoring, but he has produced 30 goals in the past three seasons. With the best years ahead of him, Pettersson’s combination of skill, vision, and age suggests he can evolve into a more well-rounded offensive threat in the coming seasons. 

    Nylander isn't a PPG player like the rest of the bunch, but he's managed to string together back-to-back 40-goal seasons. Nylander, 28, is in his prime as an elite goal-scorer, so the Leafs signed him to an eight-year deal. However, is Nylander scoring 40 goals with the Wild? Kaprizov has scored 40 goals in the past three seasons. However, Kaprizov would've scored 50 goals last year if he played a full season. If you put Kaprizov on the Leafs, he'd break goal-scoring records playing with Matthews. 

    So now we have a better idea of what Kaprizov’s extension will be, and Guerin should pay Kaprizov what he wants and deserves! Consider this: The Wild signed Kaprizov to a team-friendly deal with his $9 million cap hit. Would Kaprizov accept another team-friendly deal? Kaprizov wants to secure his bag and win a championship. 

    Would the Wild's core five – Zeev Buium, Brock Faber, Marco Rossi, Jesper Wallstedt, and Danila Yurov – convince Kaprizov to stay? If anything, expect Kaprizov to sign a deal similar to Matthews’ contract. Kaprizov will likely sign another five-year deal, which gives them the window to develop prospects and become a better contender. 

    Kaprizov has two seasons remaining on his contract with the Wild. The worst-case scenario is that the Wild fail to show Kaprizov they're serious about being a true contender, and Kaprizov requests a trade to a better suitor. But what if Kaprizov chooses to extend in Minnesota? How long would his extension be, and how expensive would it be? Regardless of the contract details, extending Kaprizov is always the end goal! 

    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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    I'm not going to look it up now but the writer for the Star Tribune interviewed Guerin at the State Fair I think. Guerin said something like I thought we had a deal in place for Laine until we didn't. Interviewer asked him. "Laine didn't want to come here? 

    Guerin: No he didn't. So what the deal was we will never know nor will we know Laine's reasoning. Nor will we ever know Phil Kessel's reasoning for not wanting to come here. I think this could be problematic for the Wild with players NT clauses. I do not believe it is made public what teams are on what players no go list but it sure would be fun knowing. But the fact that Guerin would have pulled the trigger on bringing in Laine is just evidence of an emotional type move. A player that is a head case, just out of the NHL players assistance program and has demanded a trade from the last two teams he was on was exactly the type of player the Wild do not need right now. Makes me wonder if Guerin didn't have eyes for PLD as well.   What happened to "we need to wait until after the buyout penalties are over"? A move like bringing Laine in smacked of desperation. Why are we desperate? We aren't winning the Cup next year and Laine was not going to even get us close.

    As Pewter said I think Laine saved Guerin from himself on this one. 

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    13 minutes ago, MacGyver said:

    But the fact that Guerin would have pulled the trigger on bringing in Laine is just evidence of an emotional type move. A player that is a head case, just out of the NHL players assistance program and has demanded a trade from the last two teams he was on was exactly the type of player the Wild do not need right now.

    Smells like desperation or bad judgement to this fan.  Neither one is a good look for Guerin. 

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    22 hours ago, MacGyver said:

    I think if Guerin had his way Rossi would not even be here now. 

    I agree. I also think and have said all along he never wanted Deano as the coach, it's just that Deano never gave him the opportunity to get rid of him. He used a normal skid as his opportunity to get rid of him and predictably he took it.

    He's in over his head. I've always hoped he'd eventually learn, but like you've said he's to emotional.

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    2 hours ago, Pewterschmidt said:

    shedding Laine + $4M AAV for two career AHL'rs? 

    why would you say that with 1 combined year in the A they are both career AHLers?

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    1 hour ago, Pewterschmidt said:

    As much as it pains me to compliment Foligno, these guys are professionals.  They're not going to get butt hurt because Laine just said no.  This ain't a High School matchup between New Prague and Shakopee where half of Shak-ka-kon's stars transferred from NP and the #7 D-man on NP nicknamed Mongo takes runs all game.

    I guess I live in a different era where a club being disrespected should give a response. Both, a little extra shoulder in contact and running up the score a bit are definitely in my golf bag.

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    1 hour ago, MacGyver said:

    But the fact that Guerin would have pulled the trigger on bringing in Laine is just evidence of an emotional type move.

    Why does this have to be emotional or desperate? It is very obvious that we lack size and an RHS forward who can play in Ovechkin's office on the PP. Laine fills checks both of those boxes (it might be the only thing he checks 😉). If you're not giving up much of your current team to add a player of that caliber, it seems like a no-brainer. You're essentially renting him for 2 years!

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    21 minutes ago, raithis said:

    Can't figure out how to delete quote boxes so getting rid of it by posting a comment.

    if you're on a computer, you just keep hitting the backspace. On a phone with all the ads, God help you!

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    There's a lot of talk about Guerin being too emotional (and I'm not necessarily disputing that), but there are also a lot of overly emotional comments with a lot of speculation and assertion regarding what people mean by statements or what player's intentions are.

    Speculation is fine.  We don't know all the facts in any situation so we try to fill in the blanks with possibilities.  The problem is that we often seem to pick some negative possibility to focus on and treat it fact without really considering all the possibilities.

    Rossi's statement could easily be that he's just tired of being asked about it.

    It could also be that he wants a dollar amount far greater than what he's really worth or term that doesn't match what the Wild want.

    It could also be that the Wild are hoping to package him in a trade for an elite player at the trade deadline or in the next offseason.  If that's the case, it makes sense to hold off on a new contract for now.

    I personally like Rossi's effort and hope he has a spot on the team going forward, but I also understand it's a business and sometimes players you like are moved for various reasons.

    I really don't think it's Guerin's emotion that is a factor here.  His vision may not align with what Rossi desires, but that doesn't mean he is reacting emotionally in this instance.  He's definitely acted emotionally in the past, but I'm seeing far more emotion out the comments than from him in this situation.

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    2 hours ago, Pewterschmidt said:

    Guerin's statement

    Russo does a lot of stuff at the State Fair, doesn't he? Subbing on KFAN and all? That something Out of Market guys just wouldn't get.

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    44 minutes ago, mnfaninnc said:

    why would you say that with 1 combined year in the A they are both career AHLers?

    Peart played all four years with St. Cloud, and he's under sized so if i had to bet...he's our Brad Hunt for the 24-30 seasons until he goes to Europe.  No shame in that game.  Chisolm, Faber and Buium have leap frogged him since his draft.  This isn't Peart hate...it's just mathematics. 

    I haven't heard boo about Bankier.  That's the extent of my Bankier analysis.

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    42 minutes ago, mnfaninnc said:

    Why does this have to be emotional or desperate? It is very obvious that we lack size and an RHS forward who can play in Ovechkin's office on the PP. Laine fills checks both of those boxes (it might be the only thing he checks 😉). If you're not giving up much of your current team to add a player of that caliber, it seems like a no-brainer. You're essentially renting him for 2 years!

    I liked your Brady Tkachuk takes better than this take

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    1 hour ago, mnfaninnc said:

    Why does this have to be emotional or desperate? It is very obvious that we lack size and an RHS forward who can play in Ovechkin's office on the PP. Laine fills checks both of those boxes (it might be the only thing he checks 😉). If you're not giving up much of your current team to add a player of that caliber, it seems like a no-brainer. You're essentially renting him for 2 years!

    That's IF Laine plays and is happy here for more than two days. His track record is very suspect. Why do the Wild need to gamble on that now when the gates of cap space heaven are supposedly going to open up here in another year. It has the smell of Guerin feeling the need to do something because 1 he somehow feels we are one piece away from contending for the Cup next year or two he's desperate to keep Kaprizov happy. I'm going to guess bringing in Laine would have had the opposite effect. 

    Rossi was on the trade block because Guerin locked up all the other possible trade assets to long term deals with no trade and movement clauses. Rossi was all he had left in a known asset to deal.  Guerin is swinging blindly. Some GM is going to fleece him badly one day. 

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    17 hours ago, MacGyver said:

    Rossi was on the trade block because Guerin locked up all the other possible trade assets to long term deals with no trade and movement clauses. Rossi was all he had left in a known asset to deal.  Guerin is swinging blindly. Some GM is going to fleece him badly one day. 

    There is no statement that Rossi was in this particular deal, it's only speculation. Sure, he may be on the trading block, but in this instance, Guerin knows what he's worth and hasn't just accepted the "best offer." I really don't think he wants to get rid of him. I do think this team has some areas of need and he'd be trading from what he would see as a position of strength to fill a position of need.

    That would mean that he would be projecting both Heidt and Yurov as satisfactory replacements for Rossi. Yet, this season, he still has Rossi at about $1m, which is great value, and as you mentioned, 1 more season until the cuffs come off. 

    What is needed? I would say a large bodied forward with a canon for a shot that is right handed and can fill the box of Ovechkin's office. A large bodied defender with offensive upside who is also right handed. The rest, as I see it, can be internal fills and will take a little time to get up to speed. 

    I don't see this as emotional at all, but a way to fill holes and maybe even push up the contending window.

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    17 hours ago, MacGyver said:

    Guerin is swinging blindly.

    I think this assessment/conclusion is accurate and fair after watching the last 2-3 off seasons.  This is unfortunate for fans as we were hoping that we’d have dry powder with one year left of cap hell and next off season we’d get rewarded for our patience.  Due to Guerin’s decisions we’re instead getting rejected by Patrick Laine.  
     

    ill say it again, if most of our prospects hit big no one will remember how Guerin put us in this spot.  If our prospects sputter and this lineup of 35 yr olds continues sideways the buck will stop with Guerin 

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    14 minutes ago, mnfaninnc said:

    What is needed? I would say a large bodied forward with a canon for a shot that is right handed and can fill the box of Ovechkin's office.

    Brock Boeser?

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    18 minutes ago, Pewterschmidt said:

    ill say it again, if most of our prospects hit big no one will remember how Guerin put us in this spot.  If our prospects sputter and this lineup of 35 yr olds continues sideways the buck will stop with Guerin 

    I'm expecting big things from our prospects. I have liked letting them develop on the smaller stage. But it's time to inject them. Remember, it takes time to acclimate to the N. Expect to see inconsistency when they're here just starting out.

    This is where I think Dino got an advantage. Those 19 games or so didn't show much offense, but it allowed him to get acclimated so he could make adjustments in the offseason. I expect him to come in this season and perform better than Dewar did.

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    1 minute ago, mnfaninnc said:

    I'm expecting big things from our prospects. I have liked letting them develop on the smaller stage. But it's time to inject them. Remember, it takes time to acclimate to the N. Expect to see inconsistency when they're here just starting out.

    This is where I think Dino got an advantage. Those 19 games or so didn't show much offense, but it allowed him to get acclimated so he could make adjustments in the offseason. I expect him to come in this season and perform better than Dewar did.

    Agree 100%.  Expectations are not for Dino to be a 1C, but instead to be a solid contributor in the bottom 6.  Good on PK, honey badger on the forecheck, RAT like along the boards, can't wait.  This kid will give the bottom six a little more backbone.

    Ogzy also up for his tryout.  Expecting Nino 2.0.  If he brings a little more creativity I'll give Brackett the credit he deserves.  

    #LFG

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