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  • What Would A Post-Kaprizov Minnesota Wild Team Look Like?


    Image courtesy of Ron Chenoy - Imagn Images
    Tony Abbott

    In the aftermath of Kirill Kaprizov turning down the largest contract in NHL history from the Minnesota Wild, fans in the State of Hockey are now facing the unthinkable: A Wild team without their franchise's only superstar.

    With this news cycle being raw, the big questions are, Will this get done? or What do the Wild do with Kaprizov? But lost in that discourse is a bigger question.

    What even ARE the Wild without Kaprizov?

    The easiest answer is that they go back to where the franchise was before: Irrelevant to the NHL landscape. We got a sneak preview of it for half of last season. The Wild were 21-17-3 in games without Kaprizov, which would have put them on a 90-point pace that would have kept them out of the playoff bubble.

    If that repeated itself next year, the Wild would not just not make the playoffs, but finish well out of the Draft Lottery range. In that case, re-loading with Gavin McKenna would be a long shot.

    The timing of losing Kaprizov would be devastating. The Wild are finally entering their contention window and are built to win in the next three years. Past that time, veterans like Jonas Brodin, Jared Spurgeon, Marcus Foligno, and perhaps even Joel Eriksson Ek may age out of being real pieces of a contending team. Meanwhile, players currently on cheap contracts -- Zeev Buium, Danila Yurov, David Jiříček, and Liam Öhgren -- should see their salaries skyrocket.

    We can be pretty sure that Minnesota's ambitions to win won't slow down, even with Kaprizov gone. General manager Bill Guerin spent four years taking a step back to try moving forward with the Zach Parise and Ryan Suter buyouts. He won't want to keep going backwards, and maybe can't afford to do so. 

    So, assuming the Wild forge ahead, Guerin will build this team around their next-best player. For now, Matt Boldy is the favorite to hold that title, who is at an interesting crossroads in his career. On The Athletic's recent NHL Player Tiers list -- a ranking heavily influenced by members of NHL coaching staffs and front offices -- Boldy landed at the top of Tier 3. He's at the exact dividing line between "NHL All-Star" and "Franchise Player."

    To give some context to what that actually means, the three forwards above him in Tier 2C are William Nylander, Artemi Panarin, and Sam Reinhart, and the three below him in 3A are Jake Guentzel, Brandon Hagel, and Seth Jarvis. You can build an offense around the 2C guys, probably not so much with the 3A.

    Whether Boldy can move up into that Franchise tier, we'll save for another day. But if he does, he's on par with Panarin and Sebastian Aho, who are the best forwards on the New York Rangers and Carolina Hurricanes, respectively.

    Zeev Buium is the only other major contender for the Wild's top player. The rookie defenseman is a consensus top-10 prospect and enters the season as a leading candidate for the Calder Trophy. Should he win it, he'd join Kaprizov as the only two in Wild history to win a major player award. 

    That'd only be the beginning of overtaking Boldy as the focal point of a Kaprizov-less team, though. When we look at the top defensemen in the league -- Cale Makar (Tier 1A), Quinn Hughes (1B), Rasmus Dahlin (2A), Miro Heiskanen (2A), Zach Werenski (2B), Evan Bouchard (2C), and Adam Fox (2C) -- all but Werenski were putting up 70-plus point seasons by their third full season. If that's Buium by Year 3, then we're talking about him being in a similar tier.

    Unfortunately, if either Boldy or Buium takes that leap without the other, it's not a great recipe for success. The Wild spent the past five seasons being a team built around a better winger than Boldy, and it's only given them four playoff appearances, all lost in the first round.

    The Ottawa Senators had the best defenseman on the planet in 2016-17 with Erik Karlsson, and he and Mark Stone (a decent analogue for current-day Boldy) could only drag a ho-hum to the Eastern Conference Finals, losing to Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin's Pittsburgh Penguins.

    But the two of them hitting that franchise player-type level? We can see some examples of consistent success.

    The New York Rangers have spent the past four seasons with Panarin and Fox, and those two, being their best players (along with elite goalie Igor Shesterkin), were able to reach the Eastern Conference Finals twice in three years before falling off last season. If Filip Gustavsson can continue to deliver the kind of numbers he did last year (.914 in the regular season), Boldy and Buium could give Minnesota a similar team dynamic.

    But the ideal scenario for the Wild would be duplicating something like what the Dallas Stars have going on. They have two franchise players, at both forward (Mikko Rantanen, Tier 2B) and defense (Heiskanen, 2A), backed up by a young, gifted supporting cast. Thomas Harley (3A), Jason Robertson (3A), Jake Oettinger (3C), Wyatt Johnston (4A), and Roope Hintz (4B) are all between the ages of 22 and 28. 

    Minnesota can do this if a lot of things go right. Brock Faber (4B) is a player who can be part of a core like Dallas has, but players like Marco Rossi, Jesper Wallstedt, Yurov, Jiříček, and Öhgren have work to do before getting to that level. And still, the team has no chance of replicating Dallas' model if Boldy and Buium can't get to being franchise-type players.

    But without that Tier 1 player in Kaprizov's, what's that team's ceiling? The Stars have had a lot of success in the past two seasons. They made the Conference Finals both years, which beats the Wild for their franchise's history. However, they were thwarted in six games both times. Maybe the Stars will break through. Still, until that happens, it's hard to ignore the fact that they don't have an MVP-type player at the top of their lineup.

    Until the Wild trade him, Minnesota does. And all of the things we laid out about the team are true if Kaprizov stays in Minnesota. A lot would have to go right for the Wild to hit that championship level, of course. However, Kaprizov's presence gives them a hell of a head start, and losing him means the team's margin for error drops to zero. There may be life without Kaprizov, but losing him will be devastating to the team's ceiling, no matter what else breaks Minnesota's way.

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    On 9/14/2025 at 5:50 PM, Pewterschmidt said:

    Pewter’s Prospect Prognostications:
    If you were hoping for yurov to make a contribution this season, you’re going to be disappointed.  Think Rossi in his first 19 games (1 pt).  Nothing dynamic.  No dawg.  No vision.  Punted the puck more than once.  And this is against 18&19 year old invitees.  He’ll get TOI with big club but it won’t be pretty. 
    Haight showed a pulse tonight but he’s not ready either.  Heidt is less ready than Haight. 

    Benak again stood out.  Assisted on game winner.  Stole puck on offensive end board and silver plattered it for a tap in.  Kid is our Stankoven.  Coaches put him on 1st line with yurov and Haight today. 
    Amidovski looks like he could become a middle six forward. Good size and scored again today on a breakaway he created.  
    Masters is a big body but I’m not sure he’s got ‘it’ to make pro.  

    I don’t think you can properly evaluate a player off of a few prospect games. He broke the Khl U20 scoring record which is the second best league in the world. He beat Kaprizov, Kuznetsov, Tarasanko, Panarin etc in their u20 year. Last year he was coming off of surgery and they cut his minutes because they knew he was coming over here. Go read russos recent article about him and what Kreider had to say about Yurov. He has way more talent than you’re saying. He’s got a great shot, very good skater and playmaker and he’s defensively responsible and smart. He needs time to adjust to the American sized rink

    Also are you talking about a different masters? Because he’s 6ft, not what I would call a big body.

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    11 hours ago, Pewterschmidt said:

    As long as we’re piling on undersized players:

    haight

    heidt

     and (gasp) yurov

     are all fun-sized skaters

    Benak is fun-sized mini but he got that dawg in him and his hockey sense and hands are elite.  You know how whenever 97 gets in trouble he’s always able to put puck on teammates stick.  Never eats the puck or punts it.  Benak has that skill too.  Cool as cucumber out there.  

    Yurov is 6ft 1in. He needs to fill out for sure be he has a perfect nhl frame for a forward. I’m certain you really don’t have a clue what you’re talking about most of the time but for some people on here eat it up lol.

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    On 9/14/2025 at 5:41 PM, Patrick said:

    If he turned down the contract (and we don't know its true) because he wants more money, I say trade him ASAP.

    He has a No Trade Clause so he has to wave that (he'll pick his team).

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    Kap can decide to fuck the Wild over and do nothing if he wanted to.  He and his agent have all the leverage.  The only recourse the Wild have is, "Well, get injured, you lose the nest egg.  Don't say we didn't try"

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    8 hours ago, Mateo3xm said:

    Yurov is 6ft 1in. He needs to fill out for sure be he has a perfect nhl frame for a forward. I’m certain you really don’t have a clue what you’re talking about most of the time but for some people on here eat it up lol.

    I said strife would say this.  I meant Mateo. 

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    17 hours ago, FredJohnson said:

    He has a No Trade Clause so he has to wave that (he'll pick his team).

    Yeah. Terrible move by BG to hand out so many NTCs 

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    What Would A Post-Kaprizov Minnesota Wild Team Look Like?

    To me the only answer should be it is the year 2035, retiring both Kaprizov and #97 sweater, leaving a 3-cup championship dynasty finally brought to the State of Hockey.  Roster is peppered with some of our current pipeline projections.  Perhaps it will be the renaming to Grand Casino Arena that brings in a dash of luck.  

    ... and now returning back to regularly scheduled reality.  

     

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    7 minutes ago, hydguy75 said:

    What Would A Post-Kaprizov Minnesota Wild Team Look Like?

    To me the only answer should be it is the year 2035, retiring both Kaprizov and #97 sweater, leaving a 3-cup championship dynasty finally brought to the State of Hockey.  Roster is peppered with some of our current pipeline projections.  Perhaps it will be the renaming to Grand Casino Arena that brings in a dash of luck.  

    ... and now returning back to regularly scheduled reality.  

     

    P-Dawg's take at the end of last season's first round exit was that this group was at least two legit NHL top 6'rs away from relevance.  What's happened since then?  We've signed Tarasenko and we've gotten a sneak peak of our most prized forward prospects (Yurov, Haight, Ogz and why not Bankier).

    P-Pants prognosis: None of the forward prospects will make a meaningful contribution this season.  But P-Slaps Ogz took that homo-erotic pic that looks like he's adding muscle.  Muscle does not equal hockey sense or playmaking ability.  Ogz ceiling will be Nino 2.0 in about 4 years.  Yurov belongs in Iowa for at least a full season.  Haight might need two more years.  Bankier is the new Adam Beckman.

    So that leaves Tarasenko.  Ok let's assume he's re-born and puts up 20G 20A (most on PP) this year.  Ok that's one top 6'r.

    What top 6 wing do we add at the deadline when bill trade's Rossi?

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    I too think the Wild have just a couple potential outcomes that could make them successful for this year. (Apart from health, lack of injuries, etc.)

    1.  Pick up another talent for the scoring depth and top end punch. (Like Pewter has eluded to.)

    2. Get depth scoring from the new or unexpected places like Ogie, Trenin, Tarasenko, Yurov, Foligno, Buium, Faber, Vinnie, or some other guys who weren't with the team, or who didn't score a bunch for the Wild last year. 

    That might sound too simple, but I really think it is. If NoJo-type players who phone it in get replaced with young guys capable of adding some offense and winning energy, the Wild will be a more dangerous club. Buium, Yurov, and Ogie all have some potential to chip in a handful of goals. By comparison to the bottom-six guys from the past few years, 5-10 goals each between a faster group would be huge if the defense stays the same. MN showed last season that they can be very good. Hard to beat. Fast and capable of putting the puck in the net. 

    The areas where they're weak was in their overall scoring depth, toughness or speed & skill to overcome it, and chemistry/confidence. When they were rolling and healthy, they had some synergy-gel cookin. When they slowed down and lost identity, looking for answers, they struggled and couldn't maintain a good positive goal differential.  

    I think MN is good but the Central is a gauntlet. If they ever needed big seasons from Foligno, Hartzy, Zuccy, Tarasenko, Trenin, Vinnie, and a Rookie, now is the time...

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    2 hours ago, Pewterschmidt said:

    P-Dawg's take at the end of last season's first round exit was that this group was at least two legit NHL top 6'rs away from relevance.

    I fully agree with that statement.... and no, Tarasenko is not the answer.  I do think BG is counting on two young guys stepping up.  But that will be a year or two maybe three years away yet.  Yurov needs to adjust and Ohgren is an unknown. If we are truly building through the draft we need some youth development luck.  I had hopes that we could sign 1 of the 2 this summer but that didn't happen.  Kirill wanting $16M Plus makes it even more difficult.  It all but eliminates the free agency possibilities and relegates us to building through the draft....and we need Spurgeon, Zuc and Tara contracts to expire to probably sign the young guys on for a longer period.  

    Maybe we get lucky and snag a top 6 at the TDL.

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    I am optimistic on Tarasenko. I remember when the Wild got Staal for 3M and people generally thought he'd be an upgrade with a Cup and playoff experience, but he went on to score 40 goals. Nice surprise. 

    Not saying I think #91 will pot forty goals, but I think he can easily score twenty with the Wild in a better role than during his time in Ottawa, Florida where he was in a true depth role, or Detroit where it wasn't a fit. Obviously, the Florida stint was successful, especially the playoffs. 

    I don't think MN fans should turn their nose up at Tarasenko, who has had success playing in the Central.  

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    18 hours ago, NoJoSux said:

    I am optimistic on Tarasenko. I remember when the Wild got Staal for 3M and people generally thought he'd be an upgrade with a Cup and playoff experience, but he went on to score 40 goals. Nice surprise. 

    Not saying I think #91 will pot forty goals, but I think he can easily score twenty with the Wild in a better role than during his time in Ottawa, Florida where he was in a true depth role, or Detroit where it wasn't a fit. Obviously, the Florida stint was successful, especially the playoffs. 

    I don't think MN fans should turn their nose up at Tarasenko, who has had success playing in the Central.  

    I agree on Tarasenko being better than he has shown recently. The hope has to be that he is more aggressive in goal scoring and stays healthy.

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