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  • What Would Spending $16 Million On Kirill Kaprizov Mean?


    Image courtesy of John A. Sokolowski - Imagn Images
    Tony Abbott

    When it comes to Kirill Kaprizov, the line from Minnesota Wild owner Craig Leipold has been unwavering from the start. At the beginning of last season, Mr. Leipold told the press, "Nobody will offer more money than us." Eleven months later, it's becoming clear he wasn't bluffing.

    "[Kaprizov's upcoming contract] will be a huge deal -- likely the biggest the NHL has ever seen," declared Mr. Leipold last week. How huge? According to Elliotte Friedman on his "32 Thoughts" podcast: "I don't know if this is where it's gonna end up, but there are rumors out there the Wild will go to 8 [years] times $16 [million] for Kaprizov."

    Wowza.

    Make no mistake, Kaprizov was always going to get PAID. The salary cap is about to spike, which would have inflated the price regardless, and the Wild are in a position where they need to retain their superstar player. Kaprizov is easily the best player ever to put on a Wild uniform, and after spending to the cap year after year for a string of first-round exits, Mr. Leipold doesn't seem prepared to let him slip away over something as small as "money."

    If you're the Wild, you do whatever it takes to secure Kaprizov's services. But when he signs on the dotted line, the organization is going to have to live within the confines of that new reality.

    $16 million would make Kaprizov the highest-paid player in the NHL, and it's a decent bet that will hold after Connor McDavid re-signs with the Edmonton Oilers. During the first year of his deal (2026-27), his salary will account for 15.38% of the salary cap. That's a higher percentage of the cap than Nathan MacKinnon (15.09), Auston Matthews (15.06), and Leon Draisaitl (14.65) took up in the first years of their deals.

    Heck, that'd be $500K more than the combined cap hits of Brock Faber, a No. 1 defenseman ($8.5M) and Matt Boldy, a 70-point top-line winger ($7M).

    Now, the conventional wisdom in the NHL has been that the league's top players have been underpaid. A great example is Kaprizov. His last contract had him making $9 million against the cap, which was at the time the largest contract for someone who had under 60 games of experience at the time of signing.

    But last season, Dom Luszczyszyn had the market value of his play (presumably prorated for a full season) pegged at $14.9 million. Having Kaprizov at $9 million was basically like signing a $6 million player.

    However, you might notice, $14.9 million isn't as much as $16 million. The market has been correcting for the top players, and superstars are finally getting superstar dollars. From here on out, those bargains are drying up.

    Well, before here, actually. Let's look at those three superstar deals we mentioned: MacKinnon, Matthews, and Draisaitl. Injuries held Matthews to "only" 33 goals and 78 points in 67 games last year, but his two-way play remained at a high level. By Luszczyszyn's measure, he was the second-best player in the Atlantic Division, behind only Nikita Kucherov and ahead of MVP-quality players like David Pastrnak, Aleksander Barkov, and Mitch Marner. Still, the value of his play ($13.1M) was slightly lower than his cap hit ($13.25M). 

    MacKinnon's 32-goal, 116-point season had him fourth in Hart Trophy voting this season. It was the second-highest point total of his career, despite losing Mikko Rantanen via a mid-season trade. It's hard to ask for a better season from a superstar player. But all that produced a surplus of "only" $1.5 million on his $12.6 million cap hit.

    Then there's Draisaitl, who Luszczyszyn's model rated as the top skater in the NHL. He won the Rocket Richard Trophy with 52 goals and scored 106 points, with only Connor Hellebuyck standing between him and a second Hart Trophy. Evolving-Hockey's Standings Points Above Replacement metric valued him as being worth 9.0 points in the standings for Edmonton, the leader among all skaters. Again, it's hard to ask for a better season.

    Draisaitl put up that season under his old contract, so the Oilers got incredible savings. But if Kaprizov puts up an equivalent season in any year of a $16 million contract, he'll deliver the Wild a surplus of... $300K.

    So, at least for the first few seasons of the contract, Kaprizov is going to have to play at that MVP-like level to fully justify the dollars. That's a high, high standard.

    And yet, it's a standard Kaprizov showed he could live up to last year. Despite his injuries, Kaprizov managed to put up an 82-game pace of 50 goals and 112 points. His half-season was worth 4.0 points in the standings for the Wild. Double that, and you have 8.0, which would have ranked third in the NHL.

    There are also benefits beyond his individual numbers. Like most superstars, Kaprizov makes others better, setting up the likes of Boldy, Mats Zuccarello, Joel Eriksson Ek, and Marco Rossi with his incredible passing. Minnesota might not be getting savings on Kaprizov, but Kaprizov can help them squeeze extra value from the players around him.

    More important, however, might be what he means to the organization and the state. The Wild waited two decades to see a player like Kaprizov come to the organization. It might take another two to find another one if Kaprizov were to walk. Mr. Leipold has waited over 17 years to see this team get to a Conference Final. If $16 million is the cost of not having to take a step back, then the cost is the cost.

    Also, the fact is that Minnesota doesn't have the ready-made Stanley Cup contender that made a player like Rantanen sign with the Dallas Stars, or Marner with Vegas, for significantly less money. They hope to get there soon, absolutely, but the fact remains that Minnesota's not a free agent draw, and has to pony up to keep the biggest fish they've ever reeled in.

    It might turn into a popular sentiment that Kaprizov is overpaid, especially if he winds up making more money than McDavid. It might be technically true, but that won't mean he's not holding up his part of the bargain. If he's a top player, worth something like $12 million, then there shouldn't be grumbling about his salary. It's the cost of doing business, and paying a superstar $16 million instead of $12 shouldn't be a thing that holds a true Cup contender back.

    The Wild are apparently prepared to look past the sticker shock, and if they are willing to do so, why shouldn't the fans?

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    On 9/8/2025 at 10:52 PM, mnfaninnc said:

    Dean, you spoke a little truth here but missed the point. The constant here has been OCL being here for both of these plans. In fact, this is the only constant. But, it is his team and he can do what he wants!

    And you do NOT see  problem with it? Hey let's givesomeone(albeit one, i and MANY others see as a dumbest make important choices for us) even IF he isn't, no one should have complete control. He's had 5 yrs said he had a 5yr plan then regurgitated the same shit.

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    On 9/10/2025 at 12:13 PM, raithis said:

    I'm not advocating for $16M, but the only reason your statement is accurate is that no one can offer him 8 years because no other team can offer a free agent more than 7 years.  Only the team re-signing the player can offer 8.

    If he goes to free agency and it's another free agency like this year where most teams keep their top players (and with the cap going up as much as it is, pretty much every team that wants to keep a player will again be able to), I guarantee you a number of teams would like up even if they knew $16M was the price tag - and they wouldn't all be perennial lottery teams.

    So who wouldn't be lottery teams? Unless they are on the end of being a contender... 16 mil a year cripples the franchise, worse than 15 for 2 all star caliber players. You can see the future? You KNOW for sure the cap goes up unless other shit happens... it's a bad franchise move and now they gave kap a hint of what they would pay he wants more. He's not worth a long term. You can look at any metric

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    On 9/10/2025 at 9:54 AM, greg said:

    Yesnthe Wild will sign kirill to a massive deal then later complain they don't have enough payroll flexibility to add good players. 

     

    On 9/9/2025 at 5:36 PM, mnfaninnc said:

    Yes I do if he uses the prospects. It wouldn't be for all 5 roster spots, but if he can fill a couple of those spots with ELCs, then that's a lot of money left for 3 players.

    First off I agree. That WILL happen! If they sign him to a stupid contract like that. 

    Billy never put prospects first. He's being charged(with actually playing some prospects) now because he made a 5 year plan... he has to show the fan base, otherwise they hang his dumbass and he's gone. The owner has his back, only as long as the fan base covers for him.

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    On 9/10/2025 at 12:13 PM, raithis said:

    I'm not advocating for $16M, but the only reason your statement is accurate is that no one can offer him 8 years because no other team can offer a free agent more than 7 years.  Only the team re-signing the player can offer 8.

     

    If he goes to free agency and it's another free agency like this year where most teams keep their top players (and with the cap going up as much as it is, pretty much every team that wants to keep a player will again be able to), I guarantee you a number of teams would like up even if they knew $16M was the price tag - and they wouldn't all be perennial lottery teams.

    Is that really your argument? That should mean the wil win and hold the cards. Please be honest AND realistic. Any team paying absurd money to someone unproven in the playoffs and unable to stay healthy is NOT on the list of cup winners.

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    11 hours ago, Need4speed99 said:

    And you do NOT see  problem with it? Hey let's givesomeone(albeit one, i and MANY others see as a dumbest make important choices for us) even IF he isn't, no one should have complete control. He's had 5 yrs said he had a 5yr plan then regurgitated the same shit

    I'm not really sure what you're trying to point out here. OCL owns the team. He can do what he wants. The only say the fans have is whether or not they will buy tickets and merchandise. A fan revolt looks like a boycott, and that tends to end poorly. 

    Reality is we have very little to say on the matter because fans, specifically fans within the home base, are scared to death over teams leaving, just like the North Stars did for Dallas. You get this by not supporting the team or not filling the house. 

    I maintain that Bill Guerin has been the best GM this franchise has had. He doesn't get everything right, but neither has any of his predecessors. I don't think a new GM will magically make the Wild a destination either. The only thing that can do that is a contending team. The best way to build a contending team is to get a bunch of guys from a close draft class cluster (like '20-23) to become a core of the team. They will have to learn to win together, but generally, they are also very loyal to one another. The group tends to be better than the individual parts. 

    If you can hit 3-4 players in 2 of those drafts who can play a significant role on the team (minutes and games), you tend to get a very good chance of playing deep into the playoffs. For us, those guys really need to be good 200' players.

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    14 hours ago, Need4speed99 said:

    So who wouldn't be lottery teams? Unless they are on the end of being a contender... 16 mil a year cripples the franchise, worse than 15 for 2 all star caliber players. You can see the future? You KNOW for sure the cap goes up unless other shit happens... it's a bad franchise move and now they gave kap a hint of what they would pay he wants more. He's not worth a long term. You can look at any metric

    $16M a year can cripple a Franchise IF you don't have the prospect pool to have good RFAs on cheaper contracts.  If you do, then it's not as detrimental.

    That, and with the cap going up as fast as it is, it'll soon be a smaller percentage of the team's cap space.  No one can see the future, but the league has already indicated their projections for the next few years.  Could there be things that happen that could change that?  Of course, but they wouldn't be announcing it unless it was highly likely to happen, and you can't go through life assuming a catastrophic event will occur (like a new pandemic).  If that happens, most teams in the league will have problems - not just the Wild if they sign a player for $16M.

    We are better off with an expensive Kaprizov contract than.without him.  Again, I'd prefer to have more cap space to work with, but if it came to a trade, we likely would not get multiple star players back.  We'd probably get one really good player, a prospect, and some draft picks.  If that player does not want to be here, then that doesn't help us at all.  Also, if you can't keep your elite players, you are going to have a tough time convincing other elite players to sign on as free agents - and we already have a tough enough time drawing those players to begin with.  There's more chance of players wanting to play here with Kaprizov than without him.

    Also, since you asked me to name a non-lottery team that could afford Kaprizov - Carolina.  They have over $10M in cap space and a full roster, majority of which is signed already through next season.  With the cap expected to go up by about $9M, they wouldn't have to move the world to get him if they wanted.  They are also perennial contenders.  Being so far under the cap, they will have a lot of room to work with at the trade deadline.  I have no idea if they are interested in Kaprizov at all, but the point is, they can afford it, and some other teams who do want Kaprizov will find a way to make it happen if they want him badly enough.  With the cap going up and more superstars likely to simply stay put rather than head to free agency (since teams can more easily afford to keep them), the few truly elite players will be coveted - even I've the price is $16M.

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