Jump to content
Hockey Wilderness Zone Coverage Property
  • Will Jesper Wallstedt Be Ready To Replace Filip Gustavsson In 2026-27?


    Image courtesy of Nick Wosika-Imagn Images
    Kalisha Turnipseed

    The Minnesota Wild have remained atop the NHL standings despite their injuries, and Filip Gustavsson deserves a lot of the credit for that. Goaltending makes or breaks any team. If it weren't for Gustavsson’s hot start, the Wild wouldn’t be competing for first place in the loaded Western Conference. 

    The problem with Gustavsson is that his contract will expire in 2026-27. However, the Wild drafted Jesper Wallstedt in the first round of the 2021 draft and general manager Bill Guerin sees him as the team's goaltender of the future. Will Wallstedt be ready to take over for Gustavsson in 2026-27? 

    During the 2022-23 season, Gustavsson had a breakout season, posting a 22-9-7 record with a 93.1 save percentage (SV%), 3 shutouts, and a goals against average (GAA) of 2.10 in 39 games played. Guerin believed that Gustavsson proved himself enough to be awarded a three-year, $11.25 million ($3.75 million AAV) contract. 

    However, Gustavsson regressed last year, posting a 19-18-4 record with an 89.9 SV%, 3 shutouts, and a GAA of 3.06 in 45 games played. Guerin didn't see the same confidence from Gustavsson as he saw when he first broke into the NHL. Goaltenders are the most mysterious players, often going through Jekyll and Hyde phases

    Gustavsson has been one of Minnesota’s best players. He has a 14-4-3 record with a 92.2 SV%, 2 shutouts, and a GAA of 2.24 in 22 games played. However, Gustavsson gave up 5 goals against the Edmonton Oilers in the team's 7-1 loss. Now Gustavsson’s battling a lower-body injury.

    Here are the most recent goalie extensions: 

    • Jeremy Swayman (Boston Bruins): eight-year, $66 million ($8.25 million AAV) 
    • Linus Ullmark (Ottawa Senators): four-year, $33 million ($8.25 million AAV) 
    • Igor Shesterkin (New York Rangers): eight-year, $92 million ($11.5 million AAV) 
    • Jake Oettinger (Dallas Stars): eight-year, $66 million ($8.25 million AAV) 

    The goalie market got expensive. While Gustavsson’s not going to get as much as these four goalies, it's not unreasonable to believe that he'll get at least double his $3.75 million cap hit. Can the Wild afford Gustavsson at $7.5 million per year? Is he worth $7.5 million? Gustavsson would be getting paid more than Matt Boldy ($7 million AAV), Jonas Brodin ($6 million AAV), Joel Eriksson Ek ($5.25 million AAV), and Mats Zuccarello ($4.125 million AAV). 

    The Wild will need cap room to sign Kirill Kaprizov and Marco Rossi to extensions. You can bet that Kaprizov will earn at least $14 million on his next deal. Could Kaprizov settle for another team-friendly deal similar to Nathan MacKinnon ($12.6 million AAV)? How will Guerin approach extending Rossi? Will he get a deal similar to Florida Panthers’ Anton Lundell's $5 million AAV for 6 years, Los Angeles Kings’ Quinton Byfield's $6.25 million AAV for 5 years, or New York Rangers’ Alexis Lafreniere's $7.45 AAV million for 7 years? 

    Regardless of how Guerin signs both, he'll likely have to let Gustavsson walk in free agency or trade him so he doesn’t lose him for nothing. Will Jesper Wallstedt be ready to take over the starting role in 2025-26? 

    The Wild have slated Wallstedt to replace Marc-Andre Fleury in 2025-26. While the backup position is easier than the starting position, Wallstedt must be ready to play up to 35 games. He'll need to backup Gustavsson when the team plays back-to-back games. Wallstedt will gain more maturity and will continue to learn from Gustavsson. Will he be ready to start too soon to extend Gustavsson? 

    The Wild can choose to have both Gustavsson and Wallstedt on the team in 2026-27 to secure their goaltending position for multiple seasons to pursue a championship in the future. The Wild will have their own version of Ben Bishop and Andrei Vasilevskiy when they played for the Tampa Bay Lightning in 2014-15 when they lost to the Chicago Blackhawks in the Stanley Cup finals. However, this time, the Wild hope to secure a Cup. 

    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.


    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    Featured Comments

    1 hour ago, Thatoneguy said:

    He barely looks like an AHL caliber goal tender this season let alone NHL ready. Keep Goose because the wall is looking more like a screen door. 

    Who still thinks Wall-e is a can’t miss #1 goalie.  He’s definitely not ready mentally.  Still needs to develop his confidence and laying this egg won’t help.  Re-sign GUS on another bridge (3yr) and hope Wall figures it out over next years (see Rossi). 
    also hope Wall’s agent doesn’t convince Guerin to overpay and over term Gus with NMC

    #don't be dumb bill

    • Like 1
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    This is the part where we say ya but goalies are different they take longer to develop. And maybe so. But this illustrates exactly why you don't pencil in prospects on your roster before they ever put a skate on NHL ice. The "Wall" was supposed to be competing for the Vezina this year according to many. I don't know how many posts I've seen with Yurov on this or that line with so and so and Jircek and so and so as a second D pair and on and on. It's as silly as all these trade packages that are put together for other players that are not even available. 

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    11 hours ago, MacGyver said:

    This is the part where we say ya but goalies are different they take longer to develop. And maybe so. But this illustrates exactly why you don't pencil in prospects on your roster before they ever put a skate on NHL ice. The "Wall" was supposed to be competing for the Vezina this year according to many. I don't know how many posts I've seen with Yurov on this or that line with so and so and Jircek and so and so as a second D pair and on and on. It's as silly as all these trade packages that are put together for other players that are not even available. 

    What? Rossi for McDavid is silly? What if we throw in a 2029 3rd round pick?

    • Haha 2
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites




    Join the conversation

    You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
    Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

    Guest
    Add a comment...

    ×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

      Only 75 emoji are allowed.

    ×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

    ×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

    ×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


×
×
  • Create New...