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  • The Wild Aren't Going To Trade Core Pieces This Summer


    Image courtesy of Brace Hemmelgam-USA Today Sports
    Luke Sims

    Stop it. Don’t even think about it. Don’t even think about thinking about it. It ain’t gonna happen. The Minnesota Wild are not going to ship off any core pieces this off-season. 

    Shane Seney of NHL Trade Rumors posted an article that upset some people on the sacred scribe site of Twitter. Seney proposed that the Wild should trade their best center, Joel Eriksson Ek, to the Toronto Maple Leafs for star winger William Nylander.

    Now, I would love to add Willy to the Wild. He's coming off back-to-back 80-point seasons, including a career-high 87 in 2022-23. Oh yeah, and he potted 40 goals and has scored 35 per 82 games over the past four seasons. He would be a long-term running mate for Kirill Kaprizov and is getting paid just under $7 million for the 2023-24 season. If the Wild really wanted to, they could make that work. But it’s just not happening. 

    Kaprizov, Eriksson Ek, Jared Spurgeon, Jonas Brodin, and Matt Boldy are not playing anywhere else but Minnesota at the start of next year.

    Seney believes the Wild can afford to move Eriksson Ek because they have Sam Steel, Ryan Hartman, and Freddy Gaudreau. But anyone who watched Minnesota last year knows none of those guys are bona fide top-line centers. It would be a franchise-altering mistake if the Wild traded their only legit top-six center and one of the best two-way centers in the league. It would be like throwing the bucket you're using to bail water out of a slowly sinking ship. 

    What would a better William Nylander trade offer look like? That is a conversation for another day.  The Wild have repeatedly proven that they are not the kind of organization to make a risky trade for a star player. They’ve made small minor trades and signings but nothing that has been a real risk.

    Trading Cam Talbot last summer was not really a risk. They took a low-stakes gamble on Filip Gustavsson, and it worked out splendidly. Trading away Jason Zucker was a good trade that netted some solid assets in Addison and top defensive prospect Carson Lambos. 

    Trading of Kevin Fiala was not a big swing, it was the opposite. The Wild shipped away a star offensive player because they were dumping their money into depth players. The Wild have not made a bold trade where the player they were acquiring was the headliner in the deal since arguably, Jason Pominville over a decade ago.

    That leads to the next point. The Wild have repeatedly shown that they prioritize depth players over opening up money for big-time players. For example, re-signing and acquiring guys like Gaudreau, Alex Goligoski, Ryan Reaves, and Jon Merrill. Those guys are important depth players, but Minnesota could replace them with players on more affordable contracts. 

    The Wild have the number one prospect pool, according to The Athletic’s Scott Wheeler and that’s for a reason, and they have mostly kept it intact. Bill Guerin hasn’t traded any of Minnesota’s top prospects or futures since taking over in 2019. The team clearly prioritizes the prospects that they have. 

    They do also have a bit of a cap space problem. The Wild don’t have the cap space to sign anyone to a mega-contract. Even if they were to trade Eriksson Ek, who has a $5 million cap hit, they would still have limited funds to bring back their goalie and other depth pieces. 

    The Wild made a few trades at the deadline, but none carried any real risk. They spent just a couple of mid-round picks, some not even from this year or next, and a disgruntled player in Jordan Greenway. However, Minnesota received a similar return in the likes of Marcus Johansson, Gustav Nyquist, Oskar Sundqvist, and John Klingberg. Proven commodities that are not unknown and do not provide a ton of risk to the acquiring team.  

    The Wild did not go after Jack Eichel. They did not go after Matthew Tkachuk. Nor did they pursue Erik Karlsson. Timo Meier? No way. Not saying that they should have, but definitely saying they were not going to. 

    Maybe the Wild have something to learn from the two teams in the Stanley Cup Final. The Vegas Golden Knights and Florida Panthers’ best players were both skating for other teams at the beginning of last year. 

    Minnesota’s biggest offseason storyline is going to be whether they re-sign all of their bottom-six depth and if they trade a depth defenseman prospect. It’s not going to be a trade for Nylander (Though hey, here's an open invitation for Wild management to prove me wrong).

    Wild management isn’t going to take a big risk. This is not a team to sacrifice prospects or significant futures. The Wild are a self-sabotaged, cap-strapped squad. They are not a team to make a rash big-money decision and worry about the financial consequences later. What kind of team are they? One of 30 who get to play golf in June and watch a Stanley Cup Final featuring two big trade headliners from the comfort of the couch. 

    All stats and data via HockeyDB and CapFriendly.

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    I would consider Foligno a (was) core piece, and Ek a ridiculous speculation by Seney, but Moose's time and value aren't going to get better.

    Time to move him as I have suggested before. Ek is the only piece we need with JoJo and Bolds. The GREEF line is in the rear view mirror. Beckman needs a chance to fill the forward slot and Duhaime the physical, not fighting presence. We don't need any more penalty minutes. 

    Alex Goligoski (trade), Ryan Reaves, and Jon Merrill (trade) need to make way for our IA untested depth and I know BG will find another Middy in the mix to replace the holes. Our "D" was up and down and I believe Faber coming, with the resigning of Gus will leave us something to work with. We really need to know where were at with these IA guys O'Rourke and Hunt are before '24-'25 and the infusion we'll get this year with Bankier, Masters, Novak and Spacek.

    The draft is around the corner and a month from now all the speculation will be just that, speculation and well wishing our new added pieces in the draft, trades and free agency.

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    What kind of team are they? One of 30 who get to play golf in June and watch a Stanley Cup Final featuring two big trade headliners from the comfort of the couch. 

    This is only true if they get TNT! Otherwise, you're frozen out!

    Seney is an idiot for suggesting this. I have no idea who he is and I do read NHL Trade Rumors. But, he's either a national guy, or a Toronto writer. If his analysis is that we have Hartsy, Gaudreau, Steel, he is very out of touch with this team, and that has been my criticism of all national writers. 

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    A healthy Ek and Shaw and I really feel that we take Dallas to 7 with a good chance of winning the series.   Steel's consistent face off losses led to some very quick goals against in that series and Ek is way better at face offs and PK.  Let Beckman, Walker, Ryan O'Rorke and Wallstedt play up next season and I think the Wild will be in playoff contention with a better chance of advancing.   It should leave us a little bit extra for any trades at the deadline... A chance in the playoffs is all any team can ask for ... especially one in salary cap purgatory.

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    19 minutes ago, MNCountryLife said:

    A healthy Ek and Shaw and I really feel that we take Dallas to 7 with a good chance of winning the series.   Steel's consistent face off losses led to some very quick goals against in that series and Ek is way better at face offs and PK.  Let Beckman, Walker, Ryan O'Rorke and Wallstedt play up next season and I think the Wild will be in playoff contention with a better chance of advancing.   It should leave us a little bit extra for any trades at the deadline... A chance in the playoffs is all any team can ask for ... especially one in salary cap purgatory.

    Wallstadt is not ready to move up. He needs at least one more year in the A. Goalies are different than forwards. They take longer to develop to NHL level. If he can make it after next year that is very quick.

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    19 hours ago, MNCountryLife said:

    Let Beckman, Walker, Ryan O'Rorke and Wallstedt play up next season and I think the Wild will be in playoff contention with a better chance of advancing. 

    From what I saw, The Wall and O'Rourke are not ready to move up yet. For O'Rourke's game, he needs a lot more added muscle to play in the N, and for The Wall, I would think rebound control is going to be his main issue to work on.

    From the highlights, especially the 2nd half of the season, The Wall had eliminated most of the strange angle goals he let in. Most of the damage was done while shorthanded and off rebounds. Of course it was hard to see the numbers of the defenders since their backs were not showing in the camera angles, but some of the problems, I believe, were defenders not being quick enough to rebounds. 

    Also, The Wall, essentially, came in as 1B and ended the season as 1A. I'd like to see him take over the clear #1 role in Iowa before promoting him. 

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    3 hours ago, mnfaninnc said:

    Also, The Wall, essentially, came in as 1B and ended the season as 1A. I'd like to see him take over the clear #1 role in Iowa before promoting him. 

    I don't disagree with anything you mentioned.  But the Wild have some extremely tough decisions to make.  Our existing prospect pool is the only real viable solution and we need our prospects the next 2 years.  When Cap purgatory eases up a bit things can change.  But we need 2F, 1D and 1G from the pool... and it needs to be this year.  It leaves a little change in our pockets to handle some trade deadline options and when we exit purgatory we will have a better understanding of our needs.  I also like the idea of Fleury having a chance to Mentor the Wall.

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    We'll get our guys, and Duhaime/Shaw will not be expensive to resign. 

    1 hour ago, MNCountryLife said:

    When Cap purgatory eases up a bit things can change.  But we need 2F, 1D and 1G from the pool... and it needs to be this year. 

    I don't think we need the goalie yet from the pool. I see us running with Fleury/Gustavsson again. We will likely be able to sign a cheap UFA to play 3rd pairing LD if need be, especially with the cap only moving $1m this season. Most teams are underwater once they sign their RFAs.

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