The Hockey News’ NHL summer splash rankings roll on with Team No. 19, the Minnesota Wild.
In our summer splash rankings, we’re examining each NHL team’s off-season from the teams that got worse to those that improved the most. We’re focusing on every team’s departures, additions and coaching and management hirings and firings.
We’ve fully settled into the point in the summer splash ratings where we’re looking at teams that more or less stayed the same this summer. You can find the teams that finished below Minnesota at the bottom, but we’re turning our attention to the state of the Wild.
Additions
Vladimir Tarasenko (LW), Nico Sturm (LW), Nicolas Aube-Kubel (RW), Cal Petersen (G)
The Breakdown: The Wild were a Stanley Cup playoff team last season, so Minnesota GM Bill Guerin felt no need to make widespread changes to his roster.
The biggest name he acquired was former Detroit Red Wings, Ottawa Senators and St. Louis Blues right winger Tarasenko. The veteran posted only 11 goals and 33 points in 80 games this past year with Detroit, and Tarasenko is now 33. He projects to be a middle-six winger on the Wild, and time will tell how much he has left in the tank.
Meanwhile, Guerin’s other additions are fourth-line winger and former Florida Panther Sturm, rugged journeyman winger Aube-Kubel and third-string goaltender Cal Petersen.
Up-and-coming blueliner Buium made his NHL debut in the playoffs but will also join the NHL full-time. Buium, star D-man Brock Faber and 21-year-old defenseman David Jiricek are a solid foundation for Minnesota’s back end.
For the most part, the Wild will be sending back the same lineup that got them to fourth place in the highly competitive Central Division. Guerin still has $10.1 million in cap space, so he can augment his roster. But he may wait until the season begins – and until next season’s trade deadline – to really bring in a big fish to help Minnesota battle the Colorado Avalanche, Winnipeg Jets and Dallas Stars for one of the top three positions in the Central.
Departures
Frederick Gaudreau (C), Gustav Nyquist (LW), Justin Brazeau (RW), Brendan Gaunce (C), Jon Merrill (D), Declan Chisholm (D), Travis Dermott (D), Marc-Andre Fleury (G)
The Breakdown: While the Wild didn’t make too many additions of note, the same goes for the players who’ve departed from the organization.
Guerin traded bottom-six center Gaudreau, who netted 18 goals and 37 points in 82 games this past season, and 2025 trade deadline acquisitions Nyquist and Brazeau left the Wild as free agents.
Longtime NHL star Fleury headed into retirement after a Hockey Hall of Fame-worthy career. He’s a big name and personality to leave the team, but his playing time was reduced in his final season anyway.
You can’t look at the Wild’s departures and successfully argue Minnesota will take a major step backward in 2025-26. Guerin is clearly counting on his young players to develop into difference-makers at the NHL level, and allowing fringe players like Gaunce, Merrill, Chisholm and Dermott to move on is a direction the team is comfortable with.
So long as the aforementioned youngsters reward Guerin for investing in them, and so long as Minnesota’s veterans play as they did last season, the Wild will once again be a playoff team. But that’s far from assured.
The Bottom Line
We’re not here to tell you the Wild are guaranteed to maintain their position in the Central – or to improve on it.
Superstar left winger Kirill Kaprizov is a top-five player in the NHL, and veterans including center Joel Eriksson-Ek and winger Mats Zucarello are part of the core of this Minnesota team. Youngsters, including Faber, right winger Matt Boldy and the goaltending tandem of Filip Gustavsson and Jesper Wallstedt will give the Wild a chance to win night in and night out. There’s a lot to like about this organization.
That said, the Central’s powerhouse teams are currently a level above Minnesota. If the playoffs were to start today, we don’t know of many NHL pundits who would pick the Wild to beat the Jets, Stars or Avalanche. That’s not a condemnation of the pieces that Guerin has put together. Rather, it’s a frank observation on where the Wild are in their competitive cycle.
The day may come down the line when Minnesota’s high-end young players can take that next competitive step and deliver the Wild into a top-three spot in the Central, but that day probably isn’t today. That’s why they’re in the middle part of our summer splash series.
That said, Guerin has pretty important business to care of to ensure his team doesn’t take a massive step back after next season. Kaprizov is entering the final season of a contract carrying a $9 million cap hit, and he’ll almost certainly get at least $11 million annually on his next deal. He scores at a wicked pace, with 25 goals and 56 points in 41 games this past season, and he drives the Wild’s offense. Getting his name on a contract extension this summer would be a huge win.
The Wild also must decide what to do with RFA center Marco Rossi. The 23-year-old recorded 60 points in his second full NHL season, and yet, his ice time tanked in the playoffs. A good chunk of the team’s cap space will go to re-signing him, unless they think Rossi is worth trading in exchange for an upgrade.
If Kaprizov and Rossi are dealt with and there’s cap space left over, the Wild can accrue cap space and make a bigger splash at the trade deadline. But for now, Guerin’s relatively quiet summer is likely to lead to his team having a similar finish as in 2024-25. Although the Wild may overachieve and surprise some people next year, we’re going to be cautiously skeptical until we see it happening.
Summer Splash Rankings
19. Minnesota Wild
20. Seattle Kraken
21. Columbus Blue Jackets
22. Washington Capitals
23. Nashville Predators
24. New York Islanders
25. Tampa Bay Lightning
26. Toronto Maple Leafs
27. Dallas Stars
28. Calgary Flames
29. Los Angeles Kings
30. Winnipeg Jets
31. Chicago Blackhawks
32. Buffalo Sabres
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