Wild Fans May Not Love What Keeping Quinn Hughes Could Cost

With tensions in Minnesota over balancing star contracts, Quinn Hughes edges closer to a high-stakes extension that could shape the Wilds roster dynamics.

Minnesota’s push to keep Quinn Hughes is starting to sound real.

Two months ago, Hughes said in his end-of-season comments that he is “definitely open to re-signing” with the Wild, and he made it clear he’d prefer to get something done over the summer if possible. That window is open now, and David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period added a fresh layer to the story yesterday on Hello Hockey, reporting that the Wild and Hughes are “getting there” on an extension with an AAV of at least $17MM, if not higher.

That’s still not a done deal, and there’s plenty of work left. But for Minnesota, it’s at least a meaningful sign that the door isn’t just cracked open - it’s swinging wider. What once looked like a massive gamble, with the Wild buying roughly a year and a half of a superstar before the risk of losing him for nothing, may be turning into a win for Bill Guerin’s “all in” approach.

And on the ice, Hughes fit the Wild like a glove. Minnesota had been one of the lower-scoring teams in production from defensemen, and Hughes changed that fast.

The left-shot blueliner averaged more than 27 minutes a night and posted 53 points in 48 games. He also led the NHL in ice time per game, beating out Zach Werenski by a minute.

When you stack up his full season, Hughes finished fifth among defensemen in points with 76 combined between Vancouver and Minnesota, and 33rd among all NHL skaters. He was also one spot behind his brother Jack.

Of course, the family angle has been part of the speculation around all of this. Some in the Northeast hoped Hughes would ride things out to free agency and land in New Jersey, where he could team up with Jack and Luke in a three-brother setup the league has never seen.

It’s a fun idea, but the numbers make it complicated. The Devils have $6 million more in cap space than the Wild right now, but to realistically pay Hughes at his free-agent value, they’d likely need to clear a contract like Dougie Hamilton’s $9MM.

New Jersey also has less than 4% of its cap space tied up in goaltending next season. As appealing as the reunion sounds, Minnesota still appears to be in position to keep control of the conversation for now.

If Hughes does stay and land what would be another record-setting deal in Minnesota, the ripple effects are obvious. With the salary cap set at $104 million for 2026-27 and another increase potentially coming the following season by as much as $8.5 million, a $17 million Hughes contract alongside Kirill Kaprizov would eat up nearly 33% of the Wild’s total salary allocation.

Even the Oilers, with Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl, don’t spend that much on their top two stars. McDavid and Draisaitl are locked in through 2027-28 at a combined $26.50MM cap hit, and they combined for 235 points in 147 games last season on Edmonton’s 282 total goals-forced.

That’s the bar Minnesota would be setting for itself if it pays Hughes at that level. And if Guerin gets him on a deal that brings at least a $10 million raise, the rest of the roster gets a lot tighter.

Jared Spurgeon, the club’s longest-tenured player and annual Lady Byng vote-getter, is set to expire after 2026-27 on a $7.58MM cap hit. Ryan Hartman and Blake Coleman are also in that mix.

Beyond that, Minnesota could be staring at four or five bottom-six forward spots that need to be filled, and that’s before getting into the bigger holes. The Wild have also been viewed as a team that needs help down the middle to take the next step in the Western Conference, but fitting someone like Dylan Larkin and his $8.7MM cap hit into the picture looks difficult.

In goal, the Wild have already made a long-term commitment to Filip Gustavsson, while 23-year-old Jesper Wallstedt sits there as a luxury at $2.2MM. At some point, one of those two excellent netminders will likely have to move out to make room for the center-ice upgrade and the Hughes extension.

Minnesota has already felt the squeeze before, losing Mats Zuccarello and likely heading toward the same outcome with Vladimir Tarasenko. If Guerin is going to keep building around Hughes, he’ll need to keep finding value the way he did with 38-year-old Nick Foligno’s $900k deal for next season.

None of that is meant as a knock on Guerin. He’s the 2025-26 NHL general manager of the year, and he’s clearly raised the standard in Minnesota.

But locking up Hughes would bring a new set of problems with it, even if they’re the kind of problems teams usually welcome. The Wild would rather take their shot at proving a top-heavy roster can still work than watch an all-world defenseman walk away after a short stay in Saint Paul.

In Other News...

Bill Guerin Faces Backlash Over One Wild Exit Fans Saw Coming

Bill Guerins offseason has brought both praise and second-guessing, which is usually the price of doing business when a general manager is coming off a year that earned him league-wide recognition. The Wild added Blake Coleman and Olli Maatta, kept Michael McCarron in the fold and still looked like a team trying to balance grit with enough structure to stay dangerous in the West.

But the conversation around Guerin has shifted to one familiar name, and not in a flattering way. Mats Zuccarellos departure has reopened the debate over what Minnesota lost in the middle of its attack, especially with the power play and the teams broader strategy now under the microscope. Even with the front offices other moves, this is the kind of exit that lingers because it asks whether the Wild were solving one problem while creating another. [Read more 🡒]

Which Wild Departure Will Leave The Biggest Void Around Kaprizov

The Wilds offseason turnover has left Kirill Kaprizov with a different supporting cast to sort through, and the departures are not all equal. Mats Zuccarello, Marcus Johansson, Vladimir Tarasenko and Jake Middleton each brought something distinct last season, from puck movement and finishing touch to steadier play in their own end, and Minnesota now has to replace that mix without simply duplicating it.

Johansson and Tarasenko both gave the club useful offense in their own ways, while Middletons value was tied more to the blue line than the scoresheet. But the hardest absence to paper over is the one that affected the Wilds top-six attack and the chemistry around Kaprizov, because losing a trusted winger in that spot changes more than just one line on the depth chart. [Read more 🡒]

Did Michael McCarron Do Enough To Earn Wild Trust

Michael McCarron arrived at the trade deadline and quickly settled into the kind of role the Wild were looking for, giving them size, edge and a little offense down the stretch. In 20 regular-season games, he chipped in three goals and two assists while also throwing his weight around with 40 hits and 17 blocked shots, a useful mix for a team that wanted more than just depth minutes from its additions.

The postseason only strengthened his case. McCarron played in all 11 games, bumped up his scoring touch with two goals and two assists, and kept bringing the physical presence that made him such an easy fit in the first place. Bill Guerin sounded pleased with how McCarron meshed with the group, but the bigger question for Minnesota is whether that late-season impression is enough to make him more than a short-term answer. [Read more 🡒]