The Minnesota Wild may still be searching for the center they wanted this offseason, but they did not sit still. They already landed winger Blake Coleman from the Calgary Flames, and that move looks a little sharper now that a division rival was also in the mix.
According to The Fourth Period NHL insider David Pagnotta, the Dallas Stars were pushing for Coleman too. The problem was simple: the money did not work.
"Dallas was a key destination, but with their financials, it just didn't make sense to be able to pull that off," said Pagnotta. "So, he goes to [Minnesota] and has a good opportunity there to chase a cup."
That kind of cap squeeze has been hanging over Dallas for a while. The Stars already had to move young forward Mavrik Bourque, a restricted free agent who needed a new contract.
They sent him to the Nashville Predators, who then signed him to a six-year, $33 million extension. Dallas got a 2027 second-round pick and a 2028 third-round pick back in the deal.
Jason Robertson remains the bigger issue. The star winger is in line for a massive payday, but Dallas does not currently have enough room to fit him under the cap.
The team is scheduled for an arbitration hearing on July 25, and that should bring some clarity on whether Robertson stays on another cheap deal or pushes for a move. Robertson already blocked a trade to the Seattle Kraken, who had offered him an eight-year contract with an annual salary of $15 million.
Minnesota, by contrast, had enough flexibility to make Coleman work, especially with Calgary retaining 50 percent of his $4.9 million salary. For a Wild team that does not exactly have cap space to burn, getting that kind of help from the Flames made the deal much easier for general manager Bill Guerin.
Coleman’s numbers from last season fit the profile of the player Minnesota wanted. In 69 games with Calgary, he scored 20 goals and added 15 assists, finishing at plus-12.
He is the kind of forward who can slide into the top six and bring a little bite with him, and the Wild clearly valued that enough to move quickly. Now it turns out they were not just beating the market - they were beating Dallas too.
In Other News...
Wild Suddenly Face A Bigger Quinn Hughes Question Than Expected
The Quinn Hughes situation in Minnesota has taken on a new layer of intrigue, even as the defensemans arrival last year already gave the Wild a major jolt. Recent chatter around the league suggests the clubs interest may not stop with one Hughes brother, and the speculation has only grown because of uncertainty about where Quinns long-term future is headed.
There is still a big gap between rumor and reality here. A blockbuster swing for Jack Hughes would be a massive undertaking for any team, and the combination of his contract and the price New Jersey would ask makes it hard to see Minnesota getting far down that road. Still, the fact that the conversation is happening at all says plenty about how the Wild view their current window and how much they want to settle the Quinn Hughes question for good. [Read more 🡒]
Several Former Wild Names Are Still Waiting In Free Agency
A few familiar names from Minnesotas recent past are still hanging around the free-agent market, and for the Wild it is a reminder of how much roster churn can reshape a summer in a hurry. Vladimir Tarasenko, Cam Talbot, John Klingberg and Carson Soucy all remain unsigned as the offseason drags on, giving teams around the league a chance to circle back on players who can still fill specific needs, whether that is offense, goaltending help or a steady presence on the back end.
Klingberg stands out as the most intriguing defenseman still available, and Tarasenkos scoring touch remains part of the conversation after he gave Minnesota a useful bounce-back season. Talbot and Soucy also bring different kinds of value, with one offering veteran goaltending experience and the other a bigger body on the blue line, but for now none of those former Wild pieces has found a new home. [Read more 🡒]
