Wild Just Put Real Pressure On Bobby Brink This Offseason

After strategic offseason moves, the Minnesota Wild are placing their faith in Bobby Brink to fill key playmaker roles in the upcoming season.

The Minnesota Wild’s offseason has already sent a pretty clear message about Bobby Brink: they’re giving him room to matter.

That’s notable because the roster around him is changing fast. Blake Coleman and Max Shabanov are coming in, while Mats Zuccarello, Marcus Johansson and others are on their way out. Minnesota still has bigger business hanging over the summer - re-signing Quinn Hughes and trading for a center - but the shape of the lineup is shifting in a way that opens the door for Brink.

Brink, a Minnetonka native, re-signed with the Wild at the start of free agency after arriving at the trade deadline last season in the deal that sent David Jiricek to the Philadelphia Flyers. His short stint in Minnesota didn’t light up the box score, but the underlying numbers were encouraging. In 13 games, he posted a 54.9% Fenwick-for rating and a 55.31% expected-goals percentage.

The production lagged behind the process. Brink finished with four points in those 13 regular-season games and then had a limited postseason role, picking up one assist in four appearances. Even so, the Wild were generally better with him on the ice, and the lack of scoring could easily be tied to poor finishing or just the randomness that comes with a small sample.

What matters now is that Minnesota kept investing in him. The team spent assets to get him at the deadline, then doubled down by building its offseason in a way that suggests it sees more coming.

The departures help explain why. Zuccarello and Johansson leave behind playmaking, vision and hockey IQ - the exact kind of traits Brink brings. Elite Prospects’ scouting report on the winger calls his “hockey sense is impressive; he is a gifted playmaker and can find the back of the net too.”

That playmaking showed up in Philadelphia last season. Brink had 29 assists in 79 games for the Flyers in 2024-25, and he did it while averaging 14:50 of ice time. That works out to 1.49 assists per 60 minutes, a rate that lines up with Zuccarello’s recent seasons as Minnesota’s top setup man.

Brink also has some finishing touch. His draft-year scouting report points to his vision and deceptively strong wrist shot, and he has scored more than .6 goals per 60 in every NHL season he’s played. If he gets back to that level in 2026-27, the numbers could jump quickly.

The roster, as it stands, gives him a real shot to do it. It’s too soon to lock in a lineup, but Brink is in the mix for a top-six role.

Last season, Minnesota’s top-nine right-wing group included Matt Boldy, Zuccarello and Vladimir Tarasenko. Boldy remains, but Zuccarello and Tarasenko are gone.

Shabanov is the new name in the mix, and he looks like Brink’s main competition behind Boldy for the second right-wing spot. He brings some intriguing qualities of his own, but he has only 44 NHL games under his belt. At 5-foot-9 like Brink, Shabanov stands out more for his defensive reliability, which could make him a better fit in a third-line role, especially with Minnesota’s preference for defensive skill in its bottom six.

That leaves Brink and Shabanov fighting for the chance to skate with the Wild’s top forwards, whether that’s Kirill Kaprizov, Blake Coleman or a possible new top center. If Brink wins that job, the skill set is there for him to make it count.

His new deal also gave Minnesota some flexibility. Brink took a short-term contract for less than he was projected to make as a restricted free agent, and that move gave him a chance to earn a larger role. Based on how the Wild have handled the offseason, they seem convinced he can take it.

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