The Minnesota Wild have already made noise this offseason, but for now the focus shifts back to what happened on the ice last year - and that brings captain Jared Spurgeon into the spotlight.
Spurgeon’s season was exactly what Wild fans have come to expect in one way and a little quieter in another. The veteran defenseman doesn’t live for flash, and his numbers reflected that.
He finished with six goals and 16 assists for 22 points in 79 games, a step down from the 25 assists he posted in 66 games the year before. The offense wasn’t there in the same way, but that was never the whole story with him.
What stood out more was the way he handled the defensive side of the job. Spurgeon piled up 82 hits, his highest total since he had 91 in 82 games during the 2018-19 season, and he finished second among Wild defensemen with 137 blocked shots, behind only Brock Faber.
That kind of workload is part of why he remains so valuable. Even with his career likely moving toward the back end, he still gave Minnesota steady play on the blue line and managed to stay in the lineup for almost a full season, something that hasn’t always been easy for him.
That balance led to an A- for the regular season. The grade wasn’t higher because the Wild could have used more from him offensively. It wasn’t lower because he delivered where it mattered most: defense, physicality, and reliability.
The playoffs followed a similar script. Minnesota got past the Dallas Stars before running into trouble against the Colorado Avalanche, and Spurgeon appeared in all 11 games.
He finished with one assist, coming against Dallas, but his impact showed up in other ways. He recorded 14 hits and 22 blocked shots, continuing to throw himself into the hard minutes and the dirty work.
“Yeah, I think honestly you see how hard it is. But I think you go through it, and like I said, you play a great series against Dallas at the start and obviously come up against another great team in Colorado.
You just see how hard it is and the little things that you need to do to get to that next level. I think we’re close, but obviously, like I said, we’re not there yet, and we’re not the last ones standing,” Spurgeon said to the media during his end-of-season interview when asked about what was learned from the postseason loss.
That postseason effort earned him the same mark as his regular season: an A-. The offense dipped, but the defensive value stayed steady, and that’s what kept his grade strong.
Spurgeon’s future is still ahead of him, at least for now. He said, “I haven’t even thought about it at all.
Honestly, you go through the year, and you just are focused on the end goal. I have one year left in the contract and just right now focused on going through the summer training, getting back, but that hasn’t crossed my mind,” when asked about what comes next.
For the Wild, the hope is simple: one more healthy season from their captain, and maybe a deeper playoff run to go with it. He may not fill the highlight reel, but he still fills an important role.
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Pickards fit will be judged as much by context as by raw numbers, because last season in Edmonton was rough and the Oilers team defense did him few favors. Minnesota is hoping for a cleaner environment and a steadier workload, which could make him look more like the dependable stopgap he has been at his best. The larger concern is what happens once Gustavsson is healthy again, since the Wild still have to sort out how this goalie picture looks beyond the short term. [Read more 🡒]
