Wild Risk Repeating The Same Problem With Familiar Blue Line Fix

While a familiar face might return to the Minnesota Wild, their pursuit of Dylan Larkin and bolstering the blue line remain critical to overcoming their postseason shortcomings.

The Minnesota Wild have plenty on their summer agenda, and the biggest item remains clear: finding Dylan Larkin to fill the top-line center spot. But if last spring showed anything, it’s that the middle of the ice wasn’t the only problem. The blue line cracked, too.

Jonas Brodin’s absence for the entire second-round series against the Colorado Avalanche last spring sent Minnesota’s defensive pairings into disarray. Yet that issue barely registered in the run-up to free agency until The Athletic’s Michael Russo reported the Wild might circle back to Zach Bogosian.

“Guerin indicated the Wild want Zach Bogosian back, so it wouldn’t be surprising to see him signed soon,” Russo wrote.

There’s logic in that kind of move. Bogosian is a trusted voice in the room and handled his role well enough. But bringing him back would also leave Minnesota looking awfully similar on the back end, and that’s where the concern starts to sharpen.

Quinn Hughes and Brock Faber are set as the top defensive duo, but everything after that feels unsettled. Brodin and Jared Spurgeon used to anchor the Wild’s best pair, yet Brodin’s injury history and Spurgeon’s looming age - he’ll turn 37 next season - have both players surfacing in trade chatter.

The lower pairings bring even more uncertainty. Jake Middleton was on the ice for 13 of Colorado’s 20 goals with a goalie in net during the five-game playoff series, according to Dylan Loucks of The Hockey News. Daemon Hunt gave Minnesota a serviceable run on the second pair in that series, but John Hynes ultimately returned to Middleton late in Game 5, a decision that fed directly into the collapse and left more questions behind than answers.

Minnesota could simply roll the same defense back out there and hope last season’s success carries over. The Wild were one of the NHL’s best teams a year ago.

But there are warning signs all over the place. Filip Gustavsson is coming off hip surgery, and if Jesper Wallstedt is moved, the need to shore up the defense only grows.

The issue isn’t just performance, either. Brodin hasn’t played more than 62 games since appearing in 73 during the 2021-22 season.

Spurgeon, meanwhile, is an injury risk because of age and the usual wear-and-tear that comes with the sport. One blocked shot or one collision with the boards can change the math in a hurry.

With few NHL-ready prospects in the system and some of those pieces possibly heading out in trade, re-signing Bogosian looks like the kind of safety-first move that doesn’t cost much. He brought some value, finishing with two goals, six points and a plus-8 rating in 41 games.

Still, Minnesota can’t keep stacking older defensemen just because they’re familiar. The Wild need to get younger and bigger on the blue line, not simply pad it with another veteran.

Mario Ferraro is one free-agent possibility after posting seven goals, 23 points and a minus-1 rating in 82 games for the San Jose Sharks. Logan Stanley and Ryan Shea are also options, while Urho Vaakanainen could become a trade target if Minnesota decides to work the New York Rangers.

Cap space will shape whatever comes next, but doing nothing would be a miss for the front office. The blue line issue has been pushed into the background as free agency nears, but it’s one the Wild may need to tackle if they want to keep moving forward next season.

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