Joe Smith and Michael Russo wrote in The Athletic earlier Monday that not only does disgruntled winger Patrik Laine make sense for the Minnesota Wild, but the team kicked the tires on him at the 2024 NHL Draft.
Quite obviously, the major hurdle in bringing Laine to the ’State of Hockey’ is his $8.7M salary for the next two years with the Wild organization owning approximately $750k in cap space according to PuckPedia.
To make a trade work with the Columbus Blue Jackets, the general manager of the Wild, Bill Guerin would have to convince Don Waddell to eat some of Laine’s salary. Waddell has been adamant up to this point that he knows he will have to eat some of Laine’s salary for the next two years to facilitate a deal but is not interested in eating the full 50%.
Assuming that Guerin can convince Columbus to eat 50% of Laine’s contract for the next two years, Smith and Russo assert that forward Frederick Gaudreau and his $2.1M salary for the next four years will almost certainly head the other way.
Gaudreau performed very well under Blue Jackets’ head coach Dean Evason during his time with Milwaukee Admirals of the AHL and between 2021-23 with Minnesota. The Wild wouldn’t miss much in their lineup if Gaudreau were sent the other way especially with the team bringing in Yakov Trenin on a four-year pact earlier this summer.
This is when a potential deal gets tricky for the Wild. The team could deal out forward Marcus Johansson and defenseman Jon Merrill to make the money work but Minnesota’s depth may not be adequate to defend a three-for-one swap. Smith and Russo argue that the team could look to move goaltender Filip Gustavsson in the deal but his inclusion may cause too many problems for Columbus in the long run.
Minnesota may have too many internal complications to make a move for Laine with how their salary cap structure currently stands. There is no surefire bet that Laine would even be a significant upgrade for the team either. Between 2021-23, Laine scored 54 goals and 117 points in 129 games for the Blue Jackets but injuries and off-ice struggles limited him to only six goals and nine points in 18 games last year.
If Guerin can confirm that Laine is fully recovered and ready to participate, there may be more reason to get aggressive on a potential trade. However, unless Guerin can pull off one of the craftier trades in the last several years, it does not appear the Wild will be able to get the job done.