According to a team announcement, the Minnesota Wild have acquired defensive prospect David Jiříček and a 2025 fifth-round pick from the Columbus Blue Jackets. The Wild organization is sending back defenseman Daemon Hunt, a conditional 2025 first-round pick, Colorado’s 2026 third-round pick, Toronto’s 2026 fourth-round pick, and a 2027 second-round pick to Columbus.
It’s been a long time coming for the former sixth-overall pick of the 2022 NHL Draft. Jiříček will join the second organization of his very young career after several inconsistent years with the Blue Jackets. After scoring five goals and 11 points in 29 games for Czechia’s HC Plzeň, Jiříček was ranked as the fourth-best European skater and second-best defenseman by NHL Central Scouting before the 2022 NHL Draft.
Jiříček immediately came to the Blue Jackets organization upon being drafted, suiting up in 55 games for the AHL’s Cleveland Monsters. He impressed with six goals and 38 points in his rookie campaign in the AHL but unfortunately missed out on the league’s All-Rookie Team. Arguably Jiříček’s most impressive performance of the season came in the middle of the year during the 2023 IIHF World Junior Championship.
He scored three goals and seven points in seven games for Team Czechia while posting a +10 rating throughout the tournament. He was voted the best defenseman by the directorate and helped guide Czechia to the country’s first silver medal since 1985 when they shared a country with Slovakia.
Jiříček managed to debut in the NHL in the 2022-23 season but went scoreless over a brief four-game stretch. The following season allowed Jiříček his largest opportunity to make an impact with the Blue Jackets.
He scored one goal and 10 points over 43 games in Columbus last year. The organization kept him incredibly sheltered as the young defenseman only averaged 14:36 of ice time per game. Still, he showed flashes of being an elite two-way defenseman with a 92.4% on-ice save percentage in all situations which was especially good considering the Blue Jackets finished 31st in the NHL in goals-against per game.
Still, infrequent demotions and recalls by Columbus throughout the regular season prohibited Jiříček from gaining any traction for the Blue Jackets or Monsters. He finished the 2023-24 AHL season with seven goals and 19 assists in 29 games for Cleveland with another three goals and 11 points in 14 postseason contests.
The beginning of the 2024-25 season likely put the nail in the coffin for Jiříček’s future in Columbus. He cracked the team’s roster out of training camp but was hardly used by new head coach Dean Evason. He only suited up in six of the Blue Jackets’ first 18 games before being reassigned to the AHL on November 20th. His average ice time slipped even further with Jiříček only averaging 11:12 of ice time.
Jiříček will now join a Minnesota defense that projects to be one of the best in the league in a few years. The organization already deploys defensemen Brock Faber and Jared Spurgeon on the right side of the defense. Things look equally as impressive on the left side of the blue line with Jonas Brodin and recent draft pick Zeev Buium also projected in long-term roles.
The Wild’s already solid defense has helped them to a 15-4-4 record to start the 2024-25 NHL season making this year’s first-round pick expendable. Minnesota announced that the conditions on the first-round pick include top-five protection. The inclusion of a first-round pick was likely a bare minimum for the Blue Jackets organization despite this one likely falling outside of the lottery. The other three draft draft selections heading to Columbus give the organization eight for the 2026 NHL Draft and eight for the 2027 NHL Draft.
Hunt, reportedly the final part of the deal, is in a similar situation, albeit a lower profile, to that of Jiříček. He’ll be familiar with Evason after having played a handful of games for him last season but didn’t have any legitimate pathway to the NHL in Minnesota. He had been enjoying a quietly productive season with the AHL’s Iowa Wild tallying four assists in nine games.
Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman was the first to report the Wild were finalizing a deal for Jiříček.
TSN’s Pierre LeBrun was the first to report Hunt’s inclusion in the deal.
Daily Faceoff’s Frank Seravalli was the first to report a majority of the trade package.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.
Joe Carters walkoff
Theft
PyramidHeadcrab
If that pick isn’t someone else’s first I’mma be a bit salty.
MoneyBallJustWorks
it’s def not a 1st.
windmill_noise_causes_cancer
You’re nuts if you think they’re not getting a 1st back.
MoneyBallJustWorks
I stand corrected. it is a first and. a second. seems like an overpay
bigdaddyt
For a 5th overall pick? To a team that’s currently playing as 2nd best team in the standings so pick is looking to be in the bottom 5-10 of the draft. Ya that’s potentially a steal for a potential top paring RD for years to come
PyramidHeadcrab
A first, a second, a 4th and a 7D… Eh. Underwhelming return honestly. But who knows? Maybe he just wasn’t putting in the work off the ice. We will never know.
bottlesup
Don’t forget to add a 2026 3rd rounder for Columbus
FeeltheThunder
Columbus seems to have gotten a decent amount of assets for a player who hasn’t produced much in the NHL so far. Minnesota better hope the former 1st rounder Jiříček turns out to be worth the take. Granted, defensemen take around 200 NHL games to fully realize their true potential identity. Only time will tell how it plays out.
Zakis
Solid
slydevil
I think it may be a slight overpay for the wild, but I could be proven wrong in a few years.
I think where they won is in cost. They’re trying to get more payroll space in the future after all the years of being stuck near cap. Keeping kaprizof won’t be cheap.
uvmfiji
Weak draft
Doug Fistered
Columbus maximized value here. Anybody thinking they didn’t get good value out of Jiricek is being ridiculous. They get a 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and a 4th for Jiricek who hasn’t proven anything, he could still be a bust- not even able to prove himself in Columbus, very unlikely he ever would, so trading away that untapped potential for all those assets is an amazing return