The Quinn Hughes trade rumor mill has come to an end. The Wild have acquired the blueliner from the Canucks in exchange for center Marco Rossi, defenseman Zeev Buium, winger Liam Ohgren, and a 2026 first-round pick. Both teams have announced the swap.
Dating back to the offseason, there had been speculation that a trade involving Hughes could happen at some point. The blueliner had talked about liking the idea of one day playing with his brothers, something Canucks president Jim Rutherford also referenced. To that end, the Devils were believed to have had discussions about the idea of making a move for him with those discussions resurfacing this week amid talks with several other suitors.
Minnesota was not among those known suitors but they have won the sweepstakes for Hughes, making a significant addition to their back end. The 26-year-old has been one of the top-scoring defensemen in the NHL in recent years and is only two seasons removed from winning the Norris Trophy as the NHL’s top blueliner while finishing third in voting for the award last season.
This season, Hughes has played in 26 games with Vancouver, picking up two goals and 21 assists while logging a career-high 27:26 of ice time per night. For his career, he checks in at just below the point-per-game mark with 61 goals and 371 helpers in 459 regular season games. He has produced at a similar rate in the postseason, notching two goals and 24 assists in 30 playoff contests from the Canucks’ playoff appearances in 2020 and 2024.
It’s an understatement to say that adding Hughes will be a significant addition to Minnesota’s back end. The team has leaned heavily on Brock Faber in the early going this season with veterans Jonas Brodin and Jared Spurgeon also logging over 20 minutes a night. That’s a solid foundation but a group that was lacking a legitimate number one defender. That’s now no longer the case with Hughes sliding in as that missing piece with Jacob Middleton (when healthy) also serving as a top-four-caliber piece.
Hughes has two seasons remaining on his contract with a team-friendly $7.85MM AAV. It’s plausible that he could double that when his contract expires and have a chance to be the highest-paid defenseman in the NHL. Interestingly enough, he’s going to a team that employs the highest-paid player in NHL history as of next season in winger Kirill Kaprizov.
Clearly, GM Bill Guerin, who is also the GM for Team USA at the upcoming Olympics, feels he will be able to make a strong pitch for Hughes to stick around for the long haul, even if it requires another record-setting contract to do so. Hughes will be eligible to sign a contract extension as of July 1st although Minnesota has received no assurances that he’ll do so, according to The Athletic’s Michael Russo (Twitter link). Notably, with new CBA restrictions on term and bonus structure kicking in next September, Minnesota will have about a 10-week window to try to lock Hughes up to an eight-year extension before the maximum length of a deal drops to seven seasons.
The Wild currently sit in third place in a hotly contested Central Division. They’re behind Colorado and Dallas, the top two teams in the NHL by a considerable margin while Winnipeg, who won the Presidents’ Trophy last season, is also in their division as well, though languishing as of late. With this move, an already difficult division gets a lot more difficult but the opportunity to add an elite defender to his group is an opportunity that Guerin clearly couldn’t pass up.
As for Vancouver, this is a situation they clearly didn’t want to be in on multiple fronts. For starters, the recent trade speculation was hardly ideal and it was recently acknowledged that it was a discussion point in the dressing room. Meanwhile, their preference certainly would have been to try to lock him up long-term but TSN’s Darren Dreger reports (Twitter link) that they’ve known for a while that he wouldn’t do so. However, considering that the Canucks sit dead last in the NHL standings with just 25 points in 31 games and are coming off missing the playoffs last season, a retool of some sorts was going to be on the horizon. Taking a step back would have lowered the chances of Hughes re-signing while moving him allowed for the potential to kick-start that roster restructuring.
There’s a strong case to make that Rutherford and GM Patrik Allvin have accomplished that with this trade. For starters, they bring in a highly-touted young defender in Buium who they hope can be an impact piece right away, particularly on the offensive front.
The 20-year-old was the 12th overall pick by Minnesota not even a year and a half ago. He signed his entry-level contract at the end of his college season back in April and made his NHL debut in the playoffs, picking up an assist in four games. Buium has been a regular on the back end for the Wild this year, playing in 31 games where he has put up three goals and 11 assists in 18:28 of playing time per game. He should have a chance to play a little higher on the depth chart with the Canucks with a regular spot in the top four behind Filip Hronek, Marcus Pettersson, and Tyler Myers being a legitimate possibility. With a longer-term lens, he could be a potential long-term partner with fellow rookie Tom Willander.
Buium is signed on his entry-level contract through the 2026-27 campaign with a cap hit of $967K plus an additional $1MM in potential ’A’ bonuses in each year. If he progresses as expected, his second contract could wind up eclipsing what Hughes is making now while giving them a foundational blueliner, albeit not a franchise one like Hughes is. Buium is under team control through the 2032-33 season.
As for Rossi, he helps fill a need that the Canucks have had for quite some time as a legitimate second-line center to play behind Elias Pettersson. J.T. Miller and Bo Horvat were on the roster is past years but both were ultimately moved out and with due respect to Filip Chytil who can be a quality player when healthy, Vancouver lost a lot of impact depth down the middle with those swaps. Rossi isn’t at the level of Miller or Horvat but he will be a substantial upgrade on their current depth options, a group headlined by recent UFA signing David Kampf.
The 24-year-old was the ninth pick back in the 2020 draft class. Rossi battled myocarditis not long after being selected which stalled his development although he bounced back without any long-term concerns. He had a solid showing in 2023-24 with 40 points in 82 games and then was considerably more productive last season, tallying 24 goals and 36 assists in 82 regular season games while playing over 18 minutes per night. However, his ice time dropped in the playoffs to just 11 minutes per game and he remained a subject of consistent trade speculation throughout the summer with the two sides well apart on contract talks for a considerable amount of time.
Eventually, the parties worked out a three-year, $15MM bridge deal in late August. He will remain under team control at its expiration for one more year but will be owed a $6MM qualifying offer with salary arbitration rights. Meanwhile, Rossi has produced at a similar level this season, picking up four goals and nine assists in 17 games. However, he has missed the last four weeks with a lower-body injury although he took part in Minnesota’s morning skate on Thursday which suggests he’s getting closer to returning. With Pettersson out of the lineup himself, it’s possible that Rossi could jump right into a top-line role depending on when he returns. He and Braeden Cootes – a 2025 first-round pick – now give Vancouver some much-needed longer-term stability behind Pettersson down the middle.
As for Ohgren, he’s an intriguing addition to this swap. The 21-year-old was a first-round pick by the Wild in 2022, going 19th overall. However, his development hasn’t gone quite as planned to this point.
Ohgren had his first full season in North America in 2024-25 and was quite productive with AHL Iowa, amassing 19 goals and 18 assists in 41 games, more than solid production for a rookie. But while that yielded some opportunities with Minnesota, he wasn’t able to produce very much, being limited to just two goals and three assists in 24 games. This season, he’s still looking for his first point after being held off the scoresheet in his first 18 outings while logging just 9:32 per night. Ohgren briefly saw some action with Iowa as well, notching two goals and three helpers in nine games.
That made Ohgren a legitimate change-of-scenery candidate. He should have an opportunity to play a little higher up the depth chart at some point with Vancouver and if he can turn into a productive secondary scorer, he’s someone who can be a useful piece for them for a while. In the second season of his entry-level deal, Ohgren has a cap hit of $887K along with $500K in ’A’ bonuses per year. He’s under club control through the 2030-31 campaign.
Between these players and a first-round pick, Vancouver has added what they hope will be several core players to help them down the road. If all goes well, it will result in them taking a step back to take a couple of steps forward down the road.
From a salary cap perspective, Rick Dhaliwal of CHEK and The Athletic mentions (Twitter link) that there is no salary cap retention on any players in the swap. PuckPedia notes that the Wild are adding a net cap charge of just under $997K over a full season. Using their numbers, that means that Minnesota is now projected to finish the year around $2.1MM below the cap ceiling, meaning that Guerin still has some financial flexibility to try to add to his roster later in the year. Meanwhile, Vancouver is still operating in LTIR although they should be able to dip below that threshold before too long, allowing them to bank some cap space to put toward some of the bonuses for their entry-level players.
Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman was the first to report that Hughes was being traded to the Wild. Dreger was the first with the full trade return.
Photos courtesy of Sergei Belski and Nick Wosika-Imagn Images.
There we go.
Faber or Rossi have to be coming back in the deal
What?! Whoa did not see that coming! I gotta think Jiricek but I hope the wild woulda got Buium in return along with Rossi and a 1st
well they did get Buium Rossi a 1st and Ohgren
good call. Rossi was basically a given but getting essentially 4 first rounders is good work by the FO
Wow good move for van. Basically 4 1st round picks for a guy who was gone
If Hughes’s word is bond (that he doesn’t wanna step on Luke’s toes) and the Wild resign him, it’s a win for the Wild. Hughes is a top 10 player in the game. None of those four guys will ever touch him. Now, if they just get a year-and-a-half of Hughes, that’s another story.
well theyre compete window is now, Kaprizov’s cap hit will cripple the team for a couple seasons til the cap gets high enough a year or so after Quinn leaves
The actual thing is if he was willing to sign in Van. If he really was the ya bad deal but if not then this is good for Van if Rossi can be a 2C and Zev gets the top PP it fills a lot of holes for the Canucks
too much speculation there, and the ominous comments by Rutherford hard not to believe it, plus Vancouver having a bad year definitely wouldn’t be convincing for Quinn to think a Cup window is in the near future, Vancouver played it safe trading him now and perhaps getting an extra piece than waiting til next year
I like the return for Vancouver. I love the lineup Minnesota has built. This is a solid hockey trade all around.
What a f joke! This management team needs to be fired!
which one you talking about?
Hey it could’ve worse! Tell you what how bout you trade your management to the Sabres for theirs! I’m sure you’ll love Kevyn Adams LMFAO!
You trade a player like Hughes for a player that will put up a 100 plus points in you line up and make a difference…this trade brings nothing like that..he is a franchise player and got a return of a bag of pucks..yes my opinion..
In a yr and 1/2, you lose Hughes for nothing!
If you wait and trade next yr, you don’t get this package either!!
You got that right! This could get Guerin FIRED! The Wild aren’t any closer to the Stanley Cup after this blockbuster!
Vancouver got a major haul in this deal and it might turnout in the long-term that they got the better end of the deal. Minnesota gets Hughes for the remainder of his contract which ends in 2028 but if he leaves afterwards, Minnesota is left with nothing unless Hughes gave them word he would do an extension. It’s a bit of a gamble for Minnesota.
holy. Minnesota just have up a bag, but Hughes is a special player. This is a pretty split deal, but you make this everyday if you’re the Canucks
This was the best case scenario for a guy who was checking out after next season, surprised about the destination but this is a great haul
Vancouver absolutely needed a franchise center, but they didn’t get one. I guess the plan is to tank for the rest of the year to draft him.
Great haul for Vancouver. Minnesota better win the Cup or extend him or they’ll see a rebuild like never before if they lose Hughes and have that Kaprizov albatross
Underwhelmed. Not one acquired could project at their best as the best in that position for Vancouver. As per usual, the true real possible deciding piece – the draft pick – will be likely flipped for more mediocre gristle. Sad day in Canuckville when the pupil screws over the teacher…they couldn’t get another pick for the 2nd best Dman in the league?
Holy schnikies!! Huge add for Billy Guerin!
Holy jumpin
@Jaxteller – You said it, Panger! 😊
I think the most likely outcome is that both teams lose this trade.
The Wild already needed a center. Now they need two. Hughes is slick but can he win when it matters? Not sold on that.
Now IF they (somehow) find some help at C without gutting the rest of an already thinnish roster, they could make some noise with their elite goaltending. Kind of a big IF…AND they have to get through the Avs (Makar is much better than Hughes and the Wild have nothing to sniff McKinnon).
At first glance I liked the deal for Jimmy and VAN…BUT…while Rossi is a good player…pairing all 5’9 (if that) of him with Pettersson and Chytil is a soft, small group. Maybe they shop EP, so be it.
The Canucks IF is Buium. He’s been underwheling. Is this a case of the Wild just not being able to wait for him because the rest of the team is just so ready to win? Not really. So, the question is…have the Wild soured on him and are dumping him off before the rest of league sees it, too?
If so, Canucks will have little to show for it. But, IF Buium becomes what he was supposed to be (the next Hughes, really) even if it takes a while, then VAN did well today.
This blockbuster PROVES that the self proclaimed insiders don’t have any insight all, Plain, And simple!
Wild were doing OK without Rossi, the wild card is Buium, but he will get to being a top pairing guy. Ohgren appears to be a throw-in, and the 1st could be a good lottery ticket. Arvin could use that lottery ticket to acquire someone else that is needed, probably at the draft.
glad briere passed on hughes .. tells me there was no way he was signing an extension with the flyers .. good luck getting that done Canucks
Holy overpay Batman
This is a great move by the Canucks. Buium is a star in the making and Hughes was going to leave anyway. And if Hughes walks his way to NJ in two years, Guerin will once again look like a fool.
Think he’s just swinging for a cup. Kinda makes sense for 2 years. Doesnt work often but when it works it looks genius. I think VAN did well here all things considered.
@Brian — “The Quinn Hughes trade rumor mill has come to an end.” Great timing, Brian! That means we’ll be discussing the impending Olympics’ arena debacle for a couple more months. At least MIN is positioned for a better chance at a playoff spot, as long as John Hynes doesn’t get in his own way.