- Wild center Mikko Koivu expects to be ready for training camp after undergoing surgery to repair a torn meniscus and ACL last season, reports Jessi Pierce of The Athletic (Twitter link). However, it’s likely that he will be limited during the preseason as a precaution. The 36-year-old is entering the final year of his contract which carries a $5.5MM cap hit and with his output dipping in recent years, it will be interesting to see if the 14-year veteran will get a chance to stay with the only NHL team he has ever known or if new GM Bill Guerin will opt to move on.
Wild Rumors
Jack LaFontaine Joins The University of Minnesota
Carolina Hurricanes prospect goalie Jack LaFontaine is back in the NCAA. The 21-year-old keeper has enrolled at the University of Minnesota and will play this season, the program announced. LaFontaine had been away from the college game for one year with the Penticton Vees of the BCHL, having previously spent two seasons with the Big Ten rival University of Michigan.
LaFontaine was a third-round pick of the Hurricanes back in 2016 out of the NAHL. While some considered the pick to be a reach, seeing as Fontaine had not been challenged at an elite level yet and was raw in terms of his skill development, Carolina was clearly happy to select a player with good size and athleticism who they could groom as a long-term project. LaFontaine jumped right into the college ranks after being drafted, but failed to take advantage of no clear starter in net for the Wolverines. In each of his two years, the young netminder posted a GAA over 3.33 in just eleven appearances. Seeking a fresh start, LaFontaine left Michigan and signed with Penticton. He was beyond impressive last season, recording a .923 save percentage and 2.19 GAA in 45 starts and earning the BCHL’s Top Goaltender honors.
Having re-asserted himself as a promising young goalie, LaFontaine is ready to give the NCAA another go. He has two years of eligibility remaining, after which he hopes to have proven himself to be a pro-caliber prospect. Much like when he began with the Wolverines, the Gophers net is wide open; all three goalies who made an appearance last season, including starter and recent Minnesota Wild signing Mat Robson, have departed. LaFontaine is the odds-on replacement, but he will have to hold off 20-year-old Jared Moe, a sixth-round pick of the Winnipeg Jets in 2018. If he can do so and can put up numbers similar to this past season in Penticton, perhaps the Hurricanes will come calling even sooner than two years from now.
Minnesota Wild Sign Joel Eriksson Ek
It’s hard to make a quicker first move than Bill Guerin just did. After officially being hired as the Minnesota Wild GM this afternoon, the team has already signed restricted free agent Joel Eriksson Ek to a two-year contract. The deal will carry an average annual value of $1,487,500 and totals $2.975MM. Jokes aside, assistant GM Tom Kurvers who had been operating as interim GM, had likely worked out this contract with Eriksson Ek. The young forward will still be a restricted free agent when the deal expires, though he will have arbitration rights.
Eriksson Ek, 22, has long had tantalizing potential without much production to show for it. The 20th overall pick in 2015 routinely flashes the ability to be a solid top-nine forward and key contributor for the Wild, but still only has 37 points in 148 career NHL games. During his short stints in the minor leagues—amazingly just 18 games over three years—he has produced at a point-per-game pace and looked like the best player on the ice. But as soon as he is under the bright lights of an NHL rink things haven’t quite clicked.
That’s not to say they can’t. The Swedish forward only turned 22 in January and still has plenty of time to develop into the type of versatile two-way center the Wild have been waiting for. In fact, under new GM Bill Guerin he may get an even larger opportunity to do just that. The team recently committed to Mats Zuccarello in free agency, but there very well may be a turn towards youth and the future if the new GM doesn’t believe they’re ready to contend as currently built. Eriksson Ek and fellow restricted free agent Kevin Fiala (who share the same agent) should be considered building blocks if the team wants to start a mini rebuild, or at least start taking responsibility away from aging veterans like Mikko Koivu, Zach Parise and Eric Staal.
Minnesota Wild Hire Bill Guerin
The search is over for the next Minnesota Wild GM. Michael Russo of The Athletic (subscription required) reports that the team has hired Bill Guerin, taking him away from the Pittsburgh Penguins where he served as assistant GM. The Wild fired Paul Fenton from the position in July after just 14 months on the job.
This will mark the second assistant GM that the Penguins have seen take over their own team in the last two years, after Jason Botterill was hired by the Buffalo Sabres in 2017. When Botterill departed, Guerin was given even more responsibility in the Penguins organization, most notably taking over as GM of the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins of the AHL.
Though he will not come with any experience as a GM of an NHL franchise, there was little doubt that Guerin was on the path towards running his own front office somewhere around the league. The 48-year old had a long and productive playing career that ended with the Penguins in 2010 and quickly transitioned into a front office role with the team, first as a development coach. His ascension up the ranks in Pittsburgh showed just how capable he was in his new career.
In Minnesota however, Guerin will be given a very different task than in Pittsburgh. He must try to rescue a ship that has taken on water over the last two years and start sailing it back in the right direction. The team still has some good young players and veteran talent but have seemed to waver between rebuilding and contending without accomplishing either. Fenton for instance was allowed to sign Mats Zuccarello to a five-year, $30MM deal just before being relieved of his duties, a deal that comes with quite a bit of risk for a club that found itself out of the playoff race last season.
The fact that the new GM is coming in just a few weeks from training camp makes it an even more difficult task, and one that is rarely seen around the NHL. What this means for head coach Bruce Boudreau and the rest of the front office is unclear, though Russo notes that Tom Kurvers who had been working as the interim GM is expected to stay on in some capacity.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images
Minnesota GM Search Down To Three
The Minnesota Wild seem to have narrowed their search down a bit as three names seem to have forced their way to the top. In his recent mailbag, The Athletic’s Michael Russo (subscription required) writes that it likely will come down to Pittsburgh Penguins assistant GM Bill Guerin, Montreal Canadiens assistant GM Scott Mellanby and former Philadelphia Flyers GM Ron Hextall.
Guerin continues to be the frontrunner as Wild owner Craig Leipold is enamored by Guerin’s stature and leadership, something that is of high priority after issues with previous GM Paul Fenton, who lasted just over a year with many issues surrounding his ability to lead. Guerin is believed to be a man who can not just lead a front office, but has the ability to affect the coaching staff and the players in a positive way, which Russo believes makes him the favorite. The only issue for the Wild is that they were hoping to get a general manager that already has experience as a GM, which Guerin doesn’t.
Hextall, who many thought was the favorite immediately when the job became available, is still in the mix. Russo writes that while there are rumors that many in Philadelphia were glad to see Hextall leave due to his lack of leadership, the scribe has interviewed quite a few people and believes that those complaints can be easily explained of justified, which might suggest that Hextall, who has the most experience as a general manager, might also make a good GM. However, if the team is worried about re-creating the same problem they had when Fenton was in charge, the team might opt to go in a different direction.
Mellanby could be the darkhorse, however. He has an impressive track record in Montreal and after interviewing on Wednesday, rumors are he impressed Leipold quite a bit. The only other longshot would be New Jersey’s Tom Fitzgerald, but after extensive interviewing with Minnesota a year ago, the Devils aren’t thrilled about allowing him to interview again and only allowed a 20-minute chat. There has been no further interviews with the idea that the only way it can hire Fitzgerald is if they just offer the job to him outright without further discussion, which seems unlikely.
Scott Mellanby Gets A Second Interview For GM Role
- Bill Guerin isn’t the only Minnesota GM candidate to get a second interview thus far. Fox Sports Midwest’s Andy Strickland reports (Twitter link) that Montreal assistant GM Scott Mellanby has also had a second interview with the Wild. Tom Kurvers, who is currently battling cancer, is currently serving as their interim GM but does not appear to be under consideration for the full-time role.
Latest On Minnesota’s GM Search
It has now been more than two weeks since the Wild surprisingly fired GM Paul Fenton after just one season at the helm. While the team is still in the stages of interviewing, Michael Russo of The Athletic reports (subscription required) that Bill Guerin has already had a second discussion with the team before some prospective candidates have even had their first. That suggests that the 48-year-old may be a frontrunner for the position.
While Guerin has never been an NHL GM before, he does have a strong base of experience to work on. He has been worked in several off-ice roles with Pittsburgh since 2011 ranging from a development coach to GM of AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton to assistant GM of the Penguins, a title he has held since 2014-15. He has worked under a pair of respected GMs in Ray Shero and Jim Rutherford so it’s fair to suggest that he might be ready for the challenge.
However, Minnesota went with a rookie in Fenton last time, one that team owner Craig Leipold had some familiarity with from their time in Nashville and that decision didn’t work out too well. Accordingly, some believe that the Wild may be better served with someone with some experience in an NHL GM role. With that in mind, Russo notes former Philadelphia GM Ron Hextall could also get a second look while former executives Mike Gillis and Brian Lawton have had brief discussions with the team so far. Former Boston and Edmonton GM Peter Chiarelli has also been linked to Minnesota’s search as was Carolina GM Don Waddell before he re-signed with Carolina.
Meanwhile, others that don’t have NHL GM experience that have garnered some level of consideration are believed to include New Jersey assistant GM Tom Fitzgerald, Los Angeles assistant GM Mike Futa, London Knights GM Mark Hunter, and Montreal assistant GM Scott Mellanby. NBC analyst Pierre McGuire, whose only assistant GM experience came with Hartford in 1993-94, is also believed to have had some discussions with the team though not a formal interview.
With training camps now less than a month away, it stands to reason that they’ll want to have someone in place well before that time. They still have to re-sign Kevin Fiala, a process that’s on hold at this point and there may be other opportunities for player movement closer to the start of training camp (and whenever some of the notable restricted free agents reach new deals). It looks like Guerin is a contender for the position although it also appears that the search is far from complete.
Kevin Fiala Negotiations Waiting On New GM
When Paul Fenton was fired a few weeks ago by the Minnesota Wild, not only did the team have to start an immediate (and perhaps desperate) search for a new general manager, but the rest of their offseason was put on hold. Assistant GM Tom Kurvers took over the day to day operations, but has only officially signed prospect Hunter Warner in that time. What does it mean for the team’s other restricted free agents? Well Kevin Fiala told reporters including Dan Rosen of NHL.com that he now just has to “see and wait” for the Wild to name a new GM before his negotiations can continue. Fenton and Fiala’s agent Claude Lemieux were working on a contract when the dismissal happened, meaning the young forward is now in a sort of limbo as he watches from afar.
Fiala has known Fenton for years going back to their time in the Nashville Predators organization. It was 2014 when the young forward was selected 11th overall, likely thanks at least in part to the then-assistant general manager who was known for his scouting abilities. Fenton, who was also GM of the Milwaukee Admirals of the AHL, then helped develop Fiala into the player he is today, the one that he went after at this year’s trade deadline. Fiala came to the Wild in exchange for Mikael Granlund and put up seven points in 19 games down the stretch. The 23-year old explained to Rosen what it meant to him when he heard the GM had been fired:
He’s a great person and he has had an impact on my life, not just my career. It was emotional on that day and a few days after, but at the end of the day it’s business. That maybe sounds stupid, but it is. For me right now it’s just focusing on the season.
There’s no doubt that Fiala has immense potential that has flashed at times throughout his young career, but the Swiss forward took a mild step backwards last season when he recorded just 39 points combined between the two clubs. Gone was the 23-goal campaign from 2017-18 and with it some leverage in contract negotiations. Whoever the Wild bring in as GM will likely not have the same connection to Fiala and will have to decide what kind of salary and term the team wants to commit.
With three full seasons under his belt Fiala has four years of restricted free agency remaining and could be arbitration eligible next summer. The Wild also have Joel Eriksson Ek to get signed, who is also coming off a rather disappointing season but still possesses lots of potential to become a key contributor for Minnesota.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images
Minnesota Not Given Permission To Interview Bill Zito
In June, the Columbus Blue Jackets promoted Bill Zito to senior vice president of hockey operations and associate general manager. It sounds like they don’t want to lose him from that position, as Michael Russo of The Athletic (subscription required) reports that the Minnesota Wild asked for permission to speak with Zito for their vacant GM position and were not granted it. Russo had previously reported the same regarding New York Rangers assistant GM Chris Drury.
Interestingly though, the Wild interviewed Zito for the job last summer before eventually going with Paul Fenton. Now that Fenton has been relieved of his duties just 14 months into his tenure, it seems as though they have missed their chance to hire the Columbus executive. Zito has been on the short list for several positions around the league over the last few years, including the Philadelphia Flyers job that eventually went to former Wild GM Chuck Fletcher and with the Seattle expansion team who eventually hired Ron Francis.
There’s good reason for the interest, as Zito has deep ties to the hockey world. Once one of the more powerful player agents in the league, Zito has experience negotiating contracts from both sides of the table. He has now been with the Blue Jackets since 2013, and took over as general manager of their AHL affiliate in 2015. In his first season running the Lake Erie (now Cleveland) Monsters the team won a Calder Cup. He also served as GM of Team USA at the 2018 World Championship, bringing home a bronze medal.
Don Waddell also obviously won’t be taking the Minnesota position after inking an extension with the Carolina Hurricanes today. Ron Hextall, Bill Guerin and Tom Fitzgerald are among the candidates previously linked to the Wild.
Minnesota Wild Sign Hunter Warner
The Minnesota Wild have signed restricted free agent Hunter Warner to a one-year two-way contract. The deal will carry a $700K salary in the NHL. Warner was not eligible for salary arbitration.
Warner, 23, was signed as an undrafted free agent out of the USHL in 2014 where he was a menace on defense. Racking up 125 penalty minutes in just 43 games for the Fargo Force, that physicality has continued through the rest of his junior career and into the minor leagues. Playing for the Iowa Wild the last few years Warner has totaled just 18 points in 165 games but was a core piece in 2018-19 when the team made the Calder Cup playoffs for the first time.
With Warner signed the Wild now have just three restricted free agents left to sign. At least two of them, Kevin Fiala and Joel Eriksson Ek are important pieces of the NHL roster and will hopefully find some common ground with the front office over the next month. That front office of course is without a leader at the moment after Paul Fenton’s early dismissal.