ST. PAUL, Minn. — There were many years in Minnesota Wild history when assembling a list of their top 10 players would have been a breeze.
That was the biggest challenge this
The downside to the roster depth the Wild have built has arrived this week in the form of the NHL expansion draft, which will rob them of a valuable player on Wednesday night when the Vegas Golden Knights construct their inaugural team with one player from each of the other 30 clubs.
With
"They paid a large expansion fee, and the rules are set up that they're going to get some tremendous assets out of this process, as they should," Wild general manager Chuck Fletcher said. He added: "It's actually, I think, a compliment to our organization that we have so many tough decisions."
Fletcher and his top lieutenant, Brent Flahr, quickly realized last summer their vulnerability once the NHL revealed the expansion draft guidelines.
"We did the math very quickly, and we were like, 'We're going to lose a good player,'" Fletcher said last week, before the lists were submitted to the league .
The Wild chose the seven forwards (Charlie Coyle, Mikael Granlund, Mikko Koivu, Nino Niederreiter, Zach Parise, Jason Pominville and Jason Zucker), three
That left Martin Hanzal, Erik Haula, Jordan Schroeder, Eric Staal, Chris Stewart and Ryan White among the unprotected forwards who factored into the
"The good news is we can only lose one player. Sometimes at 3 in the morning when I wake up, I remind myself of that: 'You can lose only one player. Go back to sleep,'" Fletcher said. "But when you've drafted and developed a lot of these players, it is a bit frustrating, I'll admit that."
The Wild could work out a trade with the Golden Knights to get them to agree not to pick a particular unprotected player, but Vegas general manager George McPhee has made clear he's in it to win it . Without a first or second-round draft pick this year, the Wild would likely have to part with a player in that scenario, which would mean losing two of them instead of one.
Staal is a first-line
Dumba, despite a penchant for sloppy and inconsistent play, is just 22 and coming off a career season with 11 goals and 23 assists. He has one of the hardest shots on the team. The 27-year-old Scandella was one of the few bright spots during the first-round loss in the playoffs to the St. Louis Blues.
"I'm pretty confident I know how we'll look coming out of it," Fletcher said, "and that's still a heck of a hockey team."
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Dave Campbell, The Associated Press