The Minnesota Wild’s most successful deals are predominantly uninspiring short-term bridges (at least until recently), struggling to hit home runs when attempting to swing for longer term. But that’s not for a lack of trying. Chuck Fletcher, GM for 9 seasons, was not shy to swing for the fences, but would suffer some painful strikeouts (especially between 2012-2014). Chuck’s most famous strikeouts were Zach Parise and Ryan Suter, who each inked a massive 13-year treaty right before the NHL forced new rules that would make that type of deal illegal.
On the bright side, the arrival of Parise-Suter did generate 6 consecutive seasons of playoff appearances, but the team never made it past the 2nd round. Those two deals on this list makes them easily #1 in total term and salary allotted, as you can see on their rankings report card below. They were also #1 in total earned because Suter and Parise were good players that were not absurdly overpaid in most years they played under those treaties; it was the extra term at the end that was the team’s downfall. Resulting in a massive cap recapture penalty that hit them hard right in the prime Kaprizov window.
This was originally published in my 2020 book The Definitive Guide to Salary Mismanagement, and has now been updated with new contracts. I will continue to update each team’s list every summer going forward. The rule is that only active contracts can move up or down. Expired deals cannot pass each other (with a few exceptions). The book is still available on Amazon, though some of the stats on active contracts are now out of date. You may yet find it interesting because there were detailed stat graphics that you won't find here. One thing you won't find here are entry level contracts because they all come from the same cookie cutter and require less skill at the negotiating table.
1. Zach Parise
Adjusted Cap Hit: $108.3M, $8.3M (avg)
Value Returned: $56.8M, $4.4M (avg)
% Earned: 52%
"These signings will resonate well with our fans, with our players and with everybody associated with the team"
Zach Parise experienced a production decline from 82 PTS in 2010, down to 69 PTS in 2012 before becoming an unrestricted free agent. That did not cool demand for his services on the open market, as the New Jersey Devils advanced to the Stanley Cup finals in Parise’s last season with the team, thanks in large part to his outstanding play. The threat of another labour dispute and work stoppage hung over the league that summer, as Gary Bettman made it clear that the back-diving contract loophole would be closed in the next CBA. Parise and Ryan Suter were the hottest commodities available, and they teamed up to take their talents to Minnesota. Chuck Fletcher was willing to do whatever it took to land the duo.
Parise’s biggest problem was staying healthy, and has been productive in stretches, scoring at a 61-point pace over the first 8 seasons. The output sunk to its lowest point in year six at age 33 with 24 PTS in 42 GP, but he managed to bounce back with 28 goals and 61 PTS in 2019. Eventually the Wild bought him out and were hit with a massive cap recapture penalty that’s wildly unfair.
2. Ryan Suter
Adjusted Cap Hit: $108.3M, $8.3M (avg)
Value Returned: $87.9M, $6.8M (avg)
% Earned: 81%
"WE GOT ‘EM!"
There was a time in the summer of 2020 when I started to question whether or not the Ryan Suter contract was actually bad. He had mostly earned his cap hit for the first 8 seasons, and if the Wild could simply pull a Marian Hossa and figure out a way to stash him on LTIR when the back-dive started to avoid cap recapture, this might not be bad at all.
Unfortunately, that’s not what happened. Bill Guerin made the difficult decision of buying out both Parise and Suter in the same summer, levying a massive penalty against their salary cap. Suddenly this went from “there’s a way this might be okay” to full blown disaster. For whatever it’s worth, Suter was an effective defender who often led the NHL in ice time, in some seasons by a wide margin. He was a horse.
3. Jason Pominville
Adjusted Cap Hit: $31.8M, $6.4M (avg)
Value Returned: $17.5M, $3.5M (avg)
% Earned: 54%
“When you see a team that’s heading in that direction, I mean, why wouldn’t you want to be here? We’re fortunate to get it done, and hopefully we can add some more pieces to the puzzle to make it even better.”
The Minnesota Wild paid a hefty price to acquire Jason Pominville from the Buffalo Sabres with 1 year remaining until he was due to become UFA, giving up Johan Larsson, a prospect, plus 1st and 2nd round picks. Jason never made it to market with Fletcher locking him into this extension months early, enticing him to stay by offering a generous 5-year term after Jason’s 30th birthday.
Pommer finished that season strong, even helping the Wild with 9 PTS in 13 playoff games. Year one of the contract saw a dip in his production, but still fell within an acceptable range, helping them win a playoff series. Afterwards is when the downturn started, at age 32 when he scored 36 PTS in 75 GP. By year four the Wild decided they’d had enough, dumping him back on the Sabres, where Pominville bottomed out and his career ended. These are the pitfalls of giving a 5-year contract to a 31-year-old player.
4. Nick Schultz
Adjusted Cap Hit: $28.9M, $4.8M (avg)
Value Returned: $14.7M, $2.4M (avg)
% Earned: 50%
"He's been steady. He's been solid for us. He's been growing as a player, too. He's been playing much better"
Nick Schultz had never exceeded 15 PTS in a season when he signed this extension, a few months before he was set to become an unrestricted free agent. If Doug Risebrough wanted to retain the defenseman, he’d be forced to pay a UFA price, I’m just not convinced there was another team willing to go this high for this long.
There were no illusions of Schultz being an offensive player, yet he was compensated as though he scored 35 PTS. The first 3 years brought zero playoff games to Minnesota, prompting a shake-up that shipped Schultz off to Edmonton for Tom Gilbert. The Oilers later flipped him to Columbus for a 5th round pick. Schultz was -54 over the duration of this deal. His next contract would be for a fraction of this price.
5. Mark Parrish
Adjusted Cap Hit: $21.0M, $4.2M (avg)
Value Returned: $7.9M, $1.6M (avg)
% Earned: 38%
"Make no mistake, our goal is to bring a championship to Minnesota"
Mark Parrish was a Minnesota boy who played at St. Cloud State. When he made his first foray into unrestricted free agency at age 29, he decided to make the journey home, accepting a 5-year deal on July 1st. Parrish had peaked at 60 PTS in 2002, but otherwise never topped 50 PTS in his career, scoring 49 PTS in 76 GP before reaching the open market.
If they held a homecoming parade to celebrate his triumphant return to Minnesota, that would have been the high point of this entire experience. The trend-line took a sharp downward turn right out of the starting block. Parrish saw his deployment plunge immediately upon arrival, dropping to 14.3 minutes per game from the 18.5 he played the previous season. He scored 39 PTS in year one, 30 PTS in year two, after which the Wild bought out the remaining 3 years.
6. Thomas Vanek
Adjusted Cap Hit: $22.9M, $7.6M (avg)
Value Returned: $10.2M, $3.4M (avg)
% Earned: 44%
"It's beyond my wildest dreams"
While Thomas Vanek was unquestionably overpaid on the infamous Kevin Lowe offer sheet, he still scored 209 goals over those 7 years. There was still demand for what he provided, mostly goals. When he was traded to the Islanders as a rental in 2014, he reportedly turned down a 7-year $50M contract offer from Garth Snow, citing concern about their arena situation (and saving Garth Snow from a terrible mistake). Vanek became an unrestricted free agent for the first time at age 30 after scoring 68 PTS in 78 GP. When July 1st came to pass, Vanek signed for 3 years $19.5M, a full $30M less than Snow’s offer. Minnesota was offering a similar salary, but only on a 3-year term.
Hard to say for certain whether or not Vanek received a higher offer on July 1st, or whether it was just “beyond my wildest dreams” to play in Minnesota. It’s entirely plausible that he exaggerated how badly he wanted to join the Wild so that he could justify to himself walking away from $30M. Granted, he already had a pile of money in his bank account at this stage, so it’s at least reasonably plausible that money was not the deciding factor.
Chuck Fletcher gambled that the Austrian would be able to maintain a 30-goal, 70-point type of production level for at least a few more seasons, and he was mistaken. The depreciation began on day one, dropping down to 41 PTS in 74 GP by year two, after which the final year was bought out. This certainly wasn’t the end of the road for the sniper, as he still had productive visits to Vancouver and Detroit in his future.
7. Niklas Backstrom
Adjusted Cap Hit: $12.8M, $4.3M (avg)
Value Returned: $2.4M, $.81M (avg)
% Earned: 19%
“Hopefully, this isn’t the last contract he signs with us.”
Niklas Backstrom had already passed his 35th birthday when Chuck Fletcher decided to give him a 3-year extension, days before he could have become UFA. Chuck should have let him walk. Each year of this contract became the new worst season of Backstrom’s NHL career, as he became a below average, over-priced back-up goalie.
In 3 seasons he played just 44 games with 12 Wins, 20 losses, a 3.06 GAA, .893 SV%, and a -24 goals allowed below average. By year three the Finn was traded to Calgary in a mutual salary dump for David Jones. When this concluded, Backstrom returned home to play in the Finnish Elite League.
8. Martin Havlat
Adjusted Cap Hit: $39.9M, $6.7M (avg)
Value Returned: $20.9M, $3.5M (avg)
% Earned: 52%
"He is a terrific two-way player"
Martin Havlat struggled to stay healthy after the 2005 lockout, only playing 18, 56, and 35 games per season over a 3-year span. The good news for Marty was that he played a full 81 games in 2009 before becoming an unrestricted free agent, scoring 77 PTS, earning himself a lucrative long-term deal. The bad news, he never again came close to 77 PTS.
The first 2 years in Minnesota were quasi-decent, scoring above a 60-point pace, playing over 70 games both seasons. That’s when Chuck Fletcher decided to ship Havlat off to San Jose for Danny Heatley, a few months after Marty’s 30th birthday. It was not until Havlat arrived in San Jose that this investment took a dark turn. Over 3 years in San Jose, the winger never scored more 37 PTS and never played more than 48 games in a season (overall he scored at a 43-point pace in California).
Doug Wilson decided to buy out the final year in 2014, which he might have done earlier had Marty not been injured the previous summer (hint: you can’t but out an injured player). While the Sharks did bear the brunt of Havlat’s demise, it wasn’t much better for the Wild, as Danny took a similar nose dive after his 30th birthday too.
9. Kim Johnsson
Adjusted Cap Hit: $31.5M, $7.9M (avg)
Value Returned: $21.0M, $5.3M (avg)
% Earned: 67%
"I don't look at it as a different approach. That's just what the plan is. I don't think I would do it any other way. ... I knew at some point, this was going to happen."
For 3 years before the 2005 lockout, Kim Johnsson was a minute-eating defenseman and consistent offensive contributor in the 10-goal, 40-point range. The Swede was on pace for similar numbers in 2006 before a concussion ended his season prematurely. The injury did not deter Doug Risebrough from getting his autograph on a big-ticket July 1st, shortly after Kim’s 30th birthday.
Johnsson wasn’t exactly “bad” in Minnesota, the problem was that they were paying him like an elite power play quarterback, which he no longer was. This was like giving $7.7M to a defenseman worth $5M. He would have been a useful player at the right price, but that fee was incorrect. The final kick in the ass was Chuck Fletcher deciding to trade Johnsson to the Chicago Blackhawks for Cam Barker. Problem was, he also threw Nick Leddy into the deal, who went on to a successful career while Barker was out of the league 3 years later. You can find Wild bloggers who rate his among the worst trades in franchise history.
10. Jason Zucker
Adjusted Cap Hit: $28.2M, $5.6M (avg)
Value Returned: $16.7M, $3.3M (avg)
% Earned: 59%
"We see Jason as being a big part of now and in the future."
Paul Fenton sined Jason Zucker to this 5-year treaty after a 33-goal, 64-point season. Given that stat line, Zucker was theoretically worth every penny. The problem was, he topped his previous career best be nearly 20 PTS and has not even come close to hitting that height again. Year one JZ was back to being a 40-point winger and Fenton’s ass got fired.
The new GM Bill Guerin shipped him off to Pittsburgh in his first year on the job, where the Pens must have hoped Crosby or Malkin could tap that upside. The answer was no. For the first 2 years in Pittsburgh, Zucker produced at half the rate of his pay grade despite the greatness all around him. Guerin deserves praise for being able to dump this deal on his old team for Calen Addison and a first round pick.
11. Kyle Brodziak
Adjusted Cap Hit: $10.8M, $3.6M (avg)
Value Returned: $5.7M, $1.9M (avg)
% Earned: 52%
“I’m happy to be part of the organization for a few more years and looking forward to it.”
Kyle Brodziak was having by far the best season of his career as he on a collision course with unrestricted free agency in 2012, peaking with perfect timing. Chuck Fletcher managed to get his autograph on an extension prior to the trade deadline. The Wild more than doubled Brodziak’s salary from his previous contract and were rewarded with about half as much production.
The center saw his ice time drop significantly in each of these three seasons while mostly scoring at a 20-point pace. The good news for Minnesota was that they made the playoffs each of these seasons, advancing to the 2nd round twice. Kyle’s final stat line (including playoffs) was 229 GP, 64 PTS, with a -29.
12. Manny Fernandez
Adjusted Cap Hit: $21.8M, $7.3M (avg)
Value Returned: $6.1M, $2.0M (avg)
% Earned: 28%
“I definitely have worked really hard in practice. I’ve tried to get my focus back, so we’ll see what that will lead to”
Manny Fernandez was sensational in 2006, finishing 5th in the NHL in goals saved above average during an offensive explosion courtesy of the obstruction crackdown. Unfortunately, he would never be nearly that good ever again. The term was relatively small, but the salary put him in the 10 highest paid goalies in the league.
In year one of this contract, Fernandez was supplanted by Niklas Backstrom as the team’s best goaltender. Still, his value was high enough that the Bruins were willing to trade a prospect and a 4th round draft pick to acquire the 32-year-old. He was never anything more than overpaid back-up for the Bruins.
13. Matt Cooke
Adjusted Cap Hit: $9.2M, $3.1M (avg)
Value Returned: $4.0M, $1.3M (avg)
% Earned: 42%
“I just think Matt is, to be honest with you, an ideal third-line left winger. For our team right now, we’re in the process of learning how to win, of how to become a better team. Players like Matt bring different dimensions. But he has become a really good two-way hockey player”
It’s hard to say what Chuck Fletcher saw in Matt Cooke that he felt warranted this much money and term. Cookie scored a career high 19 goals for the Pittsburgh Penguins in 2012 at age 33, scoring this contract one year later. If Chuck thought he was getting a 20-goal scorer, he miscalculated.
The cheap-shot artist scored 14 goals and 43 PTS in 124 games for the Minnesota Wild (including playoffs) before being bought out. 85% of contracts awarded to players of this age in the salary cap era have been 2 years or less. Had this just been a 1-year term, it would have been over-priced, but defensible. This marked the end of Matt Cooke’s professional career.
14. Jared Spurgeon
Adjusted Cap Hit: $53.5M, $7.6M (avg)
Value Returned: $31.7M, $4.5M (avg)
% Earned: 59%
“We love Jared. He's a homegrown guy. He's been here for his whole career and we want him to be here his whole career.”
The problem with including Jared Spurgeon’s current contract on this list is that it has not officially turned bad. Even at age 32 he’s still playing at the level of a $6M D-man. Two years into a 7-year contract, Spurgeon is more “overpaid” than “financial calamity”, but he raises a lot of red flags when I run the numbers into career modelling to project the remaining term. In my worst NHL contract polling in 2021 and 2022, Spurgeon solicited a significant number of votes, cracking the top 15 in 2021 when he scored at a 38-point pace.
He suffered an injury in 2022, but elevated his scoring rate to 50 PTS per 82 GP. He was demoted to the “I’ve got my eye on you” section of my 2022 worst contracts list. The jury is still out on how bad this is, it may climb the list in future years, or get dropped off completely. It’s not impossible for this type of defenseman to age well, but he eventually experienced some significant injury issues. That doesn’t bode well.
15. Niklas Backstrom
Adjusted Cap Hit: $33.4M, $8.3M (avg)
Value Returned: $16.6M, $4.1M (avg)
% Earned: 50%
"I have improved my game a lot during these two-and-a-half years here, and think I can be better in the future"
Niklas Backstrom was sensational in 2009, earning himself a Vezina Trophy nomination after posting 37 wins, a .923 SV% and 28 goals saved above average. In March of that season, Risebrough signed him to this 4-year extension a month after his 31st birthday. The following year, the Finnish gatekeeper went from substantially above average, to significantly below (.903 SV%, -13 goals allowed below average).
Backstrom’s games played total shrank each of these 4 seasons, splitting starting duties by year three while he was the 5th highest paid goalie in the league. While he did rebound from a bad 1st year to finish with a .911 SV% over the whole span of the deal, he was overpaid by about $3.5M per season (adjusted for cap inflation), like paying $8M for a goalie worth $4.5M. Maybe not terrible, but not good either.
16. Nino Niederreiter
Adjusted Cap Hit: $27.5M, $5.5M (avg)
Value Returned: $18.9M, $3.8M (avg)
% Earned: 68%
"There's always been stretches in the season where I don't find the score sheet, and that's something I definitely want and need to improve on.”
Many people forget that before Nino Niederreiter was playing duck-duck-goose with a bunch of assholes in Carolina, the Swiss winger was under-performing his new contract in Minnesota. Niederreiter surged to a career high 57 PTS in 2017 before becoming a restricted free agent. He could have been UFA in 2 years, so if Chuck Fletcher wanted him any longer than that, he’d have to pay a UFA price, which is exactly what he did.
Nino played 114 games for the Wild on this new deal, scoring just 53 PTS. GM Chuck Fletcher was fired less than a year after the ink dried, and his predecessor later decided to ship Nino off to Carolina for fellow bad contract Victor Rask. While Nino’s first season in Carolina was a resounding success, the 2nd year was most certainly not, as he reverted to his Minnesota scoring pace with 29 PTS in 67 GP (despite playing most of his time with Aho and Teravainen before getting demoted from the top line). Rask on the other hand has played 66 games for the Wild, scoring 9 PTS. Ouch.
17. Marcus Foligno
Adjusted Cap Hit: $12.1M, $3.0M (avg)
Value Returned: $7.0M, $1.7M (avg)
% Earned: 57%
"We’ve been chasing Marcus Foligno for a couple seasons now and it’s a tough commodity to acquire that big, strong forward, and you look around the League and there’s very few players that have that size and physical presence that can contribute offensively."
Chuck Fletcher’s job security was likely already in jeopardy when he made the bold decision to trade Jason Pominville and Marco Scandella for Tyler Ennis and Marcus Foligno. Yes, Pominville was very much overpaid and the Wild needed salary relief, which was the impetus for this transaction. Fletcher decided to give Foligno a 4-year contract similar to the Matt Martin deal in Toronto one year earlier. Chuck was fired a few months later.
In year one Foligno averaged under 11 minutes of ice time per game, putting up just 23 PTS, while missing games as a healthy scratch. Marcus did have a quasi-decent season in year three, getting close to 15 minutes of average ice time and scoring at a 35-point pace.
18. Marco Scandella
Adjusted Cap Hit: $22.0M, $4.4M (avg)
Value Returned: $13.9M, $2.8M (avg)
% Earned: 62%
Marco Scandella was a serviceable defenseman who averaged 21.7 minutes per game the season he signed his extension, and received a fair price relative to his stat line. It was the stat line that proved unsustainable, as his deployment began a downward trend. You never like giving a pay raise to a player you’re going to use less often in future seasons. After 3 seasons Minnesota traded him to Buffalo in a mutual salary dump (that I think both sides hoped would revitalize the players involved). While Scandella did get a big usage bump his first season in Buffalo, he dropped below 18 minutes for the last two years of this ticket, which was unacceptable at that pay grade.
19. Pierre-Marc Bouchard
Adjusted Cap Hit: $28.3M, $5.7M (avg)
Value Returned: $13.1M, $2.6M (avg)
% Earned: 46%
Pierre-Marc Bouchard was a young gun on the rise in 2008, having logged 3 injury free seasons averaging near 60 PTS. This investment made perfect sense within the context it was signed, near the price his stat line warranted. Had the upward trajectory continued, it likely would have been on their best contract list. Things were looking good until he suffered a concussion near the end of year one and only played one game in year two. He was never quite the same player again. This would have been higher on the list if not for the injury issue, so it does get a partial exemption and honorable mention.
20. Mikko Koivu
Adjusted Cap Hit: $11.4M, $5.7M (avg)
Value Returned: $5.3M, $2.6M (avg)
% Earned: 46%
Mikko Koivu had a celebrated tenure as captain of the Minnesota Wild, but by age 35, the offense was starting to dry up. The former 70-point player was down to 45 PTS by age 34. The price would not have been egregious had he stayed at 45 PTS for these two seasons, but alas Father Time took a bigger pound of flesh by the second year, when Koivu declined down to 31 PTS per 82 GP. His even strength production was poor, and still received power play time to give his stats a slight boost.