Four days after the blockbuster trade sending Quinn Hughes to Minnesota from Vancouver, the Wild's blue line gains elite playmaking talent. With an updated 18-9-5 record, they solidify playoff contention in the Central Division but face scrutiny over center depth.
In the deal—initially reported as Vancouver receiving forwards Marco Rossi and Liam Ohgren, defenseman Zeev Buium, and a 2026 first-round pick—the Wild addressed a key need for offensive defensemen. Hughes, the 2023-24 Norris Trophy winner with elite underlying metrics (2.90 xGF/60 at 5v5, 54.09% xGF% share since 2023-24), joins Jared Spurgeon, Jonas Brodin, and Brock Faber to elevate Minnesota's power play and even-strength attack.
Spurgeon provides reliability, Brodin excels two-way, and Faber contributes solidly, but none matched Hughes' dynamic skating and vision. This bolsters a defense already among the league's stronger units.
Concerns persist at center, however, with options like Joel Eriksson Ek (strong two-way but likely a No. 2 on contenders), promising Danila Yurov (not yet top-six ready), Ryan Hartman, and Nico Sturm (bottom-six depth). This lags behind rivals: Avalanche (Nathan MacKinnon, Brock Nelson, Jack Drury), Stars (Roope Hintz, Wyatt Johnston, Matt Duchene; note Tyler Seguin's ACL injury), and Golden Knights (Jack Eichel, Tomas Hertl, William Karlsson).
Elite wingers Kirill Kaprizov and Matt Boldy shine, but GM Bill Guerin must pursue a top-line center before the deadline. Trailing Colorado by 10 points, the Wild improved yet remain a step behind Western elites without center help, risking tough first-round foes like the Avalanche or Stars.