
Could the Minnesota Wild Land Auston Matthews? Guerin’s Odds, Assets and Alternate Targets
If Auston Matthews ever hit the open market, would the Minnesota Wild be in the conversation? The short answer from The Athletic’s Michael Russo: absolutely — Bill Guerin would be “in on that” — but the longer answer is complicated. Minnesota has made it clear the franchise wants a bona fide top-line center, but asset constraints after recent moves make a Matthews blockbuster a steep climb.
Auston Matthews — Prediction, fit, implications Prediction: Wild would court Matthews but likely fall short unless Toronto lowered demands or Matthews limited destinations. Context / analysis: Russo stressed that Guerin would pursue Matthews “if Auston ever went to market.” The sticking point isn’t desire; it’s inventory. Any Matthews trade will carry a Quinn Hughes–style template: premium prospects, multiple firsts and blue-chip pieces. Minnesota no longer has the same depth of high-end prospects and picks after recent transactions, which limits its bargaining power. Team implications: Landing Matthews would instantly solve Minnesota’s 25–26 year search for a No. 1 center, reshaping the top six and forcing long-term cap and roster adjustments. Realistically, a trade would require the Wild to hand over cornerstone prospects (names Russo floated as possible chips include Jesper Wallstedt and Daniil Yurov) and multiple selections — a brutal price for a team already thinned in draft capital.
Vincent Trocheck — Prediction, fit, implications Prediction: The most realistic short-term target; Wild have genuine shot. Context / analysis: Russo noted Minnesota “went hard” on Trocheck at the deadline and that his name will resurface. Trocheck offers a rugged top-six pivot who can slot immediately into a scoring role without the astronomical cost of Matthews. Team implications: Acquiring Trocheck would be an impactful but manageable upgrade, preserving more prospect depth and draft currency while improving 5-on-5 driving and faceoff reliability.
Robert Thomas — Prediction, fit, implications Prediction: The Wild would pursue if available; competition would be intense. Context / analysis: A creative playmaker with top-six upside, Thomas represents an intermediate option between Trocheck and Matthews. Russo believes Guerin “went hard” on Thomas in the past, which makes sense given Minnesota’s need for a playmaking center. Team implications: Thomas would change the Wild’s offensive structure and pair well with established wingers, but cost would still be significant.
Peripheral assets and prospects The conversation named a raft of prospects the Wild could consider moving: Liam Ohgren, Zeev Buium, Marco Rossi, Marat Khusnutdinov, Jesper Wallstedt, Daniil Yurov and Charlie Stramel. Russo lamented the Khusnutdinov move in part because it removed an attractive trade chip; Minnesota may now have to part with goaltending prospect Wallstedt or Yurov to meet a contender’s asking price.
Market trends, turning points and trade themes
- Template trades (big prospect + first-round pick) raise the bar for suitors.
- Teams with recent heavy spend or depleted prospect pools — like Minnesota — face tougher odds in an active free-trade market.
- Deadline attempts matter: Minnesota’s aggressive, but unsuccessful, deadline moves show willingness; summer is when Guerin is likeliest to act.
Future outlook Guerin wants to make a splash, and the Wild will be a presence whenever elite centers are available. Matthews remains a long-shot target given the cost, but Trocheck and Thomas present realistic upgrade paths. Expect Minnesota to be on every top-line center’s rumor sheet this offseason — it’s just a question of what the Wild are willing to sacrifice to finally secure their No. 1 pivot.
Sarah Chen
International hockey correspondent specializing in European leagues and Olympic hockey coverage.