Wild Goalie Filip Gustavsson to Have Hip Surgery, Training Camp Readiness in Question

AAS Editorial Team

Wild Goalie Filip Gustavsson to Have Hip Surgery, Training Camp Readiness in Question

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Minnesota Wild goalie Filip Gustavsson will have offseason surgery on his hip, putting his readiness for the beginning of training camp in question.

Wild general manager Bill Guerin said Monday the procedure would take place "as soon as possible" to repair damage from overall wear and tear, not in response to any specific injury that occurred during the playoffs.

Performance Struggles Led to Bench Time

Gustavsson slumped down the stretch of the regular season and was benched for the start of the playoffs when rookie Jesper Wallstedt took over as the No. 1 goalie.

Gustavsson made one postseason start, a 5-2 loss at Colorado in Game 2 of the second-round NHL playoff series. The Avalanche ousted the Wild in five games.

Contract Details

Gustavsson signed a five-year, $34 million contract extension last October that kicks in with the 2026-27 season and carries a full no-trade clause for the first two years.

He went 28-15-6 in 49 starts during the regular season with a 2.69 goals-against average, a .903 save percentage and four shutouts in his fourth year with the Wild.

Rookie Wallstedt Emerges

Wallstedt was 18-9-6 in 33 starts with a 2.61 goals-against average, a .915 save percentage and four shutouts. During the playoffs, he won five of 10 starts, gave up three or fewer goals seven times, and made 30-plus saves in half of his appearances.

The fact that both Gustavsson and Wallstedt are natives of Sweden and recent Olympic teammates creates a strong dynamic in the locker room.

Trade Value Discussion

Given the commitment the Wild made to Gustavsson after the retirement of Marc-Andre Fleury and the performance by Wallstedt during his debut season, the 2021 first-round draft pick would be one of the club's most valuable trade chips to use in the long-running quest to find a true No. 1 center.

That path, though, would come with considerable risk.

GM Confident in tandem

"I like our goaltending situation, to be quite honest with you," Guerin said at his season-ending news conference. "Both of our goalies are No. 1 goalies, you know? The luxury of it is being able to put a fresh rested goalie in the net every night, and you know both guys are signed. They're both very good. They work well in a tandem. They support each other. I'm very comfortable with where it is."

Both Gustavsson and Wallstedt endorsed the time share in exit interviews with reporters last week.

"I thought our competition was really good in everything, from every day being in practice, to competing in drills, to what we did off ice, and to competing to play the games," Wallstedt said. "I thought it made us both better."

Hughes Extension Priority

The headliner trade of this NHL season was the deal that sent star defenseman Quinn Hughes from Vancouver to Minnesota for recent first-round draft picks Zeev Buium, Liam Ohgren and Marco Rossi and the Wild's first-round selection next month.

Hughes played up to his billing, with 53 points in 48 regular-season games and 15 points in 11 playoff games.

"The impact that he had on our team was incredible," Guerin said. "So, yeah, priority one."

Hughes, who has one year left on his current contract with a $7.85 million salary cap hit, has said nothing to suggest he's hesitant to commit to Minnesota long term.

"I love the team. I love the city and the fans. Just being in that locker room, it's a special group," Hughes said last week. "I would definitely be open to re-signing here."

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