
No, Jason Zucker didn't gloat. He didn't take pleasure in a man losing his job.
On Tuesday, Wild owner Craig Leipold fired General Manager Paul Fenton. On Wednesday, Zucker – who twice was nearly traded by Fenton – addressed the move and took the high road.
"Paul brought in guys who he thought were going to be key guys for our team,'' Zucker before his game in Da Beauty League at Edina's Braemar Arena. "We can't fault him for moves that he felt were going to make us better. Whether you agree with it or disagree with it, it doesn't matter. He felt those were moves that were going to make the team better.''
Fenton traded away Wild mainstays Nino Niederreiter, Charlie Coyle and Mikael Granlund near the trade deadline, and Zucker nearly was the next core piece to go. A deal with Calgary fell through at the deadline, and then a trade in May that would have sent Zucker to Pittsburgh and Phil Kessel to Minnesota was vetoed by Kessel.
The situation, Zucker acknowledged, wasn't easy.
"It was tough in the sense I didn't want to leave,'' said Zucker, who was signed by Fenton to a five-year, $27.5 million contract on July 25, 2018. "Obviously, it was a bit of limbo-type thing for the year, but it's part of the business. Names get floated all the time. I'm glad the trades didn't happen.''
Hearing his name bandied about twice ramped up the uncertainty.
"If it happens once, it's in the back of your mind a bit. If It happens twice, it's really in the back of your mind,'' said Zucker, winner of the King Clancy Memorial Trophy for his charity work in Minnesota. "It was definitely something that was in the forefront of my mind for the last while. It's hard for me to fault him if he thought that's what's best for the organization.''