Matt Dumba wants to continue to play for the Wild, and Minnesota is home for the defenseman.
That's the message Dumba relayed to General Manager Bill Guerin during Dumba's exit meeting on Tuesday, but the team figures to have some maneuvering to do to shield Dumba from Seattle in the NHL's latest expansion draft in July.
"They always made a way to make it work in the past," Dumba said. "My name's in trade speculation every year, at the deadline, throughout the year. I've become accustomed to it. It is what it is. I've expressed my feelings and where I want to be, where my heart is. At the end of the day, that's all I can do."
This is a familiar crossroads for Dumba and the Wild.
When the NHL had an expansion draft for Vegas in 2017, the Wild enticed the Golden Knights into selecting Erik Haula and steering clear of the likes of Dumba by trading Alex Tuch to Vegas. A similar strategy might be required this year if the Wild wants to hold onto Dumba, who has two seasons left on his five-year, $30 million contract.
The Wild can choose to protect seven forwards, three defensemen and a goalie, or eight skaters and one goalie. If the Wild goes the first route, the three spots on defense would be taken by captain Jared Spurgeon, Ryan Suter and Jonas Brodin since they have no-movement clauses; players with such clauses have to be protected unless they waive them.
And if the Wild opted to pick eight skaters regardless of position, the team could run the risk of exposing a forward it wants to keep. Zach Parise and Mats Zuccarello are the forwards with no-movement clauses. First and second-year players, like Kirill Kaprizov, are exempt from the expansion draft and don't have to be protected.
"I love it here," Dumba said. "It's felt different this year, this season. I'm super excited to be a part of this new Minnesota Wild team. I know from a fan's perspective, it does feel like that. This isn't your old Minnesota Wild team. It's not boring hockey. We've got high-octane offense. We play this gritty style, different than in years past.