ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

Wild acquire Bryzgalov from Oilers

By Chad Graff St. Paul Pioneer Press ST. PAUL -- After informing veteran goalie Niklas Backstrom on Monday that he would be shut down for the rest of the season, Minnesota Wild general manager Chuck Fletcher intensified his search for a goalie. H...

By Chad Graff

St. Paul Pioneer Press

ST. PAUL - After informing veteran goalie Niklas Backstrom on Monday that he would be shut down for the rest of the season, Minnesota Wild general manager Chuck Fletcher intensified his search for a goalie.

He was looking for a veteran, someone with playoff experience - and in the final year of an expiring contract.

On Tuesday, a day before the NHL trade deadline, Fletcher found his man, picking up 33-year-old Ilya Bryzgalov from the Edmonton Oilers for a fourth-round draft pick.

ADVERTISEMENT

With Backstrom and Josh Harding sidelined, Bryzgalov is expected to back up 23-year rookie Darcy Kuemper in goal the rest of the season.

“He’s had some very good seasons in this league, he’s a goaltender that’s certainly playing very well right now and can give us some depth and fit well with Darcy Kuemper as we go down the stretch,” Fletcher said of Bryzgalov.

Kuemper has started the past 15 games and is set to remain the Wild’s top goaltender as they make a run at a Western Conference playoff spot over the final 20 games of the season.

Backstrom, 36, has played just 21 games because of abdominal issues that have limited him since the season started.

At this point, Fletcher said, the team wants to shut down Backstrom is to make sure he’s healthy for the start of the 2014-15 season. Backstrom still has two seasons left on his contract, a primary reason Fletcher wanted his incoming goalie to have an expiring contract.

Fletcher said Backstrom likely will have to have surgery, but didn’t provide specifics.

“I give Nik a lot of credit,” Fletcher said. “I think a lot of goaltenders would’ve shut down a month or two ago. He’s battled through it all year. I’m not quite sure he’s ever been healthy.”

The trade was made under the assumption that both Backstrom and Harding are out for the remainder of the season.

ADVERTISEMENT

After performing as one of the NHL’s top goalies the first half of the season, Harding, out since Dec. 31, has not skated over the past nine weeks, taking time off to adjust to medication to treat multiple sclerosis.

“If Josh is able to come back, it’d be tremendous, and certainty we’d bring him back and let him compete,” Fletcher said. “But at this point, we have to make the assumption that Nik and Josh will not be playing for us this year and this is the direction we’ve chosen to go.”

That leaves the Wild dependent on two goalies who weren’t even around at the beginning of the season.

Kuemper was the organization’s No. 3 goalie entering the season, but he moved into the top spot when Harding couldn’t return in early January. After seven seasons in the NHL, Bryzgalov had his contract in Philadelphia bought out over the summer. He spent the first part of this season without a team before signing with Edmonton.

Playing behind the Oilers’ poor defense, Bryzgalov posted a 5-8-5 record with a .908 save percentage and 3.01 goals-against average in 20 games.

He became a familiar counterpart to the Wild during his years as a backup goalie in Anaheim (where he got to know Fletcher) and four seasons as a starter in Phoenix. He was 3-1 with a 2.00 GAA against the Wild in the first round of the 2007 playoffs

while backing up Jean-Sebastien Giguere for the Ducks.

Now, with the Wild building a cushion in the wild card race, Bryzgalov has a chance to make the playoffs for the sixth time.

ADVERTISEMENT

“I look at this as a great opportunity for me to play and it’s like a new challenge because it’s a new team,” he said. “I know the Minnesota Wild are in a playoff spot and fighting for a playoff spot. It’s the most exciting time of the year when you’re fighting for the playoffs.”

Before the trade, Yeo said at his morning media availability that Kuemper, 11-3-2 with a 2.19 goals-against average in 18 games, would likely remain the team’s starter.

But starting Saturday, the Wild play 20 games in 37 days, part of the reason a backup was needed to provide Kuemper rest.

Kuemper will likely start Saturday night in Dallas and Bryzgalov will likely make his Wild debut Sunday night in St. Paul against the St. Louis Blues.

“There’s no question he’s done enough that we’re going to keep giving him opportunity to go out there and show what he’s done,” Yeo said of Kuemper. “In large part, (we’re at) where we are right now because of the job that he’s done. We love his potential, but more than that we love the way that he’s playing right now.”

The Wild considered several goalie options, including Buffalo’s Jaroslav Halak and future Hall of Famer Martin Brodeur, but weren’t willing to separate with a better draft pick or one of their talented young players.

They did, though, want to add depth, especially after it was decided they’d shut down Backstrom.

It was a tough season for Backstrom who signed a three-year contract over the summer.

ADVERTISEMENT

He didn’t fully heal from offseason surgery over the summer, strained his knee in the third game of the season, and suffered a concussion Nov. 13.

“I’m sure it’s been extremely difficult for him,” Yeo said before the trade. “He’s a guy that is very proud, and that’s a part of what makes him such a great competitor. So it’s frustrating for him not being at 100 percent and not having the opportunity to get out there, but I think he’s handled it unbelievably well.”

The Pioneer Press is a media partner with Forum News Service.

What To Read Next
Get Local

ADVERTISEMENT