The Minnesota Wild have signed their final restricted free agent of the summer, inking Marcus Foligno to a four-year contract worth $11.5MM. The deal will pay him $2.875MM per season, only a slight raise over his 2016-17 salary of $2.25MM. Foligno had been skating with teammates prior to the start of training camp today, showing his confidence that a deal would eventually be signed. The 26-year old forward is new to Minnesota, having come over from the Buffalo Sabres along with Tyler Ennis in a trade for Marco Scandella and Jason Pominville, but should be an interesting addition to their deep forward group. The breakdown of the deal is as follows:
- 2017-18: $2.0MM
- 2018-19: $3.0MM
- 2019-20: $3.5MM
- 2020-21: $3.0MM
The Wild have always held defensive play in high regards for their forwards, with players like Mikko Koivu and Nino Niederreiter among the league’s best two-way performers. Foligno’s game brings some of that defense as well, along with an incredibly physical style that should give the team a new look in their bottom-six. He’s been penciled into the third line alongside Joel Eriksson Ek and Charlie Coyle, though that could obviously change at any moment during training camp. That line would be difficult to handle physically, as all three players stand at least 6’2″, with Coyle and Foligno some of the odds-on favorites to lead the team in hits (Nieddereiter edged out Coyle last year).
Still, Foligno has some warts to his game. Thought at times he’s shown he can contribute offensively, that touch in the offensive zone has never been very consistent and he’s finished with no more than 23 points in a single season of his career. In his mid-twenties he could still improve in that area, but more likely he’ll still struggle to produce more than 10-15 goals in a year. Part of that is why the contract likely took so long, as both sides were trying to project what he can do surrounded by better players and on a winning team.
Though the contract took a while, Minnesota fans should be happy with it. Foligno is giving up two unrestricted free agent seasons but still making a relatively low amount that fits nicely into their salary structure. He’ll have to be more than a fourth-line player for them, but with the deal expiring before Foligno turns 30, Minnesota has bought out his prime for a reasonable amount. It does however get them awfully close to the cap, and probably means they won’t be able to sign Daniel Winnik to a deal any more than the league minimum despite inviting him to camp.
Michael Russo of The Athletic was first to report the deal and its details.
Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.