Wild goaltender Troy Grosenick sustained a torn ACL in his right knee and underwent surgery Tuesday, per a team announcement. He’ll miss the 2024-25 season but is expected to be cleared to play for the 2025-26 campaign.
Grosenick, 35, signed a one-year, two-way deal ($775K/$250K) with the Wild in the offseason. He’ll still collect his pro-rated NHL salary while spending the entire campaign on season-opening injured reserve. Grosenick spent one day on the Predators’ roster last season, meaning he’ll cost $4K against Minnesota’s cap, per PuckPedia. He’ll become an unrestricted free agent next summer, meaning he’ll potentially never suit up for a regular-season game in the Minnesota organization.
An undrafted free agent signed by the Sharks in 2013, Grosenick has played sparingly in the NHL. He’s only made four career appearances, two with San Jose in 2014-15 and two with the Kings in 2020-21. He was strong in spot duty, logging a .933 SV% and 2.27 GAA.
Those numbers aren’t entirely surprising – it’s more surprising that he never got a more extended look at the top level. The Wisconsin native has long been one of the AHL’s best talents between the pipes, posting a career .913 SV%, 2.52 GAA, 13 shutouts, and 169-101-42 record in 324 appearances in parts of 11 seasons. He’s a two-time All-Star and won the league’s Best Goaltender award in 2016-17.
The Wild were to be Grosenick’s fifth organization in the past five years. After playing 2020-21 in the Kings’ system, he’s also played for the Bruins’, Flyers’, and Predators’ minor-league affiliates. He was projected to be AHL Iowa’s starter this season after logging a .907 SV% in 30 games for Milwaukee in 2023-24. His absence leaves the Wild affiliate in a tough spot with top prospect Jesper Wallstedt set to jump to the NHL as part of a three-goalie rotation with Marc-André Fleury and Filip Gustavsson. They’ll instead turn to 26-year-old Dylan Ferguson, who signed an AHL deal with them last month after a failed PTO with the Canucks. He had a .904 SV% in 23 KHL games last year for Belarus’ Dinamo Minsk.