Chuck Fletcher stuck to his guns.
On a day where lucrative long-term deals were being tossed around the NHL at record pace, the Wild general manager risked that the allure of coming home to Minnesota and playing on a contender would be enough for Thomas Vanek to spurn longer, richer contracts elsewhere.
In the end, the Austrian-born former Gophers star wasn't turned off and the Wild, a team in need of more goals, attracted the best goal scorer on the open market with a three-year, $19.5 million contract.
"About a year ago when I made my decision to go to free agency, this was definitely the team that I had in mind," said Vanek, a two-time 40-goal scorer who has scored at least 25 goals in all eight of his full seasons and 20 goals in 38 games in lockout-shortened 2013. "For it to come true today, I've still not come to terms with it. I'm extremely thrilled to be a part of the Wild and of a group like this. I'm just happy.
"My top priority was to sign here."
It actually is hard to come to terms that after more than a year of anticipation and speculation in the Twin Cities and leaguewide, after he turned down seven-year, $50 million extensions from the Sabres and Islanders last season, that Vanek will wear No. 26 in a Wild sweater next season and not have to move him, his wife and their three sons out of his Stillwater home.
"We all knew it was probably going to happen," said his former Sabres linemate, Jason Pominville. "Now that it really has, I'm really happy he is part of our team."
It was a wild day in which it seemed every ginormous available player landed in the Central Division, which could be dubbed the Division of Death. Many considered it the NHL's toughest division already.