When the Wild acquired Jason Pominville on April 3, the team seemed destined to use a compliance buyout this offseason on veteran Dany Heatley.
That's now unlikely to happen.
The NHL salary cap drops to $64.3 million for 2013-14. The Wild's will be about $63.9 million because performance bonuses achieved by Jonas Brodin put the Wild over last year's cap. The Wild, as it stands today, has about $6.2 million to fill out next year's roster.
Heatley would have been an ideal candidate for a compliance buyout. The team would still be on the hook for two-thirds of his $5 million salary, but the buyout would create a much-needed $7.5 million in salary-cap relief.
But on the same day the Wild traded for Pominville, Heatley tore the labrum in his left shoulder. He underwent surgery five days later and was given a four- to six-month recovery time.
That timetable is significant because an injured player cannot be bought out.
The first compliance buyout window begins 48 hours after the Stanley Cup Finals and ends when free agency begins July 5. To be bought out, Heatley, rehabbing at home in Kelowna, British Columbia, would have to be cleared by Wild doctors. That makes for a delicate situation because all the pitfalls for a potential grievance are present.
"We have a few different ways we can get to the cap," General Manager Chuck Fletcher said Monday. "We have options, but some things are easier done than others."