Hours after saying nothing was imminent and he planned to let the dust settle, Wild General Manager Chuck Fletcher detonated a dust cloud into the sky.
In a two-pronged rapid-fire move Friday night that came together "incredibly quickly," the Wild traded Devin Setoguchi inside its division to the Winnipeg Jets for a 2014 second-round pick and followed it up by signing a player many consider one of the NHL's biggest cheap-shot artists.
Matt Cooke, who routinely used to draw the ire of Wild fans as a member of the loathed Vancouver Canucks, signed a three-year, $7.5 million deal with the Wild. Cooke, who gained a reputation as a dirty player during the early portion of his five-year career with Pittsburgh, has worked to clean up his act the past few years and has developed into a quality two-way winger who can score, kill penalties, work relentlessly and yes, hit with the best of them.
"There's no question when he came into the league, he was an agitating player, a player that was in the league because of his physical play and his ability to get players off their game," said Fletcher, assistant GM in Pittsburgh when the Penguins acquired Cooke. "He's really evolved."
Fletcher called Cooke the ideal third-line winger — blocks shots, has scored 12-19 goals in seven of his 12 full seasons despite little power-play time, "angles well, cycles well, is good along the wall," skates well and has played more than1,000 regular-season and playoff games.
He won a Stanley Cup with Wild coach Mike Yeo as Pittsburgh's assistant in 2009. Still, because of his reputation, some Wild fans voiced shock and vitriol at the signing on social media — a similar reaction to when former Wild GM Doug Risebrough traded for Chris Simon in 2008.
"Matt is a player that brings a lot to the table," Fletcher said. "I think when everybody watches him as a player and focuses in on what he is now as a player versus what his reputation is as a player, I think you'll be pleasantly surprised of what you see."
Earlier Friday, Fletcher watched from the sidelines as NHL players changed addresses at a frantic pace. Wild veterans Matt Cullen and Pierre-Marc Bouchard were two of those players. Cullen signed a two-year, $7 million deal with Nashville; Bouchard a one-year, $2 million deal with the Islanders. The Wild did make Keith Ballard's signing official and re-signed defenseman Jared Spurgeon to a three-year, $8 million deal.