We can criticize Wild management for holding on to Marian Gaborik past his expiration date, just as we criticized the Twins for losing Torii Hunter for nothing and Johan Santana for too little, just as we criticized the Timberwolves for trading Kevin Garnett for a handful of supporting players from a bad team.
We can criticize these teams, but we should do so with this caveat: Trading a superstar at the right time is tricky. "That's not easy," said Wolves coach Kevin McHale. "A lot of decisions go into that."
If there is a lesson to be learned from recent history, it is that smaller-market teams should trade superstars headed for free agency sooner rather than later, even though that very act might become the most unpopular move in franchise history.
It would have been difficult to trade Gaborik last year, when he was playing so well for a team surging into the playoffs, and it would have been difficult to trade Gaborik for equal value right after he went scoreless in the playoffs. When he reinjured what the Wild refers to as his "lower body" this season, trading him for value became impossible.
Should the Wild really have dumped him earlier? It's easy to say that now; few were saying it then.
It would have been difficult to trade Hunter before he reached free agency, because the Twins looked like World Series contenders. Now we know that they should have traded him a year earlier, but that would have been a highly unpopular move at the time.
It would have been difficult for the Twins to trade Santana two years before he became a free agent. How do you develop a Rule 5 draftee into one of baseball's elite pitchers, then dump him two years before he's eligible for free agency?
Trading him a year earlier, though, would have brought a much bigger ransom in a trade.