The question you have to ask about the fruitless negotiations between the Wild and Marian Gaborik is, how can you root for either side in this one?
Gaborik is hurt again, proving himself fragile, damaging his leverage in negotiations and the Wild's leverage in trade talks. He scored as many goals as me in last year's playoffs. He's asking for the kind of money paid to dominant all-around players, and he isn't one. How do you take his side?
The Wild is getting ready to get rid of another popular player, refusing to pay top dollar for one of the guys who helps fill the X every game night, dooming the franchise to endless rebuilding and an over-reliance on their coach to keep winning games 2-1. How do you take the team's side?
The Wild is right about one thing: The team needs to trade Gaborik when the time is right.
That presumes, though, that Gaborik will be healthy and productive enough before the March 3 trading deadline to incite a bidding war for an injury-prone player asking for big money in a league filled with teams pushing the salary cap.
At this point, a deal with the trading deadline approaching seems to make most sense, but if you follow Minnesota sports, you know that these deals are hardly guaranteed successes.
The Twins tried to incite a bidding war for Johan Santana, and wound up with a raw center fielder and mediocre pitching prospects.
The Twins decided to play out the string with Torii Hunter, to take a shot at the World Series in 2007, and they missed the playoffs and watched Hunter walk away.