Obviously a Brink's truck of cash helped, but the money was going to be big for Zach Parise and Ryan Suter last summer no matter where they signed.
And, when you start talking contract lengths as long as 13 years, quality of life and where you want to raise your family become overriding factors.
But Parise and Suter want to win.
So while the heaps of cash and lure of playing (in Parise's case) at home or (in Suter's case) near home helped the Wild in landing Parise and Suter over several other suitors, there's no doubt the Wild would have struck out if they weren't convinced they could win here for years.
The Wild's stable of blue-chip prospects was as big a recruiting tool as anything.
"Thirteen years is a long time, so you have to make sure you're going to a place well set up for the future," Parise said. "I mean I get it; sometimes prospects don't pan out. But I feel nowadays they do more than they don't. And when we were going through each team, my agents really educated me on the kids here and felt no team had more legit prospects."
The Wild ranked seventh in last year's Hockey News Future Watch. It was the first time in the 20-year history of the edition that five players from one team ranked in the top 40 prospects in the NHL (Mikael Granlund, 2; Jonas Brodin, 12; Charlie Coyle, 14; Matt Hackett, 35; and Johan Larsson, 38). A sixth player (Brett Bulmer, 69) made the top 75.
This year's edition will be on newsstands in early March. The Wild could inch even higher up the rankings thanks to Jason Zucker's stock rising (17 goals, 36 points in 39 games for Houston), the 2012 draft editions of Matt Dumba, Raphael Bussieres, John Draeger and Adam Gilmour and the fact that prospects Erik Haula, Mario Lucia, Tyler Graovac, Nick Seeler, Johan Gustafsson and others are developing nicely.