Cam Talbot was benched during the best run of his NHL career, assigned to being the Wild's backup when the team started the playoffs before making a last-ditch, pinch-hit effort in a season-ending loss to the Blues.
But the goaltender wants to remain with the Wild and with another year left on his contract, he expects to stick around.
"Unless they have something else planned," Talbot said, "I plan on being back here in September."
Once a position with clarity, how the Wild handles its goaltending is now one of the questions that will headline the team's offseason, which included players speaking Monday during a news conference at Xcel Energy Center.
The arrival of Marc-Andre Fleury at the trade deadline scrambled the equation. It meant subtracting Kaapo Kahkonen after Kahkonen worked with Talbot for a season and a half before getting sent to the Sharks. A three-time Stanley Cup champion and reigning Vezina Trophy winner as the league's top goalie, Fleury rotated starts with Talbot until near the end of the regular season, when Fleury began to see more action ahead of him ultimately getting the nod vs. St. Louis.
Talbot, meanwhile, finished on a 13-0-3 tear, setting a franchise record for longest point streak by a goalie and tying for the most wins in the NHL during that span.
"The coaches had a decision to make, and I don't think there was a wrong decision," said Talbot, who was still disappointed he didn't play more in the postseason. "Obviously, you trade for a guy like that with his pedigree and his past, why wouldn't you start him Game 1? Obviously, I wanted to play but I understood their decision and where they were coming from."
On multiple occasions, Wild coach Dean Evason referred to choosing a goaltender as "easy," a comment Talbot and Evason have discussed.