One of the more surprising teams to miss out on the 2024 Stanley Cup playoffs is the Minnesota Wild. The Wild were officially eliminated from the postseason with a loss on April 9 to the Colorado Avalanche in which they surrendered five goals.
While it’s disappointing that the Minnesota Wild’s season is likely over, it may be for the better, especially if they had to play a physical team, because they’ll be without Marcus Foligno for sure and Ryan Hartman for the next two games.
Just before their game against the Ottawa Senators, the Minnesota Wild announced that Marcus Foligno will miss the rest of the season after successful core muscle repair surgery.
The Wild have not commented on the specifics of the injury, but the veteran has seemingly been dealing with the issue for much of the second half of the campaign.
The Minnesota Wild have several players who can throw their bodies around, but none like Marcus “Moose” Foligno. There’s a reason his nickname is “Moose,” after all.
When a team is battling hard to climb the standings and still believes they can make the playoffs while almost every number and probability equation says they cannot, they need their stars to perform.
Some roster adjustments for the team from the State of Hockey. On Monday, the Minnesota Wild announced they are placing forward Marcus Foligno on injured reserve.
The Minnesota Wild will be shorthanded on their upcoming road trip as The Athletic's Michael Russo reports that forward Marcus Foligno will miss "a couple games" with a lower-body injury.
The Minnesota Wild were finally back in action after ten days without a game played. They were on the road with a later start time against the Chicago Blackhawks who were without superstar Connor Bedard.
Matthew and Brady Tkachuk. Jakob Chychrun. Nick and Marcus Foligno. Max Domi. The Hughes brothers. In these cases and more, hockey talent has developed a track record of being genetic.
The Minnesota Wild have signed winger Marcus Foligno to a four-year contract extension with a $4 million cap hit. Foligno, 32, was in the final year of a three-year contract with a $3.1 million contract and was set to become an unrestricted free agent at the end of the season.
The Minnesota Wild inked winger Marcus Foligno to a four-year contract extension. Will they get a repeat of his strong 2021-22 showing or his more subdued 2022-23 showing?
Keeping with the report card theme, the next Minnesota Wild player up for review is Marcus Foligno who also goes by the nickname “Moose”. He’s another fan favorite both for his monster hits and his hairstyle that many envy.
The Dallas Stars aren't expecting the visiting Minnesota Wild to tap the brakes in Game 5 of their Western Conference first-round series on Tuesday night.
Wild forward Marcus Foligno wasn't a happy camper after being on the wrong end of several questionable calls in Sunday's 3-2 Game 4 loss to the Stars.
Minnesota Wild winger Marcus Foligno will be returning to the lineup for Tuesday’s game against the New Jersey Devils.
Marcus Foligno will not play in the Minnesota Wild’s contest against the Vancouver Canucks Thursday night as he battles a lower-body injury.
The injury occurred in the second period of the game against the Panthers when Foligno blocked a shot that hit the inside of his left knee.
Marcus Foligno says he felt disrespected by the referee who slapped him with a roughing penalty and then an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty following his
Foligno, 30, in the midst of a career year, with 22 goals and 39 points in 71 appearances for the Wild. The always-excellent defensive forward has turned up his offensive game.
MarcusFoligno initially earned a minor penalty for unsportsmanlike conduct but has since received a more appropriate punishment after a post-fight knee to Marcus Lowry while both were on the ground.
That fight seemed to be a predictor of how the game would go. The Wild ended up winning 6-5 in overtime.
Marcus Foligno was the first Minnesota Wild player to contract COVID-19, and now he feels responsible for the team's outbreak.
The Minnesota Wild have placed forward Marcus Foligno in the NHL's COVID-19 protocol. Foligno is the first Wild player to be added to the COVID-19 list this season
The 29-year-old Foligno may not contribute a ton at the offensive end of the rink, but he is one of the few rare players in the NHL who doesn’t really need to.
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