The conversation around who plays on that left wing with Wheeler and Mark Scheifele isn't a new one for Jets head coach Paul Maurice. He's had a number of players in that spot, including Laine, Kyle Connor, Nikolaj Ehlers, and at times, Andrew Copp.
"I've had a version of that conversation, truly, with almost every other forward in our group…. It's understandable and everybody wants it," Maurice said. "They want to play more minutes and they want to play with the team's best."
The 21-year-old Finnish sniper has lit the lamp 110 times in his first three seasons in the NHL, making him one of Winnipeg's most lethal offensive weapons. His 184 points since he came into the league in 2016-17 are the third most on the team behind only Wheeler and Mark Scheifele.
"He's certainly one of our best players. He spends a good deal of time on that top unit on the power play. We've been top five in the league the last couple of years and a big part of it is what Patty does," Wheeler said of Laine, who led the Jets in power play goals last season with 15.
"It's a great trait to have to want more, to want more ice time, more playing time. I would say those are all good things. You want guys that are hungry for more and not content with where he's at."
Where Laine is at, Wheeler estimates, is in "limbo." Laine's representatives and Jets General Manager Kevin Cheveldayoff are still working on getting the restricted free agent's name on a contract.
The Jets captain hasn't spoken with Laine on the phone in the last couple weeks, but the two have exchanged messages on Snapchat very recently.
"He's just in a spot right now where he's caught in limbo and wants more than anything to get here and play and be an NHL player again," said Wheeler, who had Laine on the wing for stretches of last season at even strength.
"He was competing hard. Whether we're at home or on the road, the match-up our line gets requires that. He was given that opportunity and he was certainly giving it his all."
Maurice said Laine earned that opportunity - which came on Feb. 22, 2019 against the Vegas Golden Knights - because of the way Laine had developed his entire game.
"Running the right routes, finishing checks, understanding with Mark's group a lot of times they do play against the other team's best. I saw some growth there," Maurice said. "Some growth and development that will have to continue and we expect it to continue."