Judd Brackett, the Wild's Director of Amateur Scouting, called it "perfect harmony."
"Once in a while, it becomes real easy where that intersection is," Brackett said. "And tonight, we're very happy with how things worked out. He was the player we wanted, and we're really excited about it."
Wild General Manager Bill Guerin announced the pick virtually from the team's headquarters in downtown St. Paul before the celebrating began. Need and opportunity came together for the Wild on Tuesday night and the franchise couldn't be more excited about it.
For all the talk of selecting a goaltender with its first pick, it quickly became clear that it was Rossi whom the Wild targeted all along.
"We felt he was the best player available at the time, and the fact that he's a center, we accomplished what we wanted," Guerin said. " We're just really happy to have him at that pick."
Indeed, that was the primary worry of the evening. Once Rossi got out of the first six picks, there was concern that either New Jersey, picking seventh, or Buffalo, selecting eighth, might take Rossi.
"I can't say we were confident [he'd be there]," Brackett said. "Marco had a tremendous year in a heavily scouted league, so we sat here with a lot of anxiety and some nervous anticipation, but that's the best part of the draft. It's not scripted, things play out sometimes in your favor and I think tonight was one of those situations."
In Rossi, the Wild is getting a playmaking centerman with a knack for making highlight-reel plays. A simple YouTube search will yield a number of unbelievably skilled players that left scouts and general managers in awe.
At 5-foot-9, he doesn't possess prototypical size of a centerman, but scouting reports say that he doesn't play like a small player.
"It depends how you define size. He sure is strong enough," Guerin said. "He's 5-9 1/2 and he's probably almost as wide, and that's what makes a difference. To be able to handle the physical nature of the game, I have no problems at all with his height."
Brackett said his low center of gravity makes him difficult to move off the puck despite weighing well under 200 pounds.
"I think he's certainly built with a strong lower half so some of what he lacks in length or height he makes up for with balance and headwork and some explosion," Brackett said. "He's always on the inside and underneath defenders and first to pucks. When you have a player of his size something we look for as scouts is his courage. He plays with that every night."