What might the Detroit Red Wings look like right now if last season had ended with a playoff berth instead of a collapse?
That’s the question hanging over everything. A team that looked headed for the postseason entering the Olympic break instead faded down the stretch, and the ripple effects have been hard to miss.
In a different version of events, maybe captain Dylan Larkin never would have submitted his trade request to GM Steve Yzerman. Maybe Patrick Kane’s future in Detroit would already be settled instead of drifting toward rumors that he’s headed to the Buffalo Sabres.
Right now, Kane remains unsigned. One social media post pointed to three possible landing spots for him: the Sabres, the Blackhawks, or a return to the Red Wings. But in Detroit, the uncertainty has only grown as the team has stalled.
That’s what makes the “what if” game so tempting here. It’s impossible to know how much one season’s ending can alter the next, but it’s fair to wonder whether a playoff appearance would have changed the mood entirely.
Larkin’s situation is the biggest one. Maybe the tension between him and Yzerman was already too deep to fix.
Even with a better finish, he still might have wanted out. But if Detroit had kept winning and reached the playoffs, it would have been a lot harder to explain a trade request from a captain looking at a team that suddenly seemed to be moving in the right direction.
Kane’s case felt different. The sense around him was that he wanted to stay with the Red Wings, and in past summers, a new deal seemed like it would be only a formality. Then the Larkin situation exploded, and Kane’s future in Detroit shifted sharply.
If the Red Wings had not thrown away a playoff spot, both stories might have looked very different. As it stands, that collapse became the most painful loss of the season.
In Other News...
Red Wings Prospect Already Has Fans Wondering About His Long Term Future
Axel Sandin-Pellikka is already giving Detroit fans a glimpse of the long view, even as he settles into the middle stages of his first North American pro season. The young defenseman spent most of the year with the Red Wings before landing with the Grand Rapids Griffins, where the focus has shifted to tightening up his defensive game and rounding out the details that matter at the NHL level.
For now, the path stays centered on development, but the roster math in Detroit could make the next step a little bumpy. With more defensemen potentially in the mix next season, Sandin-Pellikka may have to open 2026-27 back in Grand Rapids, a reminder that his future is still being written one layer at a time. [Read more 🡒]
Red Wings Suddenly Face A New Twist In Dylan Larkin Drama
Dylan Larkins name has been circulating in trade chatter again, and the latest wrinkle is that his trade list has reportedly grown by one team. Even so, nothing about a move sounds close, and the Red Wings are still believed to be holding firm on the idea that they would not part with their captain for anything less than proper value.
That leaves Todd McLellan doing what coaches have to do this time of year: mapping out lineup possibilities before training camp even opens. Detroit also has another contract matter hanging in the background with restricted free agent Simon Edvinsson, whose negotiations could stretch deeper into camp if outside interest turns into an offer sheet, adding yet another layer to an already busy summer. [Read more 🡒]
Red Wings Prospect Rankings Just Raised A Bigger Question About This Rebuild
The Red Wings prospect pool got a noticeable boost with seven new additions in the 2026 draft, and the latest rankings reflect a system that is getting deeper even if it still lacks the kind of blue-chip star power that changes a rebuild overnight. Michael Brandsegg-Nygard has moved to the top of the list after a strong season and a standout international showing, while other young players have also made clear gains, giving Detroit a group that looks increasingly sturdy from top to bottom.
What makes the picture more interesting is how many of these prospects are still on a long runway, with several expected to spend 2026-27 in the NCAA before they even start pushing for NHL jobs. Trey Augustines rise, Michal Postavas jump and the arrival of the new draft class all point to a pipeline that is trending in the right direction, but it also leaves the same larger question hanging over the rebuild: is Detroit building enough impact talent to match the patience this kind of timeline demands? [Read more 🡒]
