Steve Yzerman put together plenty of wins during his run as general manager of the Detroit Red Wings. He rebuilt the prospect pipeline, landed core pieces such as Moritz Seider, Lucas Raymond and Simon Edvinsson, and gave the franchise a much clearer path forward.
But if there’s one draft move that still hangs over his Detroit tenure, it’s the 2021 decision to trade up for Sebastian Cossa instead of taking Jesper Wallstedt. The price of that move also came back to sting the Red Wings when the pick they sent to Dallas later became Wyatt Johnston.
Detroit started the 2021 NHL Draft with the 6th overall pick and the 23rd overall selection. Wanting to address a long-term need in goal, Yzerman moved up with the Dallas Stars to get the 15th pick.
The Red Wings gave Dallas the 23rd overall pick, the 48th overall pick and the 138th overall pick in exchange for the slot they used on Cossa.
Cossa was a big-name goalie prospect for a reason. He stood 6-foot-6 and had just turned in a dominant season with the Edmonton Oil Kings, finishing 17-1-1 with a 1.57 goals-against average and a .941 save percentage.
The problem with the pick was never that Cossa was a bad prospect. It was that another elite goalie was still sitting there.
Jesper Wallstedt was available at No. 20 when the Minnesota Wild took him. He had already played professionally in Sweden’s SHL and arrived at the draft as the top European goaltender on NHL Central Scouting’s list. A lot of scouts saw him as the safer bet because of his technique, maturity and experience against older competition.
Cossa had the size and upside. Wallstedt had the polish.
Then there’s the part that really twists the knife for Detroit: Dallas used the pick it got from the Red Wings to take Wyatt Johnston at No. 23. Johnston has since become one of the NHL’s best young forwards and a major piece of the Stars’ future.
That’s what makes this one so hard to shake. At the time, Detroit was trying to solve a real organizational need in net, and no draft pick comes with a guarantee. But looking back, the combination of the assets sent away, Wallstedt still being on the board and Johnston becoming an impact player makes the Cossa trade-up look like one of the most questionable calls of the Yzerman era.
Calling Cossa a bust would be too early. Goaltenders take their own path, and he still has time to become the player Detroit hoped it was getting. Even so, this is the kind of draft decision that keeps the what-ifs alive.
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