Red Wings Just Changed Everything About Their Goalie Picture

The Detroit Red Wings are facing uncertainty in net as they balance youth and experience in a critical staffing decision for the upcoming season.

The Red Wings have left their goalie picture open enough that Michal Postava now has a real lane to the backup job behind John Gibson.

That’s the clearest takeaway after Detroit traded Sebastian Cossa to get back into the first round of this year’s draft and take forward JP Hurlbert. Cossa was drafted in 2021 and developed by the organization for the last five years, so moving him after he had appeared at the NHL level only once was a notable shift. But Postava changed the equation.

Signed out of the Czech league last offseason, Postava passed Cossa as the top goalie in Grand Rapids and was a big reason the team pushed deeper in the postseason than it had in the previous two years. After a week of free agency, he looks positioned to get a legitimate look for the Red Wings’ backup spot, with Daniil Tarasov the only other goalie signed.

Detroit still can’t realistically head into the season with Postava as the only backup plan. He’s 27 and just in his second year of North American hockey, while Gibson started 57 games last season, the third-highest total of his career. The Red Wings had to balance the need for a veteran safety net against how much runway Postava might earn.

That balance is part of why Tarasov makes sense. He has been a career backup, and before last season he had never started more than 25 games in a year.

Injuries to the Florida Panthers pushed him into 33 games last season, but over five years with the Columbus Blue Jackets and Panthers, he’s gone 32-49-9 and his goals-against average has stayed above 3.00. He’s an NHL goalie, even if he’s not the kind of signing that shuts the door on someone like Postava.

If Detroit wanted to tell Postava he wasn’t really in the mix for the job, it likely would have gone after a stronger veteran option. Or brought back Cam Talbot.

Instead, the Red Wings gave themselves room to move Postava up and, if needed, send Tarasov down later in the year by signing Tarasov to a one-year, $2 million deal. If Postava wins the backup job in camp, Tarasov could still be useful as a way to shelter a young Trey Augustine in his first pro season. That kind of cap hit isn’t something many teams want buried in the AHL, but Detroit has kept the door open.

For now, the message is simple: Steve Yzerman and the Red Wings are ready to let their young goalies take their turn.

Postava probably isn’t going to take Gibson’s spot, but he has a real chance to win the backup job out of camp. He took over in Grand Rapids in the back half of last season, and that move might have come even earlier if not for the injury that kept him out for a month.

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