Red Wings Just Made Another Goalie Bet Fans Will Instantly Debate

While doubts linger from critics, the Detroit Red Wings remain confident in Michal Orsulak's potential as he begins his journey from promising Czech goalie to NHL hopeful.

The Red Wings added another goalie to the pipeline, taking Czechia’s Michal Orsulak with the 79th pick in 2026 after moving on from Sebastian Cossa and opening up a spot in their group of prospects.

Orsulak arrives with a resume that gave Detroit plenty to like. He spent last season with Prince Albert in the Western Hockey League, helped the club get all the way to the WHL Finals and also played a role in Czechia’s silver-medal run at the World Junior Championships. Some draft boards even had him as high as second among the eligible goalies.

Detroit assistant general manager Kris Draper said the Wings got a close look at him while scouting Prince Albert defenseman Justice Christensen, who later signed with Grand Rapids.

“We had a lot of eyes on (Orsulak) and we’re able to watch him play a lot,” Draper said. “And just watching the size, the compete, the way he moves, we just felt that, with where we were in the draft, we felt it was a real good pick.”

Orsulak is listed at 6-foot-4 and 228 pounds, and he went 28-4-4 for Prince Albert. He described himself this way: “I think I’m an athletic goalie,” Orsulak said. . .

Every goalie is different. But if I see like myself like for the NHL I compare like most to the (Yaroslav) Askarov.

He also pointed to the Czech goalie tradition as part of what shapes his game.

“I think we don’t do it (like) robots,” Orsulak said. “Different styles.

Everything different than the other countries. We have many goalie coaches. . . we have a good system in Czech.”

Not everyone in the scouting world was sold. Red Line, the independent scouting service, had Orsulak as the draft’s most overrated player and ranked him 215th, writing: “Overweight, slow and not clutch.”

Detroit, though, is betting on development and patience. Goaltenders usually take six to eight years to mature, and most NHL debuts for young goalies come at age 24 or 25. The odds are steep, too: about one in five drafted goalies reaches the NHL and appears in at least one game, fewer than 15% get to 25 games, and roughly 10% reach 100 games.

For now, the Red Wings are treating Orsulak like the next tree in the orchard - another long-term project with the chance to grow into something more.

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