With the NHL buyout window set to open on Tuesday, June 30, the Detroit Red Wings have a decision to make, and Michael Rasmussen sits at the center of it.
The former first-round pick has not come close to matching the value of the four-year extension he signed on February 20, 2024. Since that deal was completed, Rasmussen has put up 45 points in 161 games. That works out to 22 points per season, and his 2024-25 output was even quieter: just 14 points in 64 games.
At $3.2 million per year, the math is hard to ignore. The Red Wings paid Rasmussen $228,571.43 per point last season, and the question becomes whether that money - and the lineup spot - could be put to better use.
A buyout would not wipe Rasmussen’s cap hit away cleanly. Detroit would still be carrying his salary for four seasons instead of the two years left on the deal. But the buyout would spread the hit across a longer stretch, which matters in a league where the salary cap is climbing and the Red Wings have room to work with.
From a pure salary perspective, the move would only create a little extra flexibility. It could help keep depth players around, but Detroit was never in a tight financial spot to begin with. In that sense, the buyout would be more about roster management than cap survival.
That is where the real case for moving on from Rasmussen starts.
The Red Wings’ forward group already looks crowded, and that makes bottom-six ice time precious. Buying out Rasmussen would open another path for a younger player to grab a spot and force his way into the picture.
Assuming Patrick Kane is extended, the forward setup would look like this:
Finnie-Larkin*-Raymond
DeBrincat-Copp-Kane
Mazur-Kasper-[empty]
Rasmussen-Compher-Appleton
*Dylan Larkin has requested a trade and will likely not be on the roster opening night.
If Rasmussen is out of the picture, the door swings open a little wider for the next wave. Michael Brandsegg-Nygard could take on the third-line role, while Carter Bear would be a natural candidate to slide into Rasmussen’s old spot. That would allow Mazur to move down to the fourth line and give Detroit a third line with Carter Bear, Marco Kasper and Michael Brandsegg-Nygard.
That kind of trio would be hard to ignore: two rookies alongside a player who could be in line for a bounce-back season.
For the Red Wings, the appeal of a Rasmussen buyout is not just financial. It is about making room for more young talent, while giving Rasmussen a clean reset somewhere else. The 27-year-old would likely land a short-term deal once he reaches free agency, though the Red Wings probably would not be able to move his contract without attaching picks.
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