Steve Yzerman's Red Wings Legacy Comes Down To These Hits And Misses

Discover the defining successes and missteps of Steve Yzerman's time with the Detroit Red Wings as he navigates the challenges of modern NHL management.

Steve Yzerman’s run as general manager of the Detroit Red Wings is going to be remembered in two very different lights.

At the front end, he hit on major draft picks and gave the organization a real foundation with players like Moritz Seider and Lucas Raymond. At the back end, the picture has gotten far messier, with Dylan Larkin wanting out, Detroit sitting a full decade removed from the playoffs and the mood around the team sounding bleak.

That split is what makes Yzerman’s tenure such a mixed bag. His biggest wins and his biggest misfires tell the story.

The strongest part of his work has been the draft. Yzerman’s first-round haul has been impressive, with Seider emerging as a top-five defenseman in the NHL, Raymond developing into a top winger and Simon Edvinsson becoming one of the premier shutdown defensemen in the league.

He’s also found value deeper in the draft, landing Elmer Soderblom in the sixth round and Red Wings Rookie of the Year Emmitt Finnie in the seventh. Even with some inconsistency in the second round, the overall track record says he can identify talent in almost every round.

The problem has been what happened once it was time to add veterans. His pro scouting has been a mess, and the contract and trade decisions reflect that.

Long-term deals for underperforming players like J.T. Compher and costly moves for players such as Justin Faulk have left the roster short on value.

The Ben Chiarot extension, which runs until he’s 38, only adds to the issue, especially with so many players crowding the lineup and blocking younger defensemen like Axel Sandin-Pellikka and William Wallinder. Jacob Bernard-Docker is part of that logjam too.

Yzerman also deserves credit for one of his better trades: bringing in Jake Walman from the St. Louis Blues in 2022.

Detroit got Oskar Sundqvist, Walman and a second round pick for Nick Leddy and Luke Witkowski. Leddy’s production with the Blues was underwhelming, while Walman quickly grew into a top-pairing defenseman.

The second round pick eventually helped the Red Wings land Andrew Gibson, who has not yet made his NHL debut, and the pick before that was used to acquire Trey Augustine, who looks like the goaltender of the future if things go well in Grand Rapids.

But that move makes the next one look even worse. Yzerman later sent Walman and a second round pick to the San Jose Sharks for future considerations.

He never publicly explained the decision, and to this day he still hasn’t addressed it. The result was brutal: Detroit got nothing back.

San Jose then flipped Walman to the Edmonton Oilers for a first round and second round pick, turning half a season of Walman into a major return. For Detroit to walk away with zero value from a young defenseman like that is a serious mark against Yzerman’s record.

Another clear win came with the Alex DeBrincat trade. Yzerman landed the hometown forward from the Ottawa Senators for Dominik Kubalik, Donovan Sebrango and a conditional first round pick.

Ottawa was stuck with DeBrincat, and Yzerman took advantage. Kubalik finished with just 15 points before heading to Europe, Sebrango was claimed off waivers by the Florida Panthers, and the first round pick Detroit sent out was later used to acquire Linus Ullmark, who posted a .891 save percentage with the Senators last season.

By the source’s own measure, Yzerman won that deal by a mile.

The final criticism is more about approach than any single transaction. Yzerman has preferred a slow, steady build, but the NHL has shifted toward a more aggressive model, with teams using trades and offer sheets to speed up the process.

That hasn’t been his style. In another era, that patience might have been praised.

In this one, it has left Detroit stuck in the mushy middle, unable to take the next step.

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