The Detroit Red Wings have room to maneuver when free agency opens, and that gives them a chance to address one of their clearer needs: more help on the wings. One name that fits the conversation is Chicago Blackhawks forward Ilya Mikheyev, who could draw real attention when the market opens on July 1.
Mikheyev isn’t the flashiest option among the pending UFAs, but he has built a case over the last two seasons in Chicago. The 31-year-old winger put up 18 goals and a career-best 36 points in 77 games this past season.
Before that, he logged 20 goals and 34 points in 80 games during the 2024-25 campaign. For a Detroit team looking for more secondary scoring, those numbers matter.
His appeal goes beyond the box score, though. Mikheyev would look like a natural fit in the Red Wings’ bottom six, where his speed and ability to chip in offensively could make him useful on the third line. Even if he landed on the fourth line, he’d still bring value as a reliable two-way forward.
What really stands out is his work on the penalty kill. Mikheyev’s defensive game was a major part of why he mattered so much to the Blackhawks over the last two seasons, and that same skill set would likely earn him a role on Detroit’s penalty-killing units if he signed there.
Of course, the Red Wings wouldn’t be alone in the chase. As one of the NHL’s top pending UFA wingers, Mikheyev should have plenty of suitors if he reaches the open market.
He also won’t come cheap. Still, for a Detroit club trying to strengthen its depth and add a little more pop to the lower part of the lineup, he’s the kind of player worth serious consideration.
The fit makes sense. The question is whether the Red Wings will make their move.
In Other News...
Mammoth Just Sent A Clear Message About Sebastian Cossa's Future
Sebastian Cossas latest step says plenty about how the Mammoth view one of the leagues more intriguing young goaltenders. Utah locked him in on a two-year deal that carries a $2 million cap hit, a move that covers his restricted free agent years and puts a real price tag on the belief that he can grow into much more than a prospect. For a goalie still trying to turn long-held promise into an NHL role, it is the kind of contract that signals patience and expectation in equal measure.
Cossa arrives with a path that still needs sorting out, but the structure in Utah suggests he is not being brought in merely to sit and wait. The Mammoth expect him to work alongside Karel Vejmelka and handle a meaningful share of the crease, which gives Cossa a chance to prove the organizations confidence is justified. For Detroit, it is another reminder that the future it once imagined for the netminder has already moved on to a new address, and his next stretch will say plenty about whether that faith was simply early or fully earned. [Read more 🡒]
Red Wings Free Agency Could Force Yzerman Into A Tough Scoring Bet
The free-agent market the Red Wings are likely to face next summer may not offer the kind of easy scoring fix teams sometimes hope for. With much of the top 2026 class already spoken for, Detroits options could narrow to a handful of players who bring either some offensive upside, some pedigree, or both, but none comes without a degree of uncertainty.
That is why the speculation around possible fits matters for Steve Yzermans club, because adding scoring help may require a bet on someone whose value is not entirely clear-cut. Whether the answer comes from a younger scorer still trying to establish himself, a familiar face with Detroit ties, or a former elite talent looking to rebuild his market, the Red Wings may have to decide just how much risk they are willing to take to patch a lineup need. [Read more 🡒]
