Detroit’s summer has turned into a real balancing act, and Dylan Larkin and Alex DeBrincat sit right at the center of it.
Elliotte Friedman’s latest 32 Thoughts podcast dug into the Red Wings’ situation, and the message coming out of Detroit is pretty clear: Steve Yzerman is being patient, but he’s also being demanding. On one hand, there’s a growing sense that Larkin’s trade value has climbed after the Leo Carlsson offer sheet fallout. On the other, there’s real hesitation about locking DeBrincat into a major extension at a time when contract prices around the league keep rising.
With Larkin, Friedman said the Carlsson offer sheet situation has actually boosted his value, which gives Yzerman even more reason to hold firm if trade conversations pick up. Friedman doesn’t get the impression Yzerman wants to drag this into the season with a distraction hanging over the team, but he also made the point that no deal is better than a bad one.
What Detroit wants back matters here. Friedman reported that Yzerman is looking for NHL-ready players in any Larkin return, not draft picks or prospects.
That detail says plenty about how high the bar is. If futures were enough, Friedman suggested, this move probably would have already happened.
Kane’s situation remains unresolved as well. Friedman said there’s still no clear read on where Patrick Kane ends up, though he doesn’t expect a return to Detroit to happen. Toronto, Buffalo, and other teams could make sense for the veteran, and Friedman said he’s likely to land on a bonus-heavy deal with either a contender or a team that carries personal meaning for him.
DeBrincat is the other big question. Friedman said there’s legitimate hesitation in Detroit about giving him a large extension.
Yzerman reportedly isn’t comfortable with the size of contracts being handed out across the league, and it’s still unclear how willing he’ll be to pay DeBrincat full market value once he reaches free agency. DeBrincat is in the final season of his deal and would become a UFA, which puts the Red Wings in a spot where they’d prefer to get something meaningful back rather than lose him for nothing.
The broader concern in Detroit is tied to salary growth and how quickly a contract can turn from asset to burden. Friedman’s read is that Yzerman is wary of paying big money into the wrong part of a player’s career, when production can fade but the cap hit stays put.
That could push Detroit toward a different kind of strategy: moving players while their value is high and keeping the deals that already look like bargains. Friedman pointed to Lucas Raymond’s contract, which “suddenly looks extremely good.” Moritz Seider’s deal, he added, may be among the best value contracts anywhere in the league.
For now, the Red Wings are sitting in that uneasy middle ground where almost anything feels possible. In a market this uneasy about term and cost, both Larkin and DeBrincat could wind up on the move.
In Other News...
Red Wings Just Added A New Name Fans Will Want To Know
A new depth piece is on the way for Detroit after the club added an unrestricted free agent on a two-way deal, giving the Red Wings another name to track as they sort out the edges of the roster. The move fits the kind of low-risk, organizational signing teams make when they want more options up front and a player who can move between Detroit and Grand Rapids as needed.
There is also a little bit of familiarity here, because the forward already crossed paths with the Red Wings during his NHL debut with Florida, when he picked up two assists against them. For now, the expectation is that he will open next season with the AHL Grand Rapids Griffins, which makes this less about an immediate lineup shakeup and more about adding another layer of depth the organization can develop. [Read more 🡒]
Red Wings Suddenly Face A Serious Threat To Simon Edvinsson
Simon Edvinssons next contract has quickly become one of the more delicate issues on Detroits summer board, with the young defenseman still unsigned as a restricted free agent and the market around him starting to take shape. NHL insider Elliotte Friedman reported that another club has at least kicked the tires on the idea of a major offer sheet, which is the kind of pressure point that can turn a routine negotiation into a franchise decision.
For the Red Wings, the concern is not just losing a promising blue-liner, but losing a player who has grown into a key part of their future on defense. Any aggressive outside bid would force Detroit to weigh the cost of matching against the risk of letting a core piece walk, and the compensation rules only add to the stakes if the number climbs high enough. [Read more 🡒]
Red Wings Suddenly Look Like A Real Threat In Major Kraken Deal
Seattles offseason chatter has started to turn into something more tangible, and it has Detroit fans paying attention. On Elliotte Friedmans 32 Thoughts podcast, the Kraken were framed as a team that could listen on pieces like Jared McCann and Vince Dunn as both players near the end of their contracts, which immediately puts the Red Wings in the conversation as a club with the kind of prospect depth that can make a deal work.
For Detroit, the appeal is obvious: adding established help without having to strip the roster bare. McCann would bring scoring punch, while Dunn would give the blue line a puck-moving boost, and the Wings have enough young talent to at least explore whether a match makes sense. Nothing is imminent, but when a team with Seattles kind of names comes into play, Detroit has to be ready to see how far its prospect pool can carry it. [Read more 🡒]
