Steve Yzerman arrived in Detroit with the kind of reputation that can reset a franchise’s mood overnight. He was the man who helped build the Tampa Bay Lightning into champions, and when the Red Wings hired him as general manager in 2019, the expectation was clear: he would drag Detroit out of the mud and back into relevance.
Seven years later, the Red Wings are still waiting for that turnaround. Yzerman is moving out of his role as head of hockey operations and into a senior adviser position, and the ledger is brutal: no playoff appearances, no breakthrough, no real evidence that the “Yzerplan” got the job done.
The disappointment starts with the draft, because that was supposed to be Yzerman’s superpower. In Tampa Bay, he helped assemble a powerhouse through smart picks and patient development, even without living at the top of the board.
He inherited Steven Stamkos, taken No. 1 in 2008, and Victor Hedman, selected No. 2 in 2009, but the rest of that Lightning core was built with a steady stream of homegrown talent. Yzerman also turned some picks into assets, including Jonathan Drouin, who went No. 3 in 2013, and late first-rounders Vladislav Namestnikov at No. 27 in 2011 and Brett Howden at No. 27 in 2016, both of whom were later moved in the Ryan McDonagh deal.
That kind of draft touch never really showed up in Detroit. The Red Wings did land Moritz Seider at No. 6 in 2019, Lucas Raymond at No. 4 in 2020, and Simon Edvinsson at No. 6 in 2021, three players who matter to the future. But too many other first-round swings have yet to pay off, including Sebastian Cossa at No. 15 in 2021, Marco Kasper at No. 8 in 2022, Nate Danielson at No. 9 in 2023, Axel Sandin-Pellikka at No. 17 in 2023, and Michael Brandsegg-Nygard at No. 15 in 2024.
The bigger issue is what happened beyond the first round. In Tampa Bay, Yzerman routinely found useful NHL players in the middle and later rounds.
In Detroit, that pipeline has been thin. Albert Johansson, taken No. 60 in 2019, Elmer Soderblom at No. 159 in 2019, and Emmitt Finnie at No. 201 in 2023 are the only non-first-round picks who have become NHL regulars.
Meanwhile, early second-rounders Antti Tuomisto at No. 35 in 2019, William Wallinder at No. 32 in 2020, and Shai Buium at No. 36 in 2021 have combined for zero NHL games.
That lack of depth has left Detroit short on answers everywhere else, especially on defense. Seider and Edvinsson formed a strong top pairing this season, but the rest of the blue line couldn’t keep up, and that weakness helped sink the Red Wings down the stretch on the way to a 10th straight missed playoff berth.
Some of that pain traces back to moves that aged badly. Filip Hronek and Jake Walman are two defensemen Yzerman should probably wish he still had.
Hronek was still only 25 and trending upward when Detroit sent him to the Vancouver Canucks in 2023, even though he fit the club’s timeline. The return included first- and second-round picks, but the Red Wings would likely prefer Hronek behind Seider right now.
Walman’s exit was even stranger. He had settled in with Detroit and built strong chemistry with Seider on the top pair, yet the Red Wings sent him and a second-round pick to San Jose for future considerations in the 2024 offseason. The Sharks then flipped him to the Edmonton Oilers for a first-rounder, and the Oilers later gave him a seven-year, $49-million extension.
If Detroit had held onto Hronek and Walman, the club might not have had to lean so heavily on Ben Chiarot in a top-four role he clearly can’t handle. Yzerman also gave the 35-year-old a three-year extension with a $3.85-million AAV this past season. And the Red Wings might not have needed to part with a package including a first-round pick for 34-year-old Justin Faulk at the 2026 deadline.
The cap decisions have been just as hard to square. If Yzerman moved on from Hronek and Walman because he didn’t want to pay them, then it’s even more confusing that he committed major money to Andrew Copp and J.T.
Compher. Copp signed a five-year deal worth a $5.625-million AAV in 2022, and Compher followed with a five-year contract carrying a $5.1-million AAV the next season.
That’s almost $11 million tied up in two players who profile more like third-liners than difference-makers.
Copp has averaged 39 points per 82 games with the Red Wings, while Compher has averaged 38 points per 82 games. Those are the kinds of deals a team makes when it believes it’s close. Detroit was still rebuilding, and that money could have gone to a real impact player like Hronek or been used to keep stacking assets.
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