The Detroit Red Wings are suddenly staring at a major organizational reset, and one familiar name from Toronto has already entered the conversation.
On July 15, Elliotte Friedman said on NHL Tonight that former Maple Leafs executive Brendan Shanahan could be one of the candidates to step into the void after the sudden departure of Steve Yzerman. Friedman said the Red Wings are “casting a wide net” and added, “You're going to hear a lot of names like Brendan Shanahan, who was one of the first people I thought of.”
For Detroit, the fit is easy to understand. Shanahan is a Red Wings legend, and if he were to take over, it would not be in the GM chair. In Toronto, he spent about a decade as President of Hockey Operations, which is the kind of role he would likely be looking at in Detroit as well.
That would effectively mean the Red Wings trying to swap out the Yzerplan for the Shanaplan.
Leafs fans know how that story went. Shanahan helped revive the franchise, but the end result still fell short of expectations.
Even so, there’s no denying the state Toronto was in when he arrived in 2015. The team was on life support, hit rock bottom, and then climbed back into relevance.
Detroit’s situation is just as stark. The Red Wings currently own the longest active playoff drought in the league, and that makes this a difficult job for anyone walking in the door.
Still, Shanahan’s track record gives the idea at least some appeal. He has done the rebuild-from-the-bottom work before.
At this point in the season, the Red Wings could do a lot worse than Shanahan.
It would be a strange sight for Maple Leafs fans to see him land with a division rival, but the connection to Detroit is real. He had plenty of success there as a player, and that history could make the move make sense.
Maybe this is the opening he’s been waiting for all along.
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