A couple of days ago, I posted this on the platform formerly known as Twitter, mostly amused in the Alanis Morissette sense of the term “ironic,” a.k.a. “darkly funny.”
Just an FYI (and I will write about this soon):
— George Malik (@georgemalik) June 12, 2026
There is another parallel between Sergei Fedorov's divorce from the Wings in 2003 and Dylan Larkin's impending exit from Detroit in 2026:
Pat Brisson. He was Fedorov's agent. He is Larkin's agent.
Take that for what you will.
You really can interpret this post as you will. Pat Brisson has been one of the NHL’s most prolific and powerful agents over the course of the last 30 years, representing everyone from Mario Lemieux, Fedorov and Sidney Crosby to people like Dylan Larkin, Quinn Hughes and dozens of others.
Some of Brisson’s clients have been shepherded through the ask-for-a-trade and/or “sign elsewhere” process; other clients have remained with their employers throughout the duration of their contracts, and have even spent their entire careers with one organization.
I don’t know whether having the same agent is the reason that Larkin is divorcing the Red Wings, which still strikes me as quite similar to Fedorov’s decision to walk away from Detroit after both his 1998 holdout and the 2003 free agency dispute with Mike Ilitch’s management team.
I just know that it’s out there, as a data point, and that it’s really effing ironic, perhaps in the Alanis Morissette sense of the term. It’s not THE REASON why Larkin is asking for a trade, but it’s certainly worth noting.
I do know that Brisson is the reason that people like Pierre LeBrun, the Free Press’s Helene St. James and the Detroit News’s Ted Kulfan (among others) were able to corroborate Elliotte Friedman’s initial report that Larkin had asked Detroit for a trade to the release of Larkin’s “short list” of destinations, as well as the possibility of adding new teams to the list.
Why? Because the Red Wings’ management team simply does not speak with the media until Steve Yzerman decides that it’s time to hold a press conference, and Larkin’s an unlikely source as a disgruntled party, too. The information has to be coming from somewhere, and it’s likely Brisson who’s sharing these nuggets of joy with the Wings’ beat writers and some carefully chosen genuine “insiders.”
Continue reading Regarding Dylan Larkin: Irony is dead, and a history lesson