The Hockey News’s Carol Schram wrote a very good profile of Red Wings defenseman Simon Edvinsson, and the profile emphasizes that #77’s present NHL employer ought to re-sign the 23-year-old restricted free agent as soon as possible:
With each passing year, the young core GM Steve Yzerman has been assembling since his return to Hockeytown in 2019 has been putting down roots as the nucleus of the Red Wings’ roster. Lucas Raymond, a 2020 first-rounder, is establishing himself as a clutch scorer. Meanwhile, [Moritz] Seider and Edvinsson have quickly become one of the NHL’s elite defense pairs.
Seider, who’s big and strong on both sides of the puck and has razor-sharp hockey sense, has bulldozed his way into a crowded Norris Trophy field after collecting the Calder in 2022. Edvinsson, who’s four inches taller and a dozen pounds heavier at 222, profiles as the shutdown presence on the left side.
The pair gelled immediately.
“Even last year, we built that connection when it comes to playing together,” Edvinsson said. “For me to come in and find my game next to him, it’s been pretty easy. It’s been good for my growth – to watch him play and, honestly, learn from him as well.”
Look a little deeper, and Edvinsson’s offensive game also teases upside. Despite almost no PP time, he potted nine goals last season, including two game-winners. Over the past two years, his 53 even-strength points are just one shy of Seider’s 54 – in 14 fewer games.
As July approached, Edvinsson and the Wings continued to negotiate a new contract coming off his entry-level deal. It’s clear, however, the team views him as a key member of the future core. There were reports that Detroit balked when Vancouver insisted on Edvinsson as part of the return in a trade for Quinn Hughes last winter.
Will Edvinsson reach Lidstrom’s rarefied heights as his game matures? That’s a tough ask. But the Red Wings have something special if he can just keep being Simon Edvinsson.
Continued with some discussion of Edvinsson’s troublesome right knee, which required two surgeries over the course of the 2025-2026 season (prior to puck drop and down the stretch).
It’s kind of scary to think about what Edvinsson can provide to the Wings’ top defensive pairing when he’s fully healthy.