MLive’s Ansar Khan wonders what path Axel Sandin Pellikka might take in terms of his almost inevitable journey to the NHL today:
General manager Steve Yzerman, as you’d expect, didn’t shut the door on the possibility of Sandin Pellikka, the skilled, right-shooting D-man drafted 17th overall in 2023, surprising at training camp.
“I’m not going to rule out any player coming in and being so good in camp that we’re going to keep him and see how he does in the NHL,” Yzerman said last month. “The preseason games are tricky in that like a lot of the veterans are playing (the games) because they know they need to play them, but it’s not the intensity and the pace of a regular-season game. And sometimes depending on who’s in the lineup, you’re not necessarily playing against NHL players. So, it can be misleading, both good and bad. I can answer that question better at the end of training camp.”
Sandin Pellikka (5-11, 185) joined the Griffins late last season after his Swedish club, Skelleftea AIK, was eliminated from the playoffs. He played two regular season games (one assist) and three playoff games (no points).
“It was great that Axel got a feel mostly for playing more games at the pro level on the North American ice surface,” Yzerman said. “I think it was enlightening for him, maybe eye-opening a little bit. It’s a little smaller ice, faster game, albeit it’s only the American League, not the NHL. And he’s got some work to do.
“If he works, and we’re expecting him to, has a good summer, gets a little bit stronger, a little bit quicker, that’ll help him prepare for a good training camp and preseason. But he’s really going to have to just force his way into the lineup. Do I rule it out? No. So we’ll wait and answer that in September. But generally, all the kids come with the mentality that ‘I’m going to show these guys, I’m going to make it hard on them to send me back to junior, to send me to GR, to release me from the ATO or PTO.’ Just the mindset of the athlete.”
Continued with comments from Wings director of player development Dan Cleary…
As Khan suggests, ASP would have to supplant one of the Red Wings’ seven regular defensemen–and probably a “top four guy”–to make the roster out of training camp and the exhibition season, and given his 5’11,” 185-pound size and stature and relative unfamiliarity with North American-sized 85-foot-wide ice rinks, those things suggest that he’s going to have to take some time to adjust in Grand Rapids, especially in terms of his tendency to loop back like a soccer player on those 100-foot-wide international rinks…
But ASP is truly extremely talented offensively, and there are times that talent and moxie make up for relative inexperience.