The Score’s John Matisz posted a list of his 10 people under the most pressure going into the 2025-2026 season, and no list of NHL players and executives would be complete these days without the Detroit Red Wings’ general manager:
Steve Yzerman
Armed with the so-called Yzerplan for rebuilding an Original Six franchise, Yzerman is about to embark upon Season 7 as the Red Wings’ GM.
Detroit has yet to make the playoffs, and it’s a coin flip if the skid ends at nine years given the competition for an Eastern Conference wild-card spot. Yzerman’s job should be hanging in the balance, but then again, he’s a franchise icon who’s ostensibly mastered the art of tempering expectations.
Detroit’s forward group is roughly NHL average. Its blue line is one gigantic question mark beyond cornerstones Moritz Seider and Simon Edvinsson. Goaltending’s been upgraded through the John Gibson acquisition. Todd McLellan, meanwhile, can flex his coaching muscles in his first full season.
Continued; I’m not going to bag on Yzerman like Steve Dangle did, and I’m going to emphasize the truth here: Steve Yzerman’s seat may be warm this season, but he is under absolutely no danger of losing his job as long as Marian and Christopher Ilitch are in charge of and/or own the team.
Has Yzerman been too cautious in terms of making trades to attempt to build a more competitive roster? For sure, 100% certain in my opinion.
Has he made some strange moves (see: the Jake Walman trade)?
Yes, of course. But has he swung and missed on free agents? That’s hard to say given that we don’t know which players were available to him to begin with.
Has he had to tear down Ken Holland’s team before beginning to build his own roster and slate of prospects? Again, 100% certain there. And that probably set what might be a 10-12 year rebuild back a couple of seasons.
Now do the fans deserve better, especially given that ticket prices have increased, and that non season ticket-holders have to buy a stupid 5-game plan in order to see Sergei Fedorov’s jersey retired? You bet. Chris Ilitch’s Red Wings are not Mike Ilitch’s Red Wings, and the customer service and guest experiences need some rebuilding, too.
But that’s not on the GM. And the Red Wings’ GM has assembled a significant pool of prospects with both the ability to improve the team and the ability to be traded in order to build the team through the trade market.
The Red Wings certainly need another top-six forward and another top-four defenseman as the 2025-2026 season progresses. This year’s roster still needs a lot of things to go right if they are to leapfrog Ottawa and Montreal for a playoff spot.
But there is hope in Detroit, there are hard-working players and prospects, and the management team didn’t get suckered into dropping a first-round pick, a prospect and a roster player for a Rickard Rakell or Bryan Rust this past offseason.
It’s up to the coaches and management to prove that the Todd McLellan effect sticks as of Thursday, and this team is going to have to avoid its month-long swoons, especially in February and March, in order to build a more consistent team that doesn’t bleed points away as the compressed Olympic schedule places unprecedented pressure on the Wings to perform better over far more limited periods of time.
But that’s what hockey is all about, and the pressure is on Yzerman, his management team, the coaches and the players to finally buck the experts’ expectations and finally at least be playoff-relevant all season long. That’s on everybody, and there’s more than enough pressure to go around.