The Free Press’s Helene St. James discusses the play of five young Red Wings players this morning, praising the Wings’ youth movement for delivering results:
Marco Kasper
Kasper, 20, showed he was NHL ready in training camp, but was sent to the minors because of a roster crunch. That error was amended within a week and all Kasper (No. 6, 2022 draft) has done since is reinforce he’s where he belongs. Since coach Todd McLellan’s arrival on Dec. 26, Kasper isn’t just displaying his gritty and defensive side, he’s coming into his own offensively, with 12 points (seven goals) in 17 games entering Saturday. Over the past week, he recorded his first two-goal game, Monday against the Los Angeles Kings, and then set up the game-tying goal against the Oilers in Edmonton on Thursday. He’s holding his own playing left wing on the top line (just like Dylan Larkin did in his rookie season) and showing signs he may emerge as a second-line center down the road.
Albert Johansson
Johansson, 24, was in an unusual position to start the season: Guaranteed to be on the roster, because the 60th pick from the 2019 draft was no longer waiver-exempt, but not guaranteed to be in the lineup. And he wasn’t, appearing in just 17 games through Christmas. But on Jan. 2, veteran defenseman Jeff Petry went down with an injury (he still hasn’t returned), creating an opening for Johansson. He has responded by fitting onto the second pairing, opposite Edvinsson, and recording four points and a plus-four rating through 13 games. Last week, McLellan indicated Johansson isn’t going back to watching from the sidelines should the Wings be at full health on defense. “Albert hasn’t done anything to give any of his game back,” McLellan said. “Good for him.”
Elmer Söderblom
He joined the team Jan. 21, called up after consecutive losses sparked a desire to shake things up among the forward group. Söderblom, 23, appeared in 21 games with the Wings in 2022-23, and then dropped from the radar. But the 6-8 Swede grabbed in the 2019 draft (No. 159 overall) has good hand-to-eye coordination and moves well for a player his size; he, too, has found a way to stay in the lineup, displacing more veteran options. He used his long reach to score his first goal, Monday against the Kings, and followed up with an assist the next game, both times helping the Wings rally to victory from 2-0 deficits. He, Kasper, Edvinsson, Berggren and Johansson are a big part of why there’s hope the Wings will finally make it back to the playoffs.
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