SAD MOMENT: Red Wings top star bids farewell to club in tears.

SAD MOMENT: Red Wings top star bids farewell to club in tears.

Red Wings 2024 First Round Draft

The 2024 NHL Entry Draft is just under two weeks away now. Though the order of the last two picks is still pending the result of the Stanley Cup Final, we mostly know where every team is picking and which players could and should be available at each selection.

The Detroit Red Wings, as you probably already know, hold the 15th pick in this year’s festivities. This is their first time picking outside the top-10 since 2016, but the organization still expects to add a quality talent with the pick. After all, it was exactly 10 years ago that the Red Wings selected a kid named Dylan Larkin with the 15th pick, and we know how that worked out for the club.

Red Wings sign captain Dylan Larkin to 8-year extension

While it would be foolish to expect that the player selected this year will become another Larkin, there are plenty of prospects projected to be available that could become a pillar of the future in Detroit. Their scouting team’s objective is to identify these players and make sure that they get the best one when it’s their turn to pick.

(C/RW) Konsta Helenius

We’ll start with a prospect that probably has the lowest chance of being available out of the prospects suggested here. Konsta Helenius was something of a Finnish phenom this season while playing against men in Finland’s top league. He 14 goals and 36 points through 51 games and then followed that up with two goals and six points in six playoff games. The kid can flat-out produce, and the way he does it should translate as he moves up the ladder.

Konsta Helenius - 2024 NHL Draft Prospect Profile - The Hockey Writers - Editor's Choice - NHL News, Analysis & More

Helenius is keenly aware of where everyone is on the ice, and that translates at both ends of the ice. While he would much rather dissect opposing defenses, he moves himself into the dangerous areas as both an attacker and defender. He isn’t afraid to go to the net, and he constantly finds ways to create offense. He probably won’t be a prolific scorer in the NHL, but his pure playmaking ability and hockey IQ makes him a threat to become a potent top six producer for years to come. He probably shouldn’t be on the board when it’s the Red Wings’ turn to pick, but it’s not outside the realm of possibility, especially if there’s a run on defensemen early on in the draft.

(RW) Michael Brandsegg-Nygård

Here’s the thing: Michael Brandsegg-Nygård has been connected to the Red Wings a lot throughout this draft cycle, and for good reason. His game is centered around a lot of what the Red Wings lack, including an imposing forecheck and strong decision-making. He plays a physical, mature game that should help him develop isn’t a high-effort, high-collision winger at the NHL level. The Athletic‘s Corey Pronman compares him to former Red Wing Tyler Bertuzzi, and I think that’s a fair comparison. (From “NHL Draft 2024 rankings: Macklin Celebrini leads Corey Pronman’s top 129 prospects”, The Athletic, 5/28/24).

Brandsegg-Nygård fits the profile of forwards the Red Wings have taken early in recent drafts. Like Marco Kasper and Nate Danielson, the Norwegian winger’s compete level is one of his most appealing traits. He plays a mature brand of offense, and his shot is promising enough to project him as a consistent scorer in the NHL. But as was the case with Kasper and Danielson, it is fair to question if Brandsegg-Nygård’s upside will be the highest of players still on the board at 15th overall. Regardless, he plays a game that fans will fall in love with and he should become a useful NHLer for years to come.

(C) Michael Hage

10 years ago when the Red Wings selected Larkin, he was a centerman committed to play for the University of Michigan in the Fall. Detroit has a chance to repeat history later this month, and though this center isn’t from Michigan like Larkin is, he does profile similarly to the Red Wings’ captain.

With 33 goals and 75 points in 54 games, Michael Hage had the fourth-most points in the United States Hockey League this season. After being limited to just 13 games last season due to a shoulder injury, he roared back into action this season, and was one of the hottest prospects in this draft class down the stretch with 27 points in his final 14 games. He already possesses NHL size at 6-foot-1, 190 pounds, and his shot is already good enough to score on professional goaltenders. If he hits his ceiling, he’ll be a top-line center that can do a little bit of everything; I think his floor is a bottom six winger with good offensive touch. After spending this season with the Chicago Steel as well as his plan to join Michigan next season, I think his development is in good hands at least to start. If nothing else, he’s an easy kid to cheer for given how he handled his father’s passing last summer.

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