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Dylan Larkin sends a clear warning to Steve Yzerman amid trade speculation

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David St-Jean
June 7, 2026  (5:35)
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Mar 28, 2026; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Philadelphia Flyers center Luke Glendening (41) and Detroit Red Wings center Dylan Larkin (71) gets set to face off in the second period at Little Caesars Arena.
Photo credit: Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images

Dylan Larkin has formally narrowed his trade options, and Steve Yzerman is now working from a short list, according to Pierre LeBrun of The Athletic on Friday.

This isn't a rumor floating around anymore. It's a formalized process.

LeBrun's reporting indicates Larkin's camp has submitted preferred destinations to the Red Wings front office, which means Yzerman's next move has boundaries. He can't just call anyone.

Pierre LeBrun: Re Dylan Larkin trade request: My understanding is that Steve Yzerman has been handed a short list of teams at this point.

That changes the leverage dynamic considerably. Teams not on that list know they're out. Teams on it know Yzerman has to work within it, which typically softens the asking price in return.

Larkin finished this season with 34 goals and 67 points in 74 games, carrying an $8.7 million cap hit through a team that ended the year ranked 16th overall with 92 points.

He also posted 14 power play goals and 9 game-winning goals. This isn't a declining captain looking for a soft landing. He's a productive top-six center at the peak of his value.

The Red Wings are trading their best player, and Yzerman still has to make it work

Detroit went 41-31-10 and finished sixth in the Atlantic Division. That's the context here. The rebuild stalled somewhere between "promising" and "playoff-ready," and now the captain wants out.

Larkin's last five games of the season: 4 goals, 5 assists, 9 points. He didn't fade out. He played his way up in value as the exit door opened.

There's something quietly brutal about that. A player producing at that level in a lost season is essentially auditioning for his next team on Yzerman's dime.

The short list format is not unusual in trade requests. Think of it like a no-trade clause executed in reverse. Sidney Crosby's eventual future movement, when it happens, will look exactly like this. The player holds real power while letting the GM do the paperwork.

Todd McLellan coached this team knowing the captain may not return next season. That's a difficult locker room reality to manage, even if both sides stayed professional publicly.

With Larkin gone, the Red Wings lose their most dangerous center, their penalty kill presence, and the identity piece the franchise has marketed for nearly a decade.

What Yzerman gets back from a short list, compared to an open market, is rarely full value. That's the trade-off. And the teams on that list know it.

The short-list reveal on June 6 suggests a trade could move quickly. Or it could stall if Yzerman decides none of the offers from approved destinations meet his floor.

That tension doesn't resolve neatly. It almost never does.