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Todd McLellan blames Patrick Kane for Red Wings’ deflating loss vs Wild

Detroit Red Wings head coach Todd McLellan didn't stutter to throw Patrick Kane under the bus after the 5-4 loss at home against the Minnesota Wild.

Patrick Kane #88 of the Detroit Red Wings at Madison Square Garden
© Bruce Bennett/Getty ImagesPatrick Kane #88 of the Detroit Red Wings at Madison Square Garden

Todd McLellan is one of the most direct and vocal coaches in the NHL. The Detroit Red Wings‘ bench boss calls it as he sees it. He definitely didn’t sugarcoat his thoughts on Patrick Kane’s late penalty after the 5-4 defeat in regulation against the Minnesota Wild.

“It hurts to not get anything out of this game,” McLellan admitted, via NHL.com. “Especially on a penalty 150 feet from our net and away from the play.” McLellan’s comment was a clear shot at Kane‘s stick infraction that handed the Wild a late power play opportunity.

Being booed off the ice at the sound of the second-period horn certainly served as a wake-up call for the Red Wings. In the third period, they found their footing and tied the game at 4–4 after trailing 4–1. However, there was still time left for the Red Wings to trip over the same stone once again.

Kane had scored the equalizer, yet he followed it up by committing a nonsensical tripping penalty on a possession-less Quinn Hughes. Minnesota went on the man advantage, Kirill Kaprizov cashed in with 1:51 left in the game—and that was all she wrote for Detroit.

Todd McLellan HC of Detroit Red Wings

Todd McLellan and the Red Wings are in trouble

Playoff implications for Detroit

A win would’ve put the Red Wings in a playoff spot with five games left in the 2025–26 NHL season. Instead, they remain in the jam-packed fight for a wild-card spot. A divisional ticket is no longer available, as the loss to the Wild meant the Montreal Canadiens punched their ticket to the Stanley Cup Playoffs.

The only way into the postseason for Detroit is now through the wild card. However, there are six teams fighting for those two spots, so the Wings’ odds decrease tremendously.

Red Wings’ playoff drought

With the Buffalo Sabres clinching a playoff spot for the first time since 2011, and snapping their 14-season playoff drought, the Red Wings could now carry the burden of the longest active playoff drought. For a franchise that once prided itself on making the postseason 25 years in a row, these are unforeseen levels of misery in Motor City. Detroit’s last playoff appearance was in 2016, and its last playoff series win in 2013.

The Red Wings can still turn things around, but the loss against the Wild had the feel of a playoff-elimination defeat, even if it was in a regular-season outing. Needless to say, McLellan, Kane, and company can’t afford to point fingers around the locker room. Instead, they must figure out a way to make the postseason and avoid yet another heartbreaking end to the season.

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