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‘Overwhelmed’ family man Sergei Fedorov relishing celebrating Detroit Red Wings history

Sergei Fedorov & Nicklas Lidström on Red Wings careers: ‘Overwhelming’

Former Detroit Red Wings superstars Sergei Fedorov and Nicklas Lidström, Nov. 7, 2025 in Detroit.

Sergei Fedorov, cutting a trim, fit figure that makes him look like he could still suit up and play, tried to explain what it’s like for him to be in Detroit this weekend as part of a Red Wings celebration of franchise history.

“It’s tough, to be honest with you,” he said. “As soon as I landed, a lot of thoughts came, a lot of memories came, and it’s still overwhelming.

“I’m trying to control myself, but it’s great to see you guys. I follow Red Wings from Moscow from time to time.”

Fedorov, the dynamic, extraordinary talent the Wings plucked from the fourth round of the 1989 NHL draft, back when the Iron Curtain still hung like a figurative wall around the Soviet Union, was at Little Caesars Arena on Friday, Nov. 7, as part of the team’s centennial celebration fan fest. It was his second visit to the Wings’ new home; he spent his playing years, from 1990 to 2003, at Joe Louis Arena, where he played a crucial role in the Wings winning the Stanley Cup in 1997, 1998 and 2002.

He’ll be back again on Jan. 12, when the Wings retire his No. 91. Fedorov called it a tremendous honor.

“Thoughts are very simple,” he said. “I got lucky to play with the greatest players in the game, coaches, staff. And I cannot thank enough ownership that gave me a chance to send a plane to Portland, Oregon, to get me. Mr. Ilitch’s family did a great job. I’m glad we won. Finally, we won.”

Fedorov sat next to fellow 1989 draftee Nicklas Lidström in an interview with reporters Friday evening. The Wings asked the budding superstar defenseman from Sweden to stay home from the draft so as not to tip off any teams, enabling them to grab him in the third round.

When the Wings drafted Fedorov at No. 74, there were snickers from competing teams because he might never be able to come to the NHL. But taking a page worthy of a John Le Carré novel, the Wings got their man during an exhibition game in Portland in the lead-up to the Goodwill Games. A hotel key was slipped under a door. A team employee collected Fedorov’s belongings while he was at the game. Another employee waiting in the lobby, a signal for Fedorov to follow him to a taxi that idled nearby (the driver had been tipped $100 to not ask questions). Mike Ilitch’s private plane, ready for takeoff.

Fedorov made his NHL debut that fall and it didn’t take long to show why the Wings chanced a pick on him. In 1993-94 he became the first Russian to win the Hart Trophy as the league’s most valuable player. Three years later, he hoisted the Cup.

“Sergei had a tremendous career,” Lidström said. “When I came to the Wings, I think he came the year before I came, Sergei was already a star when I joined the team. A couple of years later, he was a superstar in the NHL. Hart Trophy winner, Stanley Cup winner. He won everything, so it’s well-deserved to see his jersey go up in the rafters, too.”

The Wings retired Lidström’s No. 5 soon after he retired in 2012. Fedorov’s departure as a free agent in 2003 caused a rift that didn’t heal until he (together with Lidström) was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2015.

Now, it’s the memories that matter – from the disappointment of the playoffs in the early to mid 1990s to relief – that linger.

“We had a few disappointing seasons, but we never thought we cannot have done it,” Fedorov said. “The fans drove us, supported us, win or lose, bad or good. It was an amazing platform for us to continue this hard working process until eventually to get that precious trophy to the city, to the state, to the fans.

“Those parades, over one million people. I think it was a sea of people. It was a tremendous honor to be on that stage and speak to all those people who really want us to succeed. And really thank God we did it. This kind of winning attitude, winning manner helped one another.”

Fedorov, 55, returned to Russia in 2009 having played 1,248 NHL games. After playing in the KHL, he turned to coaching CSKA Moscow, last doing so in 2023-24. Fedorov still resides in Moscow with his wife and two children, and after a lifetime of being on the road and answering the grueling demands of professional hockey, he’s enjoying a low profile.

” I want to stay with the family and grow together with my kids and be around,” Fedorov said.

Contact Helene St. James at hstjames@freepress.com. Read more on the Detroit Red Wings and sign up for our Red Wings newsletter. Her books: “The Franchise: Detroit Red Wings, A Curated History of Hockeytown,” and “On the Clock: Behind the Scenes with the Detroit Red Wings at the NHL Draft,” and “The Big 50: The Men and Moments that made the Detroit Red Wings” are available from Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Triumph Books. Personalized copies available via her e-mail.

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