Red Wings to Retire Sergei Fedorov’s Number in January

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The Detroit Red Wings announced on Tuesday that they will retire the #91 of Sergei Fedorov when they host the Carolina Hurricanes on January 12, 2026.

While no player has worn the number since Fedorov left the Red Wings for the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim as a free agent in 2003, the team has emphatically rejected the idea that the number was formally retired.

That said, when Brad Richards came to Detroit in 2015, he wore #17 because he wasn’t allowed to wear his usual #19 (retired for Steve Yzerman) or #91. Similarly, Vladimir Tarasenko wore #11 last season, having been denied #91.

When the Red Wings chose to retire the #4 sweater of Red Kelly during the 2018-19 season, the #retire91 hashtag picked up steam on social media. The team itself teased this announcement by sending a tweet featuring that hashtag at 7:00 AM on Tuesday before deleting it shortly thereafter.

Fedorov’s number has existed in a state similar to that of Larry Aurie’s #6. Aurie’s number was retired by Red Wings owner James Norris in 1938 before being de-listed from the team’s retired numbers in the early 2000s. Despite that, when Mike Modano requested to wear #6 for the 2010-11 season (his usual #9 being retired for Gordie Howe), he was not allowed to and ended up wearing #90.

Additional unofficially-retired numbers for the Red Wings include Pavel Datsyuk’s #13, which Jakub Vrana was not allowed to wear. Calvin Pickard wore #31 instead of his usual #30, last worn by Chris Osgood. Vladimir Konstantinov’s #16 is famously out of circulation, though the last player to come to Detroit having previously owned that number was Brett Hull in 2001. It is assumed that Henrik Zetterberg’s #40 is unavailable but the team hasn’t brought in a player who usually wore that number since Zetterberg’s retirement.

Fedorov’s #91 will be the team’s ninth formally-retired number, joining the aforementioned #4, #9, and #19, as well as Terry Sawchuk’s #1, Nicklas Lidstrom’s #5, Ted Lindsay’s #7, Alex Delvecchio’s #10, and Sid Abel’s #12.

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Clark founded the site that would become DetroitHockey.Net in September of 1996. He continues to write for the site and executes the site's design and development, as well as that of DH.N's sibling site, FantasyHockeySim.com.

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