Wings Pick Seven on Second Day of Draft

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With only one draft pick on the first day of the 2003 NHL Entry Draft, the Detroit Red Wings had to hope they could find a diamond in the rough to use their later picks on in the fourth through ninth rounds Sunday.

The Wings have had success with this strategy before, selecting Pavel Datsyuk in the sixth round of the 1998 Draft and Henrik Zetterberg in the seventh round in 1999.

After choosing Maine goaltender Jimmy Howard in the second round on Saturday, the Red Wings stuck with forwards and defensemen on Sunday.

In the fourth round they picked defenseman Kyle Quincey of the Ontario Hockey League’s London Knights. The 6’1″, 194-pound seventeen-year-old was described by Detroit assistant general manager Jim Nill as “a solid all-around defenseman.”

Detroit’s fifth-round pick was used on center Ryan Oulahen from Brampton of the OHL. Oulahen could have been drafted earlier had he not suffered a knee injury during the season. “Very tenacious, hard-working kid. We really like his drive, and he’s got good size. Just a real competitive kid.” Nill said of him. The eighteen-year-old stands at 6’0″ and weighs in at 180 pounds.

The Red Wings took Swedish winger Andreas Sundin with their first pick in the sixth round, acquired from Columbus. The 6’0″, 185-pound nineteen-year-old “has a scoring touch” according to Wings director of European scouting Hakan Andersson. “One of his first games in the Elite League, he got a penalty shot and scored a highlight goal. The coach said everybody on the bench was like, ‘Wow. How did he do that?'”

With their second sixth-round pick, Detroit selected underscouted Swedish defenseman Stefan Blom. The seventeen-year-old is 6’2″ tall and weighs 189 pounds. Nill says of him, “He’s getting better and better. He has good skills. You’re hoping he develops and in three or four years is on the national team.”

Tomas Kollar, a 21-year-old Swedish winger, was taken with the Red Wings’ seventh-round pick. He’s big at 6’2″ and 211 pounds and the Wings hope he will make the Swedish national team next year or the following year.

Detroit rolled the dice on their eighth-round pick, Vladimir Kutny. Scouts expected him to be a first round pick after seeing him an a tournament last August, but he joined Quebec of the QMJHL and hardly played during the season. Nill said the Wings “don’t know why” 6’4″, 195-pound eighteen-year-old winger didn’t get much ice time.

The Red Wings final selection of the draft was virtual unknown Mikael Johansson. The small (5’10”, 176 pounds) seventeen-year-old Swedish forward was another gamble for Detroit. “He’s one of those smaller, weaker guys that you hope will grow up one day and be 6-feet, 190 pounds,” Nill said.

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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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