Sports Illustrated Kids - USA (2022-01 & 2022-02)

(Maropa) #1
DAVID E. KLUTHO (2)

25 and 17—to veterans. So Larkin


wears 71, a number significant for


its insignificance in Red Wings lore.


(No one wore it for more than a


season before Larkin.)


All that incredible franchise history

was not so far in the past for Larkin.


His favorite Red Wing growing up


was Henrik Zetterberg, who had led


the team to that 2008 Cup. In his


rookie season, Larkin often played on


the Wings’ top line with his idol. He


finished the year with 23 goals and had


22 assists, and potted his first playoff


goal against the Lightning.


“I don’t think I can really put into

words the transition from being a


fan and idolizing him to playing with


him and becoming friends with him,


and ultimately learning from him,”


Larkin says.


That playoff appearance was the

25th in a row for Detroit, a streak that


started in 1990–91, five years before


Larkin was born. The Wings haven’t


made the postseason since. While


Larkin’s time with Zetterberg was a


special one, it was also a transition. In


2018–19, after Zetterberg’s retirement,


Larkin had his best season yet,


registering 32 goals and 41 assists


in 76 games. The team, however,


finished just 32-40-10. Now a city used


to winning is counting on its native son


to deliver them back to glory.


VETERAN PRESENCE


In January 2021, the Red Wings announced


that Larkin would be the team’s 37th captain,


its first since Zetterberg. The honor reflects that


he’s the team’s best player and a leader in the


community. Larkin has volunteered his time at


the Special Olympics in Waterford and teamed up


with his dad, who works in the beauty industry, to


donate extra gloves and masks to local hospitals


during the COVID-19 pandemic.


Now he’s living up
to the responsibility of
the captaincy on the ice.
Before the NHL paused its
season before the holidays,
Larkin led the resurgent
Red Wings with 29 points
(15 goals, 14 assists) in
27 games. Detroit was
15-13-3 at the break, on
pace for its first winning
season since 2015–16. And
Larkin, who got to live his dream a few short
years ago by playing with his idols, already
finds himself in the opposite position,
leading a pair of star rookies in Swedish
winger Lucas Raymond and German
defenseman Moritz Seider. The Wings’
success also owes to a hometown reunion:
They traded in the offseason for starting
goalie Alex Nedeljkovic, an old friend of Larkin’s
from his under-16 team.
Now, a fairy-tale career seems destined for
a storybook ending. But for Larkin the idea of
the hometown hero ending the title drought is
almost beyond comprehension.
“It’s something I’ve thought about, and I don’t
even know how much excitement I would have,”
Larkin says. “I don’t even know what I would do
with the Cup. I think I would probably just bring
it to the center of Waterford and have everyone
spend some time with it.” Q

THE NEXT GEN
Larkin is enjoying a
career year, leading
a group of talented
rookies that includes
Seider (No. 53 ).

4 0 / SPORTS ILLUSTRATED KIDS
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