These were Zadina's first steps in the NHL, nothing more, no reason to get carried away. But you could see immediately why the Red Wings ranked him No. 3 on their draft board and were thrilled when he was available at No. 6, and why general manager Ken Holland has said he will have a chance to make the NHL roster at age 18.
In a white No. 11 practice jersey, the right wing showed off his shot, whipping pucks past goaltenders, ringing them off posts. He showed off his puck skills, dancing through the Power Edge Pro system of obstacles. He looked comfortable, even though he said he felt weird because he didn't have his usual gear.
"Obviously he's got a fantastic shot, really, good quick release, and he's very agile," said Red Wings director of player development Shawn Horcoff, who played 1,008 NHL games as a forward from 2000-16. "So I think for the first day with all brand-new equipment -- he only brought his skates -- it was pretty impressive."
The Red Wings desperately need that high-end skill. They made the Stanley Cup Playoffs for 25 straight seasons and won the Cup four times from 1991-2016 but have missed the postseason the past two seasons. Their average first pick was No. 38 over a quarter century thanks to success and trades. They unearthed centers Pavel Datsyuk in the sixth round (No. 171, 1998) and Henrik Zetterberg in the seventh round (No. 210, 1999), but the further from the top of the draft, the harder to find difference-makers.
Zadina is the Red Wings' highest pick since they took center Keith Primeau No. 3 in the 1990 NHL Draft and has been adding social-media followers by the hundreds each day. He scored seven goals in seven games for the Czech Republic in the 2018 IIHF World Junior Championship, tying for second in the tournament. He had 44 goals in 57 games for Halifax of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League in 2017-18, tied for third in the league. Detroit scored 2.59 goals per game in 2017-18, 28th in the NHL, and converted at 17.5 percent on the power play, 24th in the League.
Told he'd have a good chance to make the NHL roster, Zadina said: "That's good to hear, but I've got to do all my best stuff on the ice. I need to prove to them that I'm a good player and I deserve to get a spot on the team. I've got a chance, but I need to take it and I need to play my best hockey."
That's good to hear too. This is a player who said of the teams that passed on him at the draft: "I will fill their net with the puck."'