"I wasn't looked upon being a superstar or being a franchise player when I came in," Lidstrom said. "I came in with (Vladimir) Konstantinov, two young defensemen, just kind of looking at rebuilding with the Wings. They had some openings from older defensemen that they let go, and we had a chance to come in and play. Different situation for me, for sure.
"It's different times now, too, with everything in social media and the coverage. People know who you are. It wasn't like that at all when I came in in the early '90s."
What does Lidstrom think of players like Dahlin being compared to him?
"People are looking at me as one of the strong, good defensemen coming out of Sweden, so I feel proud of being mentioned like that too," Lidstrom said.
That's an understatement, of course. But maybe understatement is underused. Any comparison to Lidstrom is a lot on Dahlin's shoulders.
"It is," Lidstrom said. "I've had the fortune to play a lot of years. I've had a lot of success both with the Wings and individual. He's still too young to put with that kind of pressure, I think.
"He still has to learn to play the 200-foot game, as they say. You have to be strong defensively if you want to get matched up against the other teams' top lines. So it takes time. It's not something you can just get thrown into and expect to come out on top all the time.
"But from what I've seen, he's been adapting so quickly to playing at the next level. He showed that when he came three years ago when he played for Frolunda in the highest league in Sweden, and I think he showed it last year too stepping into in the NHL with the big hype, and I think he responded real well.
"So that's one impressive thing with Rasmus, is that he's been able to adapt so quickly to being in new environments."
Dahlin will have to adjust to this one now. He said he will try to treat it like another game. But that will be difficult, especially with the likes of Lidstrom in the building.
"I'm just trying to focus on the game," Dahlin said, "because otherwise I can't play."