"I'm very excited about his talent," said Hakan Andersson, Detroit's director of European scouting. "There was another scout that told me he thinks he might be the best of them all and I kind of agree. He's a great skater and a very good guy with the puck. But he has to fill out. His dad (Roger Johansson) played 160 games in the NHL and 500 games in the Swedish league and was on the national team. He's 6-foot-3 and he's got two older brothers that are big. If he grows, it's going to help his career more but even right as a 6-foot kid, a very good hockey player. For some reason, it didn't quite come out when he played on the under-18 national team but he dominated in junior in Sweden. Just dominated. He was voted the best defenseman in the junior playoffs in Sweden. Talented guy without the size."
For Farjestad BK J20 in the SuperElit, Johansson had five goals and 24 assists in 40 games.
After selecting Johansson, the Red Wings took forward Albin Grewe with their third-round pick, 66th overall.
"Albin Grewe is a very outstanding competitor," Andersson said. "I can see how he pictures himself after Brad Marchand. He's very competitive. I don't know all the North American guys. Out of the Europeans, probably the most competitive player in the whole draft. And in many years I would say."
Andersson relayed one telling story about Grewe.
"The senior coach in Djurgarden, they are a top team in the senior league, one of the better ones," Andersson said. "He said, 'I didn't realize it until I started to look around but every time this kid came up and practiced with the men's team, the whole intensity of the practice, the physical part of the practice, would go up. At first, he didn't know why. Then he realized every time this kid came up, he just brought the whole pace up.'"