Among the aspects of defenseman Anton Johansson’s game that excite the Detroit Red Wings about the Swedish prospect is the physical presence that he brings to the ice.

“He’s got that snarl to his game when he wants it,” said Dan Watson, coach of the AHL Grand Rapids Griffins, Detroit’s top farm club.

On occasion, though, Johansson snarls a bit too loudly and runs afoul of the rules of the game. One of those occasions came on Friday.

Anton Johansson(4th round’22) with a nice move at the blue line #LGRW #leksandsif pic.twitter.com/nt3fpSroz2

— Red Wings Prospects (@LGRWProspects) August 29, 2025

Playing for Leksands in a Swedish Hockey League preseason game against Linköping, Johansson was assessed a match penalty for boarding during the first period.

Johansson caught Linköping forward Loki Krantz from behind with a punishing hit, driving his opponent into the boards in front of the Linköping bench. After consulting, officials issued the Red Wings prospect a match penalty.

Linköping didn’t score during the five-minute advantage but still won the game 3-0.

Red Wings Pick Playing In First Pairing

Leksands is expecting Johansson to play major minutes this season. He’s been skating in the team’s top defense pairing during SHL preseason action. Detroit selected the 6-foot-4, 196-pound right-shot defenseman 105th overall in the 2022 NHL entry draft.

This will be his farewell season in Sweden. Already signed to an entry-level contract by the Red Wings, Johansson will report to North America, likely to the AHL Griffins, once his Swedish season concludes.

Anton Johansson(4th round’22 for Leksands if) was very AnJo tonight.
•high volume shots that got on net. One post, one off the goalies helmet
•good skating.
•closing gaps and taking the body
•few scrums
Really looking forward to seeing how he progresses this year #LGRW pic.twitter.com/bdlamc75Si

— Red Wings Prospects (@LGRWProspects) August 16, 2025

He got his first taste of North American action during a 14-game stint in Grand Rapids late last season. Johansson dished out six assists and served 12 minutes in penalties.

Johansson, 21, found that the smaller North American ice surface is a better fit to his style of game.

“Of course. I think my game suits pretty good over here,” Johansson said. “So, yeah, I think that will be good for the future.”