Former Red Wings GM Ken Holland can’t help but root for his former assistant GM in Detroit, one Dallas Stars GM Jim Nill, during the Stanley Cup Final. Holland spoke with the Edmonton Sun’s Terry Jones regarding his admiration for his former colleague…
Continue reading Ken Holland’s rooting for Jim Nill’s Stars during the Cup Final…and he dishes on Yzerman as wellMonth: September 2020
Roughly Translated: Mathias Brome discusses his preparation for the SHL season with HockeyNews.se
The Detroit Red Wings took a flyer on 26-year-old Orebro HK forward Mathias Brome this past spring, signing the Swedish scorer to a 1-year contract. Brome spoke with HockeyNews.se’s Mattias Ek regarding his decision to sign with the Red Wings, as well as his status as waiting out the pandemic with Orebro in the SHL. What follows is roughly translated from Swedish:
Continue reading Roughly Translated: Mathias Brome discusses his preparation for the SHL season with HockeyNews.seBrome’s NHL dream will give Orebro a kick-start: “It’s enough to watch now”
A conversation with Detroit general manager Steve Yzerman made Mathias Brome choose to sign with the Detroit Red Wings over Vancouver.
After not playing in a game for 16 days, the Orebro star now wants to begin a hockey party in the team’s premiere against HV71.
“Right now it’s enough to watch the other games. I watched a bit of Malmo-Leksand. But you want to be there yourself and get a point,” says Brome to HockeyNews.se.
Roughly translated: Rasmussen joins the Graz 99ers
The Red Wings loaned Michael Rasmussen to the Elite ICE Hockey League’s Graz 99ers on Wednesday, and this morning, the 99ers’ team website posted a press release regarding Rasmussen’s addition to the team’s roster. What follows is translated from German:
Continue reading Roughly translated: Rasmussen joins the Graz 99ersA bit about University of Michigan forward Phillipe Lapointe
The Michigan Daily’s Josh Taubman reports that the University of Michigan Wolverines will have a familiar name on their roster this upcoming NCAA season.
Phillipe Lapointe, the son of former Red Wings player Martin Lapointe, will be skating for the Wolverines as the younger Lapointe (Phillipe is an older freshman at 20 years of age) attempts to carve out a name for himself:
“(Playing college hockey) is something he’s wanted to do since he was a kid,” Martin said. “Having a chance to play for University of Michigan, for him it was a dream come true.”
Phillipe is coming off a stellar year with the Trail Smoke Eaters of the British Columbia Hockey League, where he totaled 20 goals and 35 assists in 36 games.
Former Trail Smoke Eaters head coach Jeff Tambellini felt Phillipe was the perfect leader to build his team around. Phillipe’s greatest intangible trait is his leadership, which will be a valuable asset to Michigan’s highly touted freshman class.
“He was a player that I thought was so similar to the way his father played,” Tambellini said. “You look at the skillset that Marty had, Phil does the same things.”
Khan continues his prospect rankings this morning, and Svechnikov’s slotted a bit high
MLive’s Ansar Khan has filed the third installment of his “Top 20 Red Wings prospects” series, and I’m gonna be honest here: there’s no way I would have ranked this player as the Wings’ sixth-best prospect:
6. Evgeny Svechnikov, right wing
Height/weight: 6-3/212
Drafted: First round 2015 (No. 19)
2019-20 club: Grand Rapids (AHL), Detroit (NHL)
2019-20 stats: Grand Rapids 51 GP, 11 G, 14 A, 25 PT, 61 PM; Detroit 4 GP, 0 G, 0 A, 0 PT, 0 PM
This is a make or break season for Svechnikov with the Red Wings. He has been slow to develop due to inconsistency and having missed the 2018-19 season following ACL surgery. He is healthy now and no longer waiver-exempt, so he will start the season on the NHL roster. He has the size, skating ability and skills to provide offense and must show he can be a consistent scoring threat.
Khan continues; I’m genuinely not sure what to make of Svechnikov’s NHL upside any more, because his ACL injury still hampered him last season.
Is the former first-round draft pick still a top prospect as a goal-scoring, heavy-bodied winger? He might turn out as a scoring winger in a couple of seasons, but between some middling AHL numbers and the fact that he’s in the middle of a career re-start at 23 going on 24 this Halloween, I see Svechnikov projecting as a 3rd-line forward with speed, grit and size that will hopefully generate some offense on the forecheck.
Evgeny is an affable guy who’s easy to root for, but I also believe that he’s not going to develop into the top-six forward that the Wings believed they drafted in 2015.
HSJ makes the case for the Wings to draft Jamie Drysdale
The Free Press’s Helene St. James suggests that the Red Wings should pick Jamie Drysdale with their 4th overall pick at the 2020 NHL draft, via answering a mailbag question:
Drysdale would shore up the Wings’ defense, headlining the depth chart next to Moritz Seider, Yzerman’s first-round pick from 2019. The Wings would have Drysdale, Seider and Filip Hronek to anchor the blue line for the next decade, complemented by prospects Antti Tuomisto, Jared McIsaac and Gustav Lindstrom.
Drysdale, 5-foot-11 and 170 pounds, is an elite skater who is sound defensively and gifted offensively. Like [Quinn] Hughes, Drysdale isn’t a big guy, but he’s swift on his feet and capable with his stick.
If Drysdale isn’t available, Yzerman’s choices will include either Stutzle or Byfield. Yzerman could also surprise — like he did last year with Seider — and draft Marco Rossi, an elite playmaking center and the first European scoring leader in OHL history, or Cole Perfetti, a creative forward who amends for his less-than-stellar speed with goal-scoring ability
Continued; I’m on the Drysdale bandwagon, but I keep on hearing that the Wings are leaning toward drafting Perfetti instead. My hope is simply that the Wings pick the player they believe has the best “ceiling” in terms of his talent and possible development.
Stars assistant coach Todd Nelson talks about coaching in ‘the bubble’
Former Grand Rapids Griffins coach Todd Nelson is the “eye in the sky” for the Dallas stars, serving as the assistant coach watching from above. Nelson spoke with WZZM 13’s Jamal Spencer regarding his experiences in “the bubble” as Nelson attempts to help the Stars win their first Stanley Cup in 21 years:
“We’re working our tails off as coaches, making sure we don’t miss anything.” aid Nelson. “We don’t want any surprises from Tampa Bay. They’re thinking the same thing. Right now it’s a chess match, but at the end of the day it comes down to heart, hard work and character”.
Nelson became the third player ever to win the Calder Cup as a player, an assistant coach and as a head coach– In 1994 he won as a defenseman with the Portland Pirates, he won again in 2008 as an assistant coach with the Chicago Wolves and, finally, as the Griffins head coach in 2017. He also won the Colonial Cup twice in Muskegon as the Fury head coach as well. He says the chance to add his name to the greatest trophy in sports is special, but he’s not ready to reflect on his career achievements just yet.
“You know what, I’ll have plenty of time after we get out of ‘Shawshank’ here to reflect on this. I’m hoping it works out the right way, I’m not going to say it but we all know what that means. This is something that every player since you were five years old dreamt of being a part of.”
Red Wings send Rasmussen on an Austrian vacation, loan big center to Graz 99ers
This is a little late, but I was waiting to get my Pacifica fixed at the repair shop:
Update: The #RedWings have loaned center Michael Rasmussen to the Graz 99ers (Austria). pic.twitter.com/tCJqaYqf22
— Detroit Red Wings (@DetroitRedWings) September 23, 2020
Update: Here’s more from Sportsnet…
The Detroit Red Wings have loaned forward prospect Michael Rasmussen to the Graz 99ers of the ICE Hockey League, Austria’s top pro league, the team announced Wednesday.
The ninth-overall selection in the 2017 NHL Draft put up 22 points across 35 games for the Grand Rapids Griffins in 2019-20, the Red Wings’ AHL affiliate.
Rasmussen — six-foot-six, 221-pound pivot — also spent 62 games with Detroit in 2018-19, racking up eight goals and 10 assists.
The decision to loan Rasmussen, a 21-year-old native of Surrey, B.C., to the Austrian club likely comes in light of the AHL’s revised start date, which is now slated for Dec. 4, 2020, after the league was forced cancel its 2019-20 season as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. The ICE Hockey League’s 2020-21 season kicks off Friday.
More Mantha contract talk from The Fourth Period
Yesterday, The Fourth Period’s David Pagnotta Tweeted out news that the Red Wings and restricted free agent Anthony Mantha have begun contract negotiations, and The Fourth Period adds a little more context to the story today:
It should be noted that while a deal is not yet imminent, contract talks are well underway, and the lines of communications are open between the Red Wings and Mantha’s agent Pat Brisson.
…
It’s unclear what type of contract Mantha is looking for, how high of an AAV, but the Wings appear to be interested in a longer-term deal as the 20th overall selection in the 2013 NHL Draft is one-year away from being eligible for unrestricted free agency.
In 43 games with Red Wings this season, Mantha registered 16 goals and 22 assists for 38 points.
Kulfan has the Wings picking Drysdale in his mock draft
The Detroit News’s Ted Kulfan has filed his first “mock draft” ahead of the 2020 NHL draft, and he has the Red Wings picking a familiar name:
4. Detroit Red Wings: Jamie Drysdale, D, Erie (OHL). The Wings need help everywhere — literally every position. With a puck-moving defenseman so important these days, Drysdale can’t be passed on.