#53 in your program, #1 in your hearts

The Free Press’s Helene St. James took note of the reason why Red Wings defenseman Moritz Seider wears #53

One of the many reasons the Detroit Red Wings are so impressed with defenseman Moritz Seider is how good he is at thinking on his feet.

He did get caught though, a few years back, when he was with Mannheim in his native Germany — and that’s why he wears No. 53. It turns out he had watched the 1968 movie “Herbie the Love Bug” about a Volkswagen Beetle named Herbie that sports the number.

“I had a chance playing pro when I was 16 in Mannheim, and they were asking me and they caught me off guard,” Seider said Saturday. “I watched a movie the day before and it stuck in my head somehow. That’s why I’m wearing 53.”

Kulfan, HSJ discuss Tyler Bertuzzi’s absence

The Detroit Red Wings play 3 of their next 6 games in Canada, so they’ll be missing Tyler Bertuzzi for a significant period of time due to his decision to not be vaccinated against COVID-19, and Red Wings coach Jeff Blashill discussed how the team will adjust to the absence of #59 while speaking with the Detroit News’s Ted Kulfan…

“In game 2 (against Vancouver) we were missing Larks (Dylan Larkin for a suspension),” said coach Jeff Blashill, using the Larkin example. “You make your line adjustments and certainly Tyler is a big part of our team and of who we are. He’s a real good player, but the extent you miss Tyler depends how the guys who fill some of those responsibilities play. If they play great, then the loss is less then if they don’t play great. Certainly we’ll be excited to get Tyler back tomorrow (Sunday in Chicago) but tonight we’ll have 20 guys dressed good enough to win the hockey game and we have to go out and execute at a high level.”

Blashill elected to slide Robby Fabbri into Bertuzzi’s spot on a line with Larkin and Lucas Raymond, while Carter Rowney drew into the lineup.

“Fabbs, for me, has been outstanding from day one of training camp in terms of his competitiveness, he has a high compete level, he’s got skill and has some of the attributes that Bert brings to the table in terms of going to get pucks and ability to score,” Blashill said. “We think it’s the most natural guy going to that line. He and Raymond have played together and played well, and Fabs centered that line when Larks was out.  We think it gives us a good piece up there.”

Bertuzzi’s decision to not get the shots, said Blashill, doesn’t bring any hard feelings among teammates.

“Our guys love Tyler Bertuzzi, he’s a great teammate, and as a coaching staff I’ve loved coaching him,” Blashill said. “He’s somebody that comes to work every day. He has great character. Players were allowed to make a decision and that’s the decision he’s made and we’ll accept that and treat it as when a player is missing and a player could be missing for a multitude of reasons. For us, it’s not a big story. We’ll play a hockey game and try to win with the 20 (players) we have.”

And the Free Press’s Helene St. James….

The NHL and the Players Association agreed not to have a vaccine mandate, but teams can suspend without pay players cannot participate in club activities because they are not vaccinated. Coach Jeff Blashill said the Wings “would keep it internally” whether Bertuzzi has been suspended.

Blashill did answer what Bertuzzi is doing while he cannot practice with his teammates. They had a morning skate Saturday at Bell Centre.

“He skated (Friday) and he chose to skate today on his own,” Blashill said. “That’s up to him.”

Commissioner Gary Bettman said before the season began there are only four players who have chosen not to get the vaccine. 

Bertuzzi is a top-line player, power play guy, and has a team-leading four goals after four games.

“Certainly Tyler is a big part of our team, he’s a big part of who we are,” Blashill said. “He’s a real good player. The extent to which we miss Tyler depends on the guys who fill the responsibilities play. We’ll be excited to get Tyler back.”

Well, can we call him ‘Herbie’ Seider, then?

I thought everybody knew this, but Twitter is going ape about this revelation from the Free Press’s Helene St. James:

Red Wings D Moritz Seider said he chose 53 because he had watched Herbie the Lovebug movie the day before he was asked what number he wanted to wear.— Helene St. James (@HeleneStJames) October 23, 2021

Herbie was a Volkswagen, after all.

Red Wings-Canadiens mega morning skate Tweets and articles: Game previews, Habs pre-game pressers, Allen starts for MTL; Wings go with 12F, 6D

The Detroit Red Wings face an unenviable task in battling the winless Montreal Canadiens (0-and-5) tonight at 7 PM EDT (on Bally Sports Detroit/City TV/TVA Sports/ESPN+97.1 FM) and then the Chicago Blackhawks (0-4-and-1) tomorrow night.

In theory, the 2-1-and-1 Red Wings can make quite the statement by pushing the Habs to the first 0-and-6 start by a Stanley Cup Finalist ever, and yes, if the Wings were to sweep this weekend’s games, they’d serve notice to the rest of the NHL; more realistically, earning a split would afford Detroit genuine optimism regarding their start while vanquishing at least one of their historical opponents, and a winless weekend…Would not be good.

Anyway, the Canadiens took to the ice around 10:30, per the Montreal Gazette’s Stu Cowan…

Complete rosters for tonight’s game between #Habs and Red Wings at the Bell Centre #HabsIO: pic.twitter.com/zt5GRCDWRM— Stu Cowan (@StuCowan1) October 23, 2021

Both rinks being used this morning at Bell Sports Complex in Brossard #Habs #HabsIO pic.twitter.com/1QdGbE35r1— Stu Cowan (@StuCowan1) October 23, 2021

#Habs head coach Dominique Ducharme speaking with his players at morning skate in Brossard #HabsIO pic.twitter.com/Vc3xAtnWf7— Stu Cowan (@StuCowan1) October 23, 2021

Not surprisingly, Jake Allen will get the start for Montreal, per TVA Sports’ Renaud Lavoie:

Continue reading Red Wings-Canadiens mega morning skate Tweets and articles: Game previews, Habs pre-game pressers, Allen starts for MTL; Wings go with 12F, 6D

Prospect Round-up, Europe: Edvinsson plays 23:30 in SHL; LDN 1+1 in J20

Of prospect-related note in Europe on Saturday:

In the SHL, William Wallinder finished even with 1 shot in 13:19 played in Rogle BK’s 3-1 win over Lulea;

Albert Johansson finished even with 1 shot in 19:45 played as Farjstads BK won 4-1 over Timra;

In terms of the Frolunda trio: Frolunda HC lost 4-3 in overtime to the Malmo Redhawks, and:

Simon Edvinsson finished even with 4 shots in a massive 23:30 played:

Follow #7 Edvinsson on this sequence as he makes multiple smart plays to create and maintain o-zone pressure for Frölunda, leading to the 2-0 goal. #LGRW pic.twitter.com/wDpdb0Jc9O— IcehockeyGifs (@IcehockeyG) October 23, 2021

Theodor Niederbach finished even with a shot in 15:19 played;

And Elmer Soderblom finished at -1 with 1 shot in 14:49 played;

In the Swedish J20 league, Liam Dower Nilsson scored a goal and added an assist (and took 3 penalties, including a game misconduct) in Frolunda HC’s 5-3 win over Farjestads BK;

Finally, in the Finnish Liiga, Eemil Viro finished even with 3 shots in 15:11 played as TPS Turku won 1-0 over HPK.

Alliance of European Hockey Clubs names Seider its ‘Young Player of the Year,’ nominates Datsyuk (and others) for ‘Career Excellence Award’

The Alliance of European Hockey Clubs is announcing some awards this morning and announcing nominees for others as part of its European Hockey Forum today, and one Red Wings player won an award…

While another was nominated for an award:

Bultman engages in a Q and A with Mark Howe

The Athletic’s Max Bultman engaged in a lengthy Q and A with Mark Howe this morning, discussing many topics with the 66-year-old hockey legend, who’s just retired from his job as the Red Wings’ director of pro scouting:

What made this the right time for you to retire?

Well, it’s hard to explain. I remember when I used to ask my dad when I was a player, every once in a while I’d call him and say, ‘Dad, how do you know when it’s time to retire?’ And all he said was, ‘Ah, you’ll know.’ And I always used to say, ‘Well dad, that’s a bad answer. Doesn’t help me at all,’ and we’d laugh, but I think it was maybe about two years into it, a year and a half, something like that, and I was coming home from a game down at the Joe. We beat somebody convincingly, and I did my job, and the team won and it was a routine victory, but it hit me that night: I just didn’t feel the same anymore, for whatever reason. So I remember I called Dad up in Traverse City, I said, ‘Well, I get what you’re talking about now,’ and I made the decision that night it was time to retire.

I think last year, I think with all that was going on with the pandemic and with so much going on, and (there had) been a health issue with my longtime girlfriend here at home, so I think you put it all together. But the bottom line was, and I told Steve Yzerman, I just said, ‘Steve, it’s time. I know it’s time.’ I’ve worked really hard at scouting. I put as much effort into it as I did my playing days, and I just can’t do the 150, 155 games and all the travel and all that, the big commitment that it takes to do the scouting job properly — the way I would go at it every year.

My body and brain and everything else were saying it’s time to go, and it’s time to let it go and move on to the next step in my life. So that’s basically what it came down to.

Continued (paywall)

Praise for the Red Wings’ and Pistons’ ‘team toughness’

The Free Press’s Shawn Windsor wrote a “Spirit of the Thing” column which extols the virtues of the Red Wings and Pistons as tougher, don’t-take-any-shit teams this morning:

The Wings and Pistons aren’t close to contention. But then, you knew that.  

What you may not have known, at least until the last couple of weeks, is how much the city’s winter teams are beginning to embody Detroit. Yes, we’re not even a week into the NBA schedule and barely two weeks into the NHL’s — but the physicality and toughness both teams have displayed isn’t an accident.  

It’s by design, specifically those of Steve Yzerman and Troy Weaver. Even in the small sample size of five combined games, it’s easy to see. 

Whether it’s Dylan Larkin dropping his gloves after taking a swing at Tampa Bay’s Mathieu Joseph in the season opener or Givani Smith curling three left hooks into Calgary’s Milan Lucic on Thursday night, the Detroit Red Wings aren’t taking anything.  

From anyone.  

Continued; the Red Wings and Pistons are certainly “prickly,” but I think that the Wings’ team toughness is a work in progress…

Prospect round-up: Cossa wins again; Draper posts 2A in BCHL; Phillips posts 2A, Gylander stops 35 in NCAA

Of prospect-related note on Friday:

In the QMJHL, Jan Bednar served as the back-up in the Acadie-Bathurst Titan’s 3-0 loss to Rouyn-Noranda;

In the OHL, Pasquale Zito finished even with 2 shots and a 2-for-7 faceoff record in the Windsor Spitfires’ 3-2 shootout loss to Kitchener;

In the WHL, Sebastian Cossa stopped 27 of 29 shots in the Edmonton Oil Kings’ 9-2 win over Brandon (for what it’s worth, after 8 games, Cossa has a 1.37 GAA and a .948 save percentage);

Alex Cotton scored 2 goals, finishing at -2 with 3 shots, in the Lethbridge Hurricanes’ 6-3 loss to Red Deer;

Cross Hanas finished at -2 with 1 shot in the Portland Winterhawks’ 5-2 loss to Everett;

In the BCHL, Kienan Draper had 2 assists, finishing even in the Chilliwack Chiefs’ 7-3 win over Merritt;

In NCAA Hockey, Ethan Phillips had 2 assists, finishing even with 1 shot, and Robert Mastrosimone finished even with 2 shots in the Boston University Terriers’ 3-2 loss to Merrimack;

Cooper Moore finished at -2 with 1 shot in the University of North Dakota Fighting Hawks’ 5-2 loss to Quinnipiac;

Carter Gylander stopped 35 of 38 shots in the Colgate Raiders’ 8-3 win over the Arizona State University Sun Devils. Ryan O’Reilly had an assist, finishing at -2 with 2 shots for Arizona State;

Antti Tuomisto had an assist, finishing even with 3 shots in the University of Denver Pioneers’ 6-5 loss to Providence.

Carter Mazur also had an assist, finishing at +1 with 1 shot, and Shai Buium finished even with 1 shot for Denver;

Red Savage had an assist, finishing at +1 with a 7-and-5 faceoff record, as the Miami of Ohio Redhawks tied Bowling Green 2-2;

Jack Adams had an assist, finishing at +1 in the University of Notre Dame Fighting Irish’s 6-0 win over Rochester;

And Sam Stange finished even with 2 shots in the University of Wisconsin Badgers’ 5-1 loss to St. Cloud State.