Kulfan’s notebook: Raymond’s getting the job done

The Detroit News’s Ted Kulfan filed an off-day notebook discussing the promise displayed by one Lucas Raymond, the NHL’s Rookie of the Month for November:

“I’m not going to get ahead of myself,” [Red Wings coach Jeff] Blashill said. “He’s a good player, there’s zero doubt. He’s really smart. He plays the right way. He’s been able to produce while also playing the right way. That’s the biggest key. That’s why he’s been so transferrable. He doesn’t need to cheat to create offense, and so then he earns ice time.”

Raymond has 10 goals and 12 assists for 22 points, in 24 games. The longest he’s gone without earning a point is two games. He’s had three, three-game point streaks. Raymond has thrived on a line with Dylan Larkin and Tyler Bertuzzi (now out for the next 10 days, being in COVID-19 protocol), complementing each other’s strengths.

Raymond has accepted the responsibility of playing on the top scoring line, knows what is expected and appears to relish the pressure.

“I take responsibility in the offensive game,” Raymond said.

There is a sense of pride and responsibility over the entire ice, which has pleased Blashill and the coaching staff from the start.

“I’m trying to find my game and I’m still learning every day, trying to get better at areas that are my weaknesses,” Raymond said. “I’m just trying to be an offensive forward that you can count on defensively who plays hard every night, and still working and going to find my identity as it goes on.My main thing is just to skate hard every night.”

Continued (paywall)

A bit of Calder Trophy stats talk from The Athletic’s Luszczyszyn

The Athletic’s Dom Luszczyszyn weighs in regarding the NHL’s major awards races, including the Calder Trophy, “By the Numbers” (as it were):

So far it’s a strong crop of rookies, but the two that have been most eye-popping both play for Detroit. Lucas Raymond and Moritz Seider have been revelations for the upstart Red Wings, more than any reasonable person might have expected to start the season. Raymond is leading the team in points with 22 in 24 games, a 75-point pace, while Seider has 16 points which translates to 55 points over 82 games. That’s stellar for a couple of rookies, but they’ve also been strong at five-on-five too. Raymond has helped the team’s top line look elite on a nightly basis while Seider has been the two-way presence this team has desperately been missing. Raymond is playing at a 2.6-win pace while Seider is at a two-win pace. That’s very close to elite calibre for their respective positions.

Those two aren’t the only special rookies this year though. Bowen Byram may just have Seider beat among defencemen with him scoring at a slightly higher rate (nine points in 13 games) and looking even stronger at five-on-five (57 percent expected goals rate). Byram gets the benefit of playing with more talented teammates, but he’s still been exceptional. As if the Avalanche needed more talented defenders. Up front, Dawson Mercer gets high marks, though that looks to be mostly due to a juiced goals percentage. He’s been strong with 14 points in 20 games, but not this strong. Trevor Zegras also hopped into the top five after a strong three-assist performance Wednesday night which put him on a 63-point pace. The 56 percent expected goals rate isn’t bad either.

Continued (paywall)

Continuing to fundraise on a blustery Thursday

I’ve tried to be good in terms of not badgering you with fundraising posts, and I’ve gotten a wonderful response to the, “Pay the taxes so we can stay at home” drive, but there’s a long way to go.

If you’re willing to lend a hand as I try to raise $748 to pay off our property tax bill for Aunt Annie and just plain old buy a cell phone because my old one won’t be supported as of January 1st (for a cost of about $500), we’re in the nascent stages (i.e. the very start) of building toward those goals.

I think we might have enough to get AA the month’s taxes in a couple of days, but not the whole bill, and the rest…Well, I do use the phone for work, but it’s hard to convince folks that not-for-profit businesses like this one need to have things like working laptops and cell phones when the investment back into the website isn’t as readily apparent as a hockey trip somewhere (but it still matters!).

So, if you’re willing to lend a hand, I would greatly appreciate your support as we try to keep the lights on and the blog up and running:

You can use PayPal at https://paypal.me/TheMalikReport, Venmo at https://venmo.com/george-malik-2, Giftly by using my email, rtxg@yahoo.com, at https://www.giftly.com. And you can contact me via email if you want to send me a paper check.

Roughly translated: Moritz Seider speaks with NHL.com/de

Red Wings defenseman Moritz Seider spoke with NHL.com/de in an exclusive interview this morning, and here’s a rough translation of Stefan Herget’s work:

Politeness and intelligence are Seider’s trademarks

The Red Wings’ German defender is very popular with the media and press due to his sociable manner

Moritz Seider: “I just try to be myself with the press,” he explains in an exclusive interview with NHL.com/de last week in Detroit. “If I’m authentically myself, that’s the best way to come across, because I don’t have to pretend. That suits me.”

In fact, it seems authentic when you speak to Seider, and despite his maturity, which he already has at age 20, it’s fun to talk to and interview him. That was also the case during his time in the AHL two years ago, when he took his first steps in North America far away from home and the familiarity of his family. He freshly answers all questions openly and honestly.

Not every athlete is so revealing, but instead, often builds a wall to prevent journalists and the public from getting too close to them. Often, standard phrases are then put together. Not so much with Seider, from whom one could get the impression that he’s enjoyed higher education.

“It started very positively with the sports school in [my hometown of] Erfurt,” he explains. “It was a great system back then with the ice training in an integrated timetable. That was of course unbelievable at the time. Then I went to Mannheim and graduated from secondary school there.”

Of course, sports was his favorite subject, but he was also fond of numbers and arithmetic. “To be honest, I’ve always been a big fan of math, I don’t even know why,” he says. “It was always very easy for me. I was also very fond of [my] English classes.”

But there were also subjects that Seider didn’t like. “Things like chemistry and biology,” he admits. “Those were too complicated for me. I’m still not really good at them today (laughs). Somehow I fudged my way through it and brought it to an end. I think everyone knows that.”

Seider was born on April 6, 2001 in Zell an der Mosel, and when he was three years old, his parents moved to Erfurt because his father had an offer to take over the management of an old folks’ home there. Both parents work in geriatric care. “It was a great fit and we felt very comfortable there,” says Seider, looking back. “We lived in Erfurt for 10 years, and I would say that I grew up there.”

He also started ice skating in the state of Thuringia’s capital, and discovered ice hockey was his sport. His talent wasn’t hidden from the big teams in Germany, either. The young Mannheim Eagles lured him with an offer when he was 14 years old.

But a host family or even boarding school were out of the question for Seider, as he frankly admits. “I felt like the prince at home and I wasn’t ready to go into the big, wide world on my own,” he says. “We drove home from a travel tournament from Mannheim and talked about moving. We all made the decision to do it together. We packed our things and moved into the vicinity of Mannheim.”

Seider was able to spend four years in his familiar family circle before he was drafted 6th overall in the 2019 draft by the Red Wings, surprisingly early to many experts.

He then went to North America, but was initially playing for the AHL farm team, the Grand Rapids Griffins. He had an easy time with some difficult phases personally; when established coaches and teammates tested the young European far away from home to see if he had what it took for an NHL career, Seider only got stronger. And in the following year in Sweden, he was voted the best defenseman of the season by the Swedish Ice Hockey League with Rogle BK, and just barely missed winning a championship as the team got to the SHL final.

Everyone knows now why Detroit’s GM Steve Yzerman wanted the rights to Seider so badly. His start in the NHL could not have been better this season, and he was named the NHL’s Rookie of the Month for October.

Accordingly, Seider is already getting a lot more attention from the media and reporters than is usually so, more like with top stars, among rookies. But Seider was undoubtedly on his way to becoming a star in the NHL, which was his big goal from an early age.

“I have two to four interviews per week,” he suggests. “Mostly when we are at home a little more, then one has the duty to speak, and trips to other cities a little less, if one or the other is talking. Not everything is put through to us. It’s already been clarified that they’re authorized media. It also has to be official channels when we talk to them. But in general, I really enjoy doing it.”

It remains to be hoped that Seider retains the freshness that he’s displayed three years ago and retained to this day. When I recently had contact with a colleague from Canada who interviewed Seider, he raved about Seider. I wrote: “He’s a very intelligent guy!” and he replied, “And also extremely polite.”

Red Wings send Kyle Criscuolo, Dan Renouf back to Grand Rapids

From the Red Wings:

UPDATE: The #RedWings today assigned center Kyle Criscuolo and defenseman Dan Renouf to the AHL’s Grand Rapids Griffins.

More » https://t.co/4wQwMsMW0x pic.twitter.com/CCDtJ5DmSM— Detroit Red Wings (@DetroitRedWings) December 2, 2021

UPDATE: The Red Wings on Thursday reassigned center Kyle Criscuolo and defenseman Dan Renouf to the Griffins. #GoGRG

Details >> https://t.co/j4IhiFcYA0 pic.twitter.com/702F5ygauV— Grand Rapids Griffins (@griffinshockey) December 2, 2021

Detroit News’s Falkner speaks with Alex Delvecchio ahead of his 90th birthday

The Detroit News’s Mark Falkner posted an article discussing Red Wings legend Alex Delvecchio ahead of his 90th birthday this Sunday:

He was Detroit’s Jean Beliveau, a graceful playmaking center and longtime captain who assisted on more of Gordie Howe’s regular-season and playoff goals (231 assists) than any other player in Red Wings’ history.

As Alex Delvecchio prepares to celebrate his 90th birthday on Saturday with his wife Judy and with many of their five children, 10 grandchildren and four great grandchildren at their home in Rochester Hills, the comparisons to Beliveau are hard for Delvecchio to comprehend.

Beliveau won 10 Stanley Cups as a player with the rival Montreal Canadiens, including five straight from 1956-60. Delvecchio and the Red Wings beat Beliveau’s Canadiens in three straight finals in 1951, 1954 and 1955.

“Jean Beliveau was a great, great hockey player and it was an honor to play against him,” Delvecchio said. “He was a gentleman, a big guy who had a bull’s-eye on his back and on his team but he went about his business, played well and was successful in Montreal. He was quiet, which is kind of like me.”

Continued

Tweet of note: A little rookie recognition

Nice to see TSN’s Gord Miller discuss the Red Wings’ dynamic duo of Lucas Raymond and Moritz Seider this morning:

Never mind league wide, the Calder Trophy race in Detroit is amazing. Lucas Raymond scored his 10th goal last night and D Moritz Seider (Rookie of the Month in October) had two assists, giving him 16 points in 24 GP. https://t.co/uGsHqKN2Pg— Gord Miller (@GMillerTSN) December 2, 2021

No Nedeljkovic in that conversation as of yet.

Update: Never mind…

And G Alex Nedeljkovic (.923 save %) also still qualifies as a rookie. https://t.co/3jB2u7q27v— Gord Miller (@GMillerTSN) December 2, 2021

The Score’s Matisz goes inside the Grand Rapids Griffins’ player development machine

The Score’s John Matisz headed to Grand Rapids to examine the player-development factory known as the Grand Rapids Griffins:

On a Thursday morning in early November, the sounds of hockey bounce off the walls inside a fanless rink. It’s a practice day at Van Andel Arena in Grand Rapids, Michigan, a midsized city some 150 miles west of Detroit.

Skates dig into the ice surface. A shot rings off the goalpost. Cursing fills the air after a shooter narrowly misses the net. A coach barks “Gap up! Gap up!” at a defenseman competing in a two-on-two drill.

In this hockey laboratory, there’s one coach for every two-and-a-half players. The players’ red hockey pants are emblazoned with the Detroit Red Wings’ iconic winged wheel logo, but the Grand Rapids Griffins emblem on each helmet serves as a reminder of the present moment. This is the minor leagues.

“Up top, in the NHL, you’re just worried about the final product,” says Mike Knuble, the former NHL forward who’s now an assistant coach for the Griffins. “Down here, it’s more so about the process to create the product.”

A variation of these sights and sounds can be seen and heard daily in AHL rinks across the continent, from San Diego to Laval, Quebec. All 32 NHL organizations are inherently invested in the development of their prospects – particularly in the AHL, where top affiliates compete not only for the league championship but also for the feeder league’s highest graduation rate.

For the Red Wings, a proud Original Six franchise, the significance is amplified.

Continued; this is a very lengthy but must-read…

ESPN’s Wyshynski deems the Wings as a team needing ‘more time to cook’

ESPN’s Greg Wyshynski ranks the NHL’s 32 teams into “contender tiers” this morning, and while the Red Wings are technically a playoff team in the NHL standings today, they’ve played in 24 games, among the most in the NHL (the Boston Bruins, for example, sit 5 points behind the Wings with 5 games in hand), so Wyshynski deems the Red Wings as needing “more time to cook“:

The Red Wings added Lucas Raymond, Moritz Seider and Alex Nedeljkovic to their roster and were like, “welp, time to start winning again.” Granted, a .457 points percentage isn’t exactly “cancel the rebuild!” material, but it would be their highest since the 2016-17 season, when their current leading scorer was 15 years old.

Continued (paywall); Detroit is 12-9-and-3 this morning, which is 3 games above .500 by NHL standards, but exactly .500 to you and me.