Kulfan ponders the Red Wings’ free agent possibilities

The Detroit News’s Ted Kulfan has posted a notebook article in which he discusses the Red Wings’ probable free agency moves:

[Detroit’s] $31 million [in] cap space looks huge, but remember there are upcoming big contracts with Dylan Larkin and Tyler Bertuzzi beginning with the 2023-24 season, and before too long, Moritz Seider and Lucas Raymond.

But [GM Steve] Yzerman is intent on finding more help for the nucleus of players that has been here through much of the rebuild, along with simply improving upon several disappointing recent seasons.

“We want help for Dylan (Larkin), Tyler (Bertuzzi), Filip Hronek,” Yzerman said. “They’ve been here a few years, Dylan and Tyler particularly. We want to surround them with some better players. We watched the positive impact some of our younger guys (Seider, Raymond) had this year. We’d like to add to that, and continue to move forward.

“If there’s a player that can make what we feel would be a significant impact, we’re not afraid to do that in free agency. If we can find a player that fills a hole and the contract makes sense, whether it’s a one-year deal or a long-term deal, we’ll do it.”

As in the previous few years, term of the contracts might be a key issue with any free agent the Wings pursue. They are nearing the end of their organizational rebuild, but still aren’t quite at the point of signing long-term deals with older players who they would be saddled with just as they pursue playoff berths. There are plenty of things for Yzerman to consider.

“What’s the cost of acquiring that player? Does the cost of acquiring that player make sense for where we hope to be in three or four years or are we just spending a whole lot of money and are not going to be much different in three or four years, whether that player is here or helped get us there,” Yzerman said. “Is there a more efficient way to get there at the end of the day? We weigh it all and that’s for short-term and long-term contracts.”

Continued

Scotty Bowman leaves the Hawks

This is an intriguing Tweet from one William Scott Bowman:

Per TSN:

As a head coach, Bowman won a record nine Stanley Cup championships. He won five with the Montreal Canadiens (1973, 1976, 1977, 1978 and 1979), one with the Pittsburgh Penguins (1992) and three with the Detroit Red Wings (1997, 1998 and 2002).

The 88-year-old Bowman also won five Stanley Cups as an executive with a team’s front office. He was director of player development for the 1991 Penguins, consultant with the 2008 Red Wings and his most recent role of senior advisor of hockey operations for the Blackhawks’ championships in 2010, 2013 and 2015 that featured his son Stan as general manager.

He ranks second all time for most Stanley Cup victories by a player, coach or executive with 14 behind Jean Beliveau’s 17.

With 1,248 wins in the regular season and 223 in the playoffs, Bowman won the Jack Adams Award as the NHL’s best coach in 1976 and 1977 and is the only NHL coach to lead three teams to Stanley Cup victories.

Bowman was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame as a builder in 1991 and Canada’s Walk of Fame in 2003. He was made an officer of the Order of Canada in 2012 and received an Order of Hockey in Canada award in 2017.

Link of note: Detroit News’s Guralnick posts 60 more summer development camp pictures

I’m posting a link and that’s it because it’s worth your time: The Detroit News’s intrepid photographer David Guralnick was here at Little Caesars Arena today, and he posted a 60-image photo gallery from the Red Wings’ summer development camp. He even snagged a picture of Derek Lalonde and his oldest son watching the proceedings.

Photo gallery: Red Wings prospect camp continues with new coach Derek Lalonde stopping by to take a peek. https://t.co/PZiDnrUR2m pic.twitter.com/h3VfGgLeUq— David Guralnick (@DavidGuralnick) July 12, 2022

Tweets of note: Wings say ‘hello’ from Day 3; Nedeljkovic on ice

Back to work. ?#DRWDC pic.twitter.com/WwWNo8cvYT— Detroit Red Wings (@DetroitRedWings) July 12, 2022

Some goalie without a jersey number working with the coaches. Kind of small. Vaughn pads. Toque mask. Long hair. Goes by “Ned.” pic.twitter.com/HZ0tb3moL9— George Malik (@georgemalik) July 12, 2022

Nedeljkovic skittering across the crease. pic.twitter.com/LJrXRIqBPy— George Malik (@georgemalik) July 12, 2022

Nedeljkovic has been VERY cautious in terms of moving across the crease. He suffered a “lower-body injury” which caused him to miss the World Championship, and I get the feeling that it involved core muscle surgery.

DetroitRedWings.com: Lalonde on adding Boughner to the mix

Red Wings coach Derek Lalonde spoke with DetroitRedWings.com’s Jonathan Mills about the addition of NHL veteran and NHL head coach Bob Boughner to the coaching mix as an associate coach and assistant who will help the defense:

“He’s coached a Norris Trophy winner and Stanley Cup winners,” Lalonde said about Boughner last Friday at the Bell Centre in Montreal. “A huge piece, ecstatic. What makes me more excited is he probably had other options. I think he liked not only where our young D-core is and where it could be, but him being part of developing them in where our organization is and was.”

Boughner, who was Detroit’s 32nd overall pick in the 1989 NHL Entry Draft, spent parts of the last three seasons as head coach of the San Jose Sharks and was at the helm of the Florida Panthers from 2017-19.

The NHL coaching and management tree is a tight-knit group. Lalonde took advantage of his relationships to do his homework on Boughner, and came away impressed

“I talked to (Dallas Stars head coach) Pete DeBoer about him, and I felt like Pete wanted to put his hands through the phone and slap me to hire him ASAP,” Lalonde said. “That’s how strongly he felt about him as a coach and how he’d be a really good fit for us.”

Lalonde said talks with Boughner began over the phone and quickly progressed leading up to the 2022 NHL Entry Draft.

“We were fortunate enough to have real positive talks throughout,” Lalonde said. “We sat here the other day and said ‘listen, let’s try to get on this.’ And Steve did, amongst his many other things going on.”

Continued

The Athletic’s Gentille offers salary cap rankings

The Athletic’s Sean Gentille offers a set of salary cap rankings from best to worst in the NHL, and he says this of the Red Wings’ cap situation:

Detroit Red Wings

2022-23 salaries: $51,478,889
RFAs estimate: $2.5 million
Dead money deals: Justin Abdelkader buyout ($2.305 million), Richard Panik retained ($1.375 million), Frans Nielsen buyout ($500,000)
Notable unsigned UFAs: Sam Gagner, Thomas Greiss, Marc Staal
Problem contract: None
Projected cap space: $28,564,486

The Red Wings, for all intents and purposes, could spend their summer figuring out their approach to the futures of 2023 UFAs Dylan Larkin and Tyler Bertuzzi. Of the three players they sent qualifying offers on Monday, Filip Zadina is the relevant piece — whether it’s to hold, cheaply extend or flip for another team’s change-of-scenery RFA. Only new goalie Ville Husso and Robby Fabbri are signed for more than two seasons. The team’s other two cornerstones — Moritz Seider and Lucas Raymond — each just finished the first year of their entry deals.

There’s also more than enough space for Steve Yzerman to add an actually relevant player or three, if he wishes. Those could be short-term deadline-flip plays, or they could be legit pieces for the next good Red Wings team. Max Bultman went over 10 solid options, starting with Ondrej Palat.

Continued (paywall)