Red Wings qualify Lethemon, Newpower, Veleno, leave Klim Kostin unqualified

According to Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman, the Red Wings submitted qualifying offers for the following players:

So John Lethemon, Wyatt Newpower and Joe Veleno were qualified;

Klim Kostin, Gustav Lindstrom, Seth Barton, Pontus Andreasson, Matt Luff and Jasper Weatherby were not qualified.

Three things: A trio of Yzer-takes on the Red Wings’ free agency outlook

Three Red Wings scribes have penned articles which discuss Detroit’s looming attempts to bolster its roster via unrestricted free agency:

  1. MLive’s Ansar Khan examines the free agent marketplace, prefacing his list of potential UFA signings with the following:

“I’d like to add some offense, but there’s no guarantees I can do anything,” Yzerman told media Thursday at the draft. “So, we’ll fill some spots. Who exactly, I’m not sure, or for how long or how much. That’s the nature of free agency. You know our roster, the guys we’ve traded (Tyler Bertuzzi, Jakub Vrana, Filip Hronek). We’ll try to do that in some form or another. Keep our fingers crossed that we can score some more goals.”

The competition will be high for the top free agents.

“You got this long list, you got all these names, you’re lucky to get one or two,” Yzerman said. “We were able to get four or five guys last year. We’ll try to get the best ones we can, taking into account the term and cost of the contract.

“I think people are looking at the free-agent market and it’s kind of thin this year. If they want to improve their team, they’re looking at the trade market. There’s probably more needs than there are players at this point.”

2. Detroit Hockey Now’s Kevin Allen also discusses the Red Wings’ free agency outlook

Continue reading Three things: A trio of Yzer-takes on the Red Wings’ free agency outlook

Bultman on the Wings’ free agency need(s)

The Athletic posted an article which discusses the “biggest need” for each and every one of the NHL’s 32 teams going into the unrestricted free agency period, and here’s what Max Bultman has to say about the Red Wings’ need(s):

Detroit Red Wings

Top-six scoring: After trading away Tyler Bertuzzi and Jakub Vrana, the Red Wings are going to have to go to free agency (or trade) to replace them and boost a bottom-10 offense. And while the trade route has the better options (headlined by Alex DeBrincat and Travis Konecny, among others), free agency is possible if Detroit is willing to pay up for a proven (albeit aging) winger such as Vladimir Tarasenko, Alex Killorn or others. The question they’ll have to answer revolves around those players’ respective ages and how much term to give, though, and their answer could ultimately swing some outcomes on July 1. — Max Bultman

Continued

Tweet of note: the Wings’ cap situation

Per CapFriendly:

Detroit #RedWings update after buying out Yamamoto

Cap Hit: $53,268,056
Cap Space: $30,231,944
Roster Size: 16 (10F – 4D – 1G – 1IR)

Notable RFAs include:
Kostin
Luff
Veleno
Lindstromhttps://t.co/sSae8AGwgK— CapFriendly (@CapFriendly) June 30, 2023

And PuckPedia:

After buying out Yamamoto, #LGRW have $30.2M Projected Cap Space with 16 players on the roster (11F/4D/1G)

RFA: Kostin, Luff, Veleno, Lindstrom

UFA: Nedeljkovic, Hellberg, Oesterle, Hagg, Pysyk, Chiasson, Erne, Suter

Includes $4.1M Dead Cap Hithttps://t.co/Vr2k3LN2xs— PuckPedia (@PuckPedia) June 30, 2023

Tweet of note: TSN’s Dreger reports that the Red Wings will buy out Kailer Yamamoto

Kailer Yamamoto will be bought out by the Red Wings. Detroit strongly considered keeping him but couldn’t make moves to make it work. Given tight cap, Yamamoto is a good you player hitting the market.— Darren Dreger (@DarrenDreger) June 30, 2023

Bought out. Becomes a decent UFA option. https://t.co/hIzzAHmhjm— JFresh (@JFreshHockey) June 30, 2023

Yamamoto is less than 26 years of age and therefore his buyout costs 1/3 of the remaining value. With 1 year left it will span 2 years.

Buyout Cap Hit:
23-24: $433k ($2.67M savings)
24-25: $533khttps://t.co/2zZZwWXdn5 https://t.co/jUTGBcAYON— CapFriendly (@CapFriendly) June 30, 2023

Matt Duchene (NSH), Blake Wheeler (WPG), Yamamoto (DET), Reilly (BOS) and all on unconditional waivers today for purposes of a buyout.— Frank Seravalli (@frank_seravalli) June 30, 2023

Detroit is buying out Kailer Yamamoto— Elliotte Friedman (@FriedgeHNIC) June 30, 2023

Yamamoto headed for a buy out, as we suspected. Confirmed now by @DarrenDreger— Mark Spector🇨🇦🇺🇦 (@SportsnetSpec) June 30, 2023

Tweet of note: Sportsnet’s Spector reports that Red Wings will sign Klim Kostin to a 2-year contract

Good news here from Edmonton-based Sportsnet correspondent Mark Spector:

Told that Avangard Omsk (KHL) has given up on signing Klim Kostin, now that the Red Wings have acquired him.
Expect a two-year deal in Detroit for the former Oiler and Blue.— Mark Spector🇨🇦🇺🇦 (@SportsnetSpec) June 30, 2023

Audio link: Kris Draper appears on 97.1 the Ticket’s ‘Stoney and Jansen’ show

Red Wings director of amateur scouting Kris Draper discussed the Red Wings’ 2023 NHL Draft haul on 97.1 the Ticket’s “Stoney and Jansen” show this morning.

Red Wings Director of Amateur Scouting Kris Draper joined us this morning to talk about the Wings’ 2023 draft class. Listen here:
https://t.co/n8f9yqdJSN— Stoney & Jansen with Heather (@StoneyJansen) June 30, 2023

Draper was unwilling to make comparisons between Nate Danielson, Axel Sandin Pellikka and the rest of the Wings’ prospects and current NHL’ers, and he offered a cautiously optimistic message as to whether the Red Wings will slowly but surely build a contending team through the draft.

Update: You can also listen to the interview directly here.

Future Considerations compares David Reinbacher and Axel Sandin Pellikka

Future Considerations’ Michael Stahurski posted a lengthy article comparing and contrasting the two top defensive prospects taken in the 2023 NHL Draft in David Reinbacher (selected by Montreal 5th overall) and Axel Sandin Pellikka (selected by the Red Wings 17th overall).

I can’t share the entire article, but I can offer you something of a preview…

On the offensive end, Sandin Pellikka is a product of the modern game. Fifteen years ago, it was rare to see a defenseman standing under six feet tall, but today, size has become much less of an obstacle.

Though he averaged a goal every two games while playing in the J20, Sandin Pellikka is unlikely to have similar goal-scoring output at the professional level. What he will do, however, is continue to compile assists. As a puck-moving defenseman, Sandin Pellikka operates as a surgeon from his perch at the top of the offensive zone, piercing pucks through the smallest of windows. His ability to locate teammates all over the ice is unique, as he finds them in optimal scoring positions.

Goal scoring may not be his most substantial attribute, but his shot is still a weapon he’s learned to use effectively. His shot power could improve, but his placement benefits himself and his teammates. Recognizing shooting lanes as he walks the blue line, Sandin Pellikka likes to snap off shots, keeping them between knee and waist height, an ideal location for a screening forward to redirect the puck.

Where Sandin Pellikka excels on the offensive end, his shortcomings become evident on defense. The physical aspect of the game troubles him as a blueliner needing to add some strength and stature to his game, as it’s the one facet where his size is a hindrance. Larger net-front forwards can cause mismatches he struggles to overcome. The same issue arises while battling for the puck along the boards, causing play to linger in the defensive end longer than necessary. Where he lacks physicality, he typically compensates with good positioning.

Continued (paywall)

Two Video Things: Wings recap the draft in Twitter form; NDN speaks with HockeySverige.se

Of brief Red Wings-related note this morning:

  1. The Red Wings posted a Tweet in which their videographers recapped Detroit’s 2023 NHL Draft experience:

2. And, if you’re interested, Noah Dower Nilsson was interviewed by HockeySverige.se’s Uffe Bodin. You can watch the 2-minute video if you wish, but you might not get much out of it as the interview’s conducted in Swedish.