Talking preseason TV/radio broadcasts

Detroit Hockey Now’s Tim Robinson examined the Red Wings’ broadcast schedule, and he reports that three of the Wings’ eight exhibition games will be televised on Bally Sports Detroit’s sports channels:

The broadcast season begins the preseason opener against Pittsburgh at Little Caesars Arena o Sept . 26. It will be broadcast on Bally Sports Extra (TV) and on WWJ-AM (950 AM radio). It’s the only preseason game braodcast on TV and radio.

Bally Sports will also broadcast home games against Washington on Oct; 1 and the preseason finale against Toronto on Oct. 7.

Preseason radio broadcasts resume with games at Chicago Oct. 3, at Pittsburgh Oct. 4 and at Toronto Oct. 5. All will be on WXYT (97.1 FM).

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Two things from The Athletic: Lucas Raymond’s ‘breakout’ imminent? And Dylan Larkin ‘taking the next step’

The Athletic’s Harman Dayal suggests that Lucas Raymond can be a “breakout candidate” this upcoming season…

Lucas Raymond, Detroit Red Wings

Lucas Raymond went through a sophomore slump in 2022-23, scoring just 45 points. There were genuine yellow flags with his play last year. His individual shot rate was down, his play-driving numbers saw a significant dip and industry observers weren’t overly impressed with what they saw.

He’s only 21, however, and we’ve seen many high-profile forwards take a big jump in their third NHL season, including his teammate Dylan Larkin, who went from 32 to 63 points in Year 3.

Raymond could certainly be next. He’s gifted with the puck, an intelligent offensive decision-maker and he fights in the hard areas despite his slight frame. Adding Alex DeBrincat should make the Red Wings’ top power-play unit more threatening, which would it easier for everybody on that unit to collect points, including Raymond.

The big question for Raymond is who he’ll play with at even strength. If he’s inserted on the top line with Larkin and DeBrincat, he’s in a prime position to rack up big numbers. But will the coaching staff deploy two undersized wingers on the same line considering the questions around size, defensive ability and forechecking?

Raymond has shown strong chemistry with Larkin, but if he gets bumped down to the second line in favor of DeBrincat, would he have enough high-end talent to play with? It’s something to monitor but Raymond seems too smart and talented to stagnate for a second consecutive season during his best development years.

Continued (paywall);

And The Athletic’s Max Bultman asks questions regarding every forward who appears to be likely to make the Wings’ roster out of training camp:

Dylan Larkin: What’s next for Detroit’s captain?

Last summer, the questions for Larkin revolved around his contract status, which lasted right up until he signed an eight-year, $8.7 million AAV extension on March 1. He’s here for the long haul. So the question now is: What’s next? He’s coming off his second consecutive season with 30-plus goals and was once again just shy of a point per game. With DeBrincat in tow, surpassing 80 points feels like a strong possibility.

My question, though: Can he do that and take the step toward being an elite defensive center, too? The potential for that kind of two-way impact has always been there for Larkin, and he took a step in that direction last season by logging his most penalty-kill usage in five years. His effort is never in question. But now that he’s proven his high-end offensive performance is a baseline, there’s room to take one more step on the other end of the puck, too.

Bultman also continues, behind a paywall..

A couple of questions with Dylan Larkin

Per ESPN’s Kristen Shilton and Greg Wyshynski, Red Wings captain Dylan Larkin was among a slate of NHL “superstars” who answered questions from Wyshynski last week at the NHL Media Tour in Las Vegas. Dylan Larkin answered questions in two categories:

What team or player are you most excited to watch this season?

Dylan Larkin, Detroit Red Wings:Pittsburgh Penguins. Like, the 13-year-old me would be thrilled with Erik Karlsson joining [Kris] Letang, [Evgeni] Malkin and [Sidney] Crosby. That’s pretty cool. I’m excited to watch them.

What’s your favorite off-day activity?

Larkin: On the couch. I’m like the worst binge watcher; I’ll watch an entire [TV show] season in a day. I just did “Outlander,” which was pretty good.

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Audio: Griffins coach Dan Watson speaks with Art Regner on the latest ‘Red and White Authority’

Per the Red Wings on “X”:

Allen assesses the statuses of seven Red Wings prospects

Detroit Hockey Now’s Kevin Allen discusses the respective statuses of Red Wings prospects Sebastian Cossa, Elmer Soderblom, Cross Hanas, Marco Kasper, Nate Danielson, William Wallinder and Antti Tuomisto after the 2023 Prospect Tournament. Let’s focus on the last two players listed:

William Wallinder (Drafted 32nd overall in 2020): The Red Wings probably want to see Wallinder, 21, play a full season in Grand Rapids. Don’t forget that even Moritz Seider played a season in Grand Rapids.

You could tell by the way Watson used Wallinder that he believes he can be an impact player in Grand Rapids. Wallinder played in all situations, and logged plenty of minutes The Red Wings gave up too many goals in this tournament and the 6-foot-4 was only -1. He boasts strong offensive potential.

This is a player who will be a top four defenseman.

Antti Tuomisto (Drafted 35th overall in 2019): Tuomisto has moved up in Detroit’s prospect rankings because of how well he performed in Finland in 2022-23. He’s big, and makes a strong first pass. Like Wallinder, he can kill penalties and play on the power play. Tuomisto and Wallinder fit well together.  Tuomisto is also a right shot, which makes him more valuable. His play in the Traverse City demonstrated his potential to be an effective North American pro player.

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Moritz Seider, bounce-back candidate?

According to Daily Faceoff’s Nick Alberga, Red Wings defenseman Moritz Seider is a fine “bounce-back candidate” for fantasy hockey poolies to target:

Moritz Seider, D, Detroit Red Wings

After winning the Calder Trophy in 2021-22, the 22-year-old had an up and down sophomore season, one that started very slow. In fact, the German defender tallied just two goals and 12 points over his first 35 contests. All in all, he finished with 42 points (five goals, 37 assists) in 82 outings, eight points fewer than season No. 1 in the NHL. Bottom line: Turbulence is expected from young blueliners. That said, naturally, Seider could be primed to take the next offensive step in his career. For what it’s worth as well, he’s slated to be a restricted free agent next summer, so there’s that whole money motivation thing as well.

Continued; I didn’t think Seider struggled that much in his sophomore season–an 8-point drop is not necessarily falling off the map–but there’s little doubt that he’s going to be a little more stable with Jake Walman on his left side from game one.

Kulfan: Griffins coach Dan Watson and Wings coach Derek Lalonde are on the same developmental page

In a Monday afternoon notebook, the Detroit News’s Ted Kulfan addressed Cross Hanas’ strong performance at the Red Wings’ 2023 Prospect Tournament, Marco Kasper’s tenacity, and the relationship between Red Wings coach Derek Lalonde and his former assistant coach in Toledo in Grand Rapids Griffins coach Dan Watson:

“It’s been a unique scenario for the past couple years,” Watson said of Lalonde coaching the Wings, and Watson guiding the minor-league affiliate Toledo Walleye. “We’re tight. It’s a great relationship at the arena and away from the arena. We’ll feed off each other real well here.”

Much as in Toledo, going up a level to Grand Rapids in the American League, Watson feels developing players is the key factor for himself and his staff.

“We have to make players better, we have to make sure they’re doing the right things away from the arena and at the arena, because that’s what it takes,” Watson said. “It’s hard, it’s hard to make the NHL. But we want to make sure our guys are developing in the right areas so when they get the call (from the NHL) they’re prepared and ready.

“We want guys to have success and not take steps backward. If Detroit needs them, they’re ready and they’ll help your lineup. That’s our job.”

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Mills: Wings’ prospects share hockey skills with Traverse City’s Blair Elementary School

DetroitRedWings.com’s Jonathan Mills reports that the Red Wings’ prospects were busy engaging in a different kind of hockey activity today at Blair Elementary in Traverse City:

Students at Blair Elementary School spent their Monday morning with some special visitors.

All 24 members of the Detroit Red Wings’ 2023 NHL Prospect Tournament roster visited the Traverse City, Mich. Public school to run a hockey clinic in the gym, an experience that forward Amadeus Lombardi described as “really cool.”

“It’s fun to give back to the community and see how happy they were when we all came in,” said Lombardi, who was Detroit’s 113th overall pick in the 2022 NHL Entry Draft. “I remember being their age, and when an event like this happened, you’re all excited.”

Upon their arrival, the Red Wings prospects were greeted by students eagerly asking for high fives while chanting “Let’s Go Red Wings.” The players then went inside the gym, where they taught students the basics of hockey through multiple rotating stations.

Forward Marco Kasper said it was fun helping students learn skills like stickhandling, shooting and passing.  

“The stickhandling and passing part of it is hard for a lot of kids,” said Kasper, Detroit’s eighth overall draft pick in 2022. “But we’re just trying to have them work together, have fun and make a great day for them.”

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