Tweets of note: Coach Lalonde visits Lions practice

Per the Detroit News’s Nolan Bianchi…

And CBS Detroit’s Rachel Hopmayer:

Update: From WXYZ’s Jeanna Trotman:

Update #2:

Meet Tyler Motte

DetroitRedWings.com’s Jonathan Mills spoke with Red Wings free agent signing and St. Clair, MI native Tyler Motte on Monday:

The 29-year-old forward describes himself as a 200-foot player, and said he has a clear understanding of what his role will be with Detroit this season.

“I’ve been in roles where I’ve played against teams’ top couple lines, a little bit more of a shutdown-matchup role,” Motte said. “I love killing penalties, that’s my favorite part of the game. I just appreciate that challenge and what that does for the group. Just talking with Steve before I signed, it was a lot of that: being on the same page, knowing what you are expected to do and me feeling confident because I’ve done it for several years. I know I can step in and do it.”

Motte said he’s excited to reunite with former Wolverines teammates J.T. Compher, Andrew Copp and Red Wings captain Dylan Larkin.

“We’re all going to have different roles and opportunities, but to be able to do it together again is super special,” Motte said. “There are also guys who I’ve played with at different stops in my career too, so it’ll be good to have a lot of familiar faces coming into a locker room that will be new to me.”

Motte joins a contingent of Red Wings players and prospects — Larkin (Waterford), Copp and Jeff Petry (Ann Arbor), Alex DeBrincat (Farmington Hills), goalie Jack Campbell (Port Huron), Sheldon Dries (Macomb), Carter Mazur (Jackson), Austin Baker (White Lake), Kienan Draper (Royal Oak) and netminder Trey Augustine (South Lyon) — who have Michigan roots.

Continued

Talking ‘front office confidence,’ the ‘Yzerplan,’ and fan-team relationships

The Red Wings finished 21st out of 32 teams in The Athletic’s Dom Luszczyszyn’s survey of front office confidence levels, so The Athletic’s Max Bultman discusses what some might deem “the shine coming off the ‘Yzerplan‘” by examining each category of Luszczyszyn’s rankings. Here’s one of them:

Free agency

2023 rating: B-
2024 rating: C

This was the lowest grade of any category from the fans  — and from the public, which gave the front office a D-plus here. It’s not too hard to figure out why, as evidenced by the cap management section.

The [Justin] Holl deal is in a league of its own, as a moderate-sized contract for a player not even in the lineup most nights, and the concerns around [Andrew] Copp and [Ben] Chiarot persist despite Chiarot playing consistent top-four minutes and Copp playing a core matchup role. But perhaps a bigger issue is that Detroit has few clear wins to point to in free agency outside of one-year deals — on which its track record has been pretty strong (including [Shayne] Gostisbehere, [Patrick] Kane, Christian Fischer and Sprong last summer). In fairness, Detroit hasn’t given out a deal longer than five years to a UFA, but those medium-length, three-to-five-year deals still linger.

The one contract of that length that probably gets underrated is [J.T.] Compher, who signed for five years at $5.1 million last summer. Compher was coming off a career-high 52 points the year prior with the Avalanche, and many questioned whether he would be able to sustain that production in Detroit. But he largely did, scoring 48 points with a career-high 19 goals. His tough-to-sustain 17.6 percent shooting percentage still keeps those questions alive, but when you consider that Chandler Stephenson signed for seven years at $6.25 million, Compher at four more years for $5.1 million looks pretty solid.

Building through free agency can be a dicey bet for any team, as players have the most leverage and are typically toward the back half of their primes. But the Red Wings haven’t had enough free agency wins — especially outside of one-year deals — and that makes this an area of real concern.

Continued; as I stated when the “front office confidence survey” came out, I understand that fans have gotten really impatient with the lengthy status of the Red Wings’ rebuild, and I effing get it as a Wings partisan myself..

But I also believe that the Red Wings’ front office (from Yzerman on out) consists of human beings who make mistakes, and it’s my belief that the Red Wings may be in the middle of a 10-12 year rebuild as opposed to an 8-10 year rebuild.

As far as this category is concerned, regrettably, most teams that attempt to rebuild their roster through free agency find that it is at best a “mixed bag,” and usually a losing proposition.

There’s no doubt that the Red Wings over-reached two summers ago, when they signed Copp, Kubalik, Chiarot and so on, but that was a sign of front-office impatience, too…

And Detroit isn’t necessarily a “destination” for free agents yet, save perhaps the cachet that’s still being felt from the Kane signing, so I’m not surprised that the Wings have struggled with money-and-term deals, while not being able to land the Marchessaults or Stamkoses of the free agency world.

I’m not letting the Wings off the hook here–there have been some bad fits, and that’s obvious, and unacceptable at the same time–but it’s hard to suggest that the Wings’ rebuild was going to be anything less than bumpy because it relied on free agent availability and/or attraction to Detroit as a destination in order to fill holes in the roster.

That’s why there are so many Michigan guys (some good and some not so good) who’ve signed via free agency thus far, and that’s one of the reasons it’s been so damn hard to do anything more than tread water in free agency…

As the Red Wings did this summer because two key veterans (see: David Perron and Shayne Gostisbehere) thought that the Stanley Cup grass was greener on the other side of the fence, and some players (see: Daniel Sprong) just didn’t fit into the roster picture any more.

At this point in the rebuild, winning some players’ signatures and losing others is an unfortunate reality of being a rebuilding team, and sometimes making some more conservative, future-minded decisions in free agency takes its toll on the here-and-now veterans in order to make contractual room and roster space for tomorrow’s stars.

Long story long, I understand that fans are getting twitchy some five years into the rebuild. I am, too. I want to see this team make the playoffs just as much as you do. But the team can’t and won’t win by building through free agency alone, and it takes time and effort to build the “free agency destination” cachet.

It’s hard to be “in for the long haul” while understanding that the front office is human and makes mistakes from time to time, and while it’s essentially “the fan’s job” to keep their team honest about those mistakes…

It’s also the fans’ privilege to only be along for the ride as their teams are built and rebuilt, because we don’t get much say in what “our teams'” front offices do or do not do in terms of making trades, free agent signings, and draft picks.

The marriage of fan and team can be bumpy at times, and it’s not always wedded bliss, but if you stick with a relationship, and put work into it, the long-term result is usually worth the arguing and fighting parts of the relationship.

We appear to be at an “arguing and fighting” part right now. Keep the faith. Better times are coming, even though it turns out that Steve Yzerman is a human being of a GM, and not some god-like figure. There’s still an “Yzerplan,” and it will prevail, though it’s not the quick fix some imagined it would be.

Duff tracks former Wings looking for employment

Former Red Wings goaltender Magnus Hellberg signed a 1-year, 2-way deal with the Dallas Stars yesterday, and as such, Detroit Hockey Now’s Bob Duff posted an article discussing the employment statuses of several former Wings players who are still looking for teams to take chances on them.

Duff reports that former Wing Filip Zadina may end up playing for Dynamo Pardubice of the Czech Extraliga..

Making the worst decision since the introduction of new Coke, winger Filip Zadina would walk away from a guaranteed $4.65 million from the Red Wings in order to become a UFA. He’d sign a one-year pact with the San Jose Sharks for $1.1 million, but they would walk away from Zadina after that one year.

Word in NHL circles is that Zadina isn’t even getting any calls from teams on this side of the Atlantic Ocean. Reports out of his native Czechia are suggesting that Zadina might return to his homeland to play for his dad Marek, coach of Padubice in the Czech Extraliga.

Continued; I would not be surprised if Zadina chooses to take a European break from the NHL to get his game in order.

Husso’s healthy again as the Red Wings prepare for a 3-goaltender rotation

MLive’s Ansar Khan discusses the Red Wings’ “three-headed goalie monster” this morning, addressing the probable competition between Ville Husso, Alex Lyon and Cam Talbot this upcoming season. Khan offers the following from coach Derek Lalonde regarding Husso:

[Red Wings GM Steve] Yzerman said last month he preferred not to carry three goalies again but probably has no alternative until Husso’s health is determined one way or another. Two separate lower-body injuries shelved him for all but half a period over the final four months.

Husso said after the season he’s healthy and ready for a full offseason of training. Lalonde confirmed this last week.

“The most important thing with Ville is being healthy, and he feels 100 percent, he feels healthy,” Lalonde said. “It’s too bad last year on the injuries because he had a really good offseason. He came in leaner; probably had his best summer he’s had off the ice. I think it’s something he can build on.

“The good thing about Ville is he’s also excited about the competition. Credit to our management group. With three goalies last year it’s very unique to the league. It’s certainly not ideal in some situations, when you talk about practice time, obviously game time. But it literally saved our season. I think we’re going to start with that same mentality this year.”

Continued (paywall); put bluntly, we’re not going to find out how the Wings’ goaltending stacks up until Husso, Lyon and Talbot battle it out in the preseason and the first ten to fifteen games of the regular season.

Tweet of note: Ryan Gustafsson discusses Red Wings’ offseason moves, ticket sales and promotions

Of Red Wings-related note from Twitter/X: Bally Sports Detroit posted a 3:23 interview with Ryan Gustafsson, Ilitch Sports + Entertainment’s CEO, regarding the Red Wings’ offseason moves, their status as having started single-game ticket sales on Monday, and regarding some of the promotions for this upcoming season’s home games:

A buzzing Berggren

Detroit Hockey Now’s Kevin Allen posted a subscriber-only article in which he discusses the depth players who may be crucial to the Red Wings’ offensive losses over the course of the 2023-2024 offseason (see: David Perron, Daniel Sprong and Shayne Gostisbehere). In Allen’s eyes, Jonatan Berggren, Michael Rasmussen, Joe Veleno and Christian Fischer can all improve in terms of their offensive output this upcoming season.

Here’s what Allen has to say about Jonatan Berggren’s possible contributions:

Left Wing Jonatan Berggren: On paper, Berggren had an exceptional season. He was one of the AHL’s most dynamic scorers, generating 24 goals and 56 points in 53 games for Grand Rapids. The young Swede added five goals and 10 points in nine playoff games.

But the truth is, it was a frustrating season for Berggren. Coach Derek Lalonde didn’t trust Berggren’s play away from the puck. After he was sent down to the AHL, he lived in a hotel, stored his clothes in his car. It wasn’t a perfect situation. The permanent call to the NHL never came.

Now the Red Wings need Berggren to succeed. There is no reason why he shouldn’t. He has played 79 NHL games and scored 17 goals. Given playing time on a scoring line, 25 goals are not an unreasonable expectation, especially if he gets power play time.

Continued (paywall); I’m not counting on 25 goals from Berggren, but I’m hoping that he scores 15 or so this upcoming season.

Given that Rasmussen, Andrew Copp and Christian Fischer were an excellent third line for the Wings last year, I’d like to see what Berggren and Veleno can do together on a de-facto fourth line, probably working with free agent signing Tyler Motte. It won’t be a physically imposing line as nobody’s tall and imposing there, but the trio could easily become far more than a simple “depth line” if Berggren and Veleno even partially fulfill their potential.

A bit about the Red Wings’ decision to leave Axel Sandin Pellikka in Sweden

NHL.com’s Dave Hogg posted a profile of Red Wings prospect Axel Sandin Pellikka this morning, discussing the Red Wings’ decision to leave ASP with Skelleftea AIK of the SHL this upcoming season:

“He’s going to play quite a bit on a good team,” Detroit assistant director of player development Dan Cleary said. “He’s going to run the power play and he’s going to play a lot with the puck. He could come over and play in Grand Rapids, no problem, but Skelleftea is a real good developmental place in a good league and a good city.”

Sandin-Pellikka will also get experience playing with a teammate he hopes he is skating with for years to come: forward Michael Brandsegg-Nygard, who was selected by the Red Wings with the No. 15 pick in the 2024 NHL Draft.

“It will be nice to be home another year, and we’re going to be going for the gold,” Sandin-Pellikka said. “I know the coaches, I know my teammates and we have a good team, so I’ll stay and develop another year.”

Sandin-Pellikka has already shown the offensive skills that led to Detroit choosing him, but he said he needs work on the other end of the ice.

“I’m mostly trying to be better with my defensive game,” he said. “After practice, the coaches back home always make me defend some forwards in the corners. That’s what I’m working on.”

That’s just what the Red Wings want.

“Axel is a very smart player and he moves well, but it is hard for a defenseman to play a lot in Grand Rapids,” Cleary said. “We don’t see the harm of keeping him home. There’s no sense rushing him.”

Continued; ASP would have a hard time earning ice time in Grand Rapids for a couple of reasons.

Despite the fact that he’s a tremendous talent, the AHL’s learning curve isn’t easy, and if the 5’11,” 176-pound Sandin Pellikka got bumped around, he’d have to play some “protected minutes”…

But the main concern would be the fact that the Griffins have both the Red Wings’ top prospects and some AHL veterans battling for 6 regular defensemen’s spots on the roster, and that Detroit’s current roster crunch on the blueline might make it more difficult for ASP to vie for time against players like Antti Tuomisto, William Wallinder, Shai Buium and Eemil Viro, as well as veterans Tory Dello, Josiah Didier and Brogan Rafferty.

Those seven players are all likely to battle for spots on the Griffins’ blueline, and with that kind of roster jam, the Red Wings have no need to hurry Sandin Pellikka over to North America when he’s going to be running Skelleftea AIK’s power play and essentially playing as their #1 defenseman.

Sometimes “baby steps” are the way to go when one has to trust the developmental process.