Tweet of note: At the Four Nations Face-Off, Raymond will wear #23, Larkin #21

Per Sportsnet’s Chris Johnston:

The numbers were released as part of a promotion for the Four Nations Face-Off jerseys:

A bit of praise for Dominik Shine

Sportsnet’s Mike Amato spotlights 4 NHL players in his “Friday Four,” and here’s his pick from the Red Wings:

Dominik Shine, Detroit Red Wings: What a journey for Dominik Shine.

The 31-year-old played his first NHL game for the Red Wings this week after grinding away in the AHL for nine seasons. Shine joined the Grand Rapids Griffins after spending four years at Northern Michigan University and has posted at least 10 goals in each of the past four seasons. He becomes the oldest player to make his NHL debut since 2015.

If you’re scoring at home, Shine played 462 AHL games before finally getting the call from the Wings, but it was worth the wait. What makes this moment even more special for Shine is that he’s a Detroit native. He got to make his NHL debut for his hometown team and the organization he grew up watching.

This is the second feel-good debut we’ve seen in January. Ethen Frank played his first NHL game for the Washington Capitals earlier this month at the age of 26, where he also plied his craft in the AHL for several years. Frank actually picked up a point in each of his first three games, including tallying a pair of goals.

Shine’s debut wasn’t as memorable as Frank’s when it came to the scoresheet. He managed only two hits and a block in 9:50 of action and didn’t record a shot on goal. Still, Shine proved persistence pays off and no matter what happens in the future, he can say he was an NHL player. No one can take that away from him.

Continued

An early Red Wings-Flames preview

The Red Wings defeated the Edmonton Oilers via a 3-2 shootout decision on Thursday night, and Detroit will head to Calgary after today’s practice to play the Calgary Flames. Here’s an early AP preview of Saturday night’s game:

BOTTOM LINE: The Calgary Flames host the Detroit Red Wings after the Red Wings took down the Edmonton Oilers 3-2 in a shootout.

Calgary is 25-18-7 overall and 16-7-3 in home games. The Flames are 7-12-2 when they commit more penalties than their opponent.

Detroit has a 25-21-5 record overall and a 10-10-3 record in road games. The Red Wings have a 4-6-3 record in games they have more penalties than their opponent.

The matchup Saturday is the second time these teams meet this season. The Red Wings won 2-1 in overtime in the last matchup.

TOP PERFORMERS: Jonathan Huberdeau has 19 goals and 17 assists for the Flames. Matthew Coronato has four goals and three assists over the last 10 games.

Alex DeBrincat has 21 goals and 18 assists for the Red Wings. Marco Kasper has six goals and four assists over the past 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Flames: 6-4-0, averaging 2.9 goals, 4.4 assists, 4.8 penalties and 13.3 penalty minutes while giving up 2.5 goals per game.

Red Wings: 6-3-1, averaging three goals, 5.3 assists, 2.6 penalties and 5.2 penalty minutes while giving up 2.6 goals per game.

Two things: praise for Larkin’s January and a late-breaking Wings-Oilers recap

Of Red Wings-related note this morning:

  1. The Athletic’s Shayna Goldman named Dylan Larkin her “second star” of the month of January thanks to a set of dominant performances from the Diesel:

Speaking of team MVPs, there is Dylan Larkin. His impact is felt all over the ice. The Red Wings count on him to retrieve pucks and transition the puck up the ice. In the offensive zone, he is a skilled playmaker and a clutch goal-scorer. That scoring has helped the Red Wings earn pivotal points in a tight playoff race. Just take his performance against Montreal, when he scored two points and outright dominated his five-on-five minutes to earn a season-high 4.15 Game Score against a team competing for the same playoff seed. He capped off January with a strong game against Edmonton, where he scored the tying goal and the game-winner in the shootout. 

2. And DetroitRedWings.com’s Jonathan Mills’ recap of last night’s 3-2 shootout victory over the Edmonton Oilers posted pretty late:

Continue reading Two things: praise for Larkin’s January and a late-breaking Wings-Oilers recap

Red Wings-Oilers wrap-up: Lyon, Larkin star in Wings’ shootout win over Oilers

The Detroit Red Wings captured a 3-2 shootout victory over the Edmonton Oilers on Thursday night, earning their 4th straight victory as they began a stretch of 4 games to be played over the course of 6 nights in Alberta and the Pacific Northwest.

In doing so, the Red Wings rebounded from a 2-0 1st-period deficit to the Oilers, thanks to 2 goals in 1:48 of 2nd period play, from Michael Rasmussen and Dylan Larkin…

And Detroit really went from being dominated by the Oilers in the 1st period and for stretches in the 2nd to going toe-to-toe with Edmonton in the 3rd and OT…

So it came as no surprise that overtime solved nothing. The shootout did, and it did in the form of 2 more stops from Alex Lyon–who saved 45 of 47 in regulation–and shootout goals from Lucas Raymond and Larkin:

The Red Wings’ captain deserves a shout-out for his performance in this game. While it was Moritz Seider who hit 30:44 for the first time, and Seider who made a stick save to keep the Red Wings tied at 2 when Alex Lyon fumbled a glove save, Larkin played 25:03, with 10 shots, 14 shot attempts, 3 giveaways, 3 takeaways, a blocked shot and a 24-and-15 faceoff record (62%).

Larkin took the team on his back as much as anyone, and that showed in the game’s result.

The Oilers know Todd McLellan pretty well, so they were complimentary toward his and his team’s machinations, as the Edmonton Sun’s Robert Tychkowski noted:

Continue reading Red Wings-Oilers wrap-up: Lyon, Larkin star in Wings’ shootout win over Oilers

Red Wings-Oilers quick take: Lyon tames the Oilers

The Detroit Red Wings kicked off their 4-games-in-6-nights West Coast Swing with a game against the 32-15-and-3 Edmonton Oilers on Thursday night.

On Thursday night, and into Friday morning, the Red Wings won a strange one. Detroit surrendered 2 goals to the Oilers in the 1st period, markers from Leon Drasiaitl and Jeff Skinner one a legit shot on the PP, and one a rebound bounce…

And while Edmonton continued to out-shot the Red Wings, Alex Lyon put up a wall, topping 45 of the 47 shots he faced, and Detroit slowly but surely clawed back, scoring goals from Michael Rasmussen at 9:59 and Dylan Larkin at 11:47 of the 2nd period–that’s 2 goals in 1:48–and after overtime and an overtime power play solved nothing…

And in the shootout, Lyon stopped McDavid, Raymond scored on Skinner, and Nugent-Hopkins fumbled, so Larkin stuffed home the 2-0 winner.

Continue reading Red Wings-Oilers quick take: Lyon tames the Oilers

On the Wings’ ‘off-day,’ facing the Kings, and Talbot on the Wings’ win

Among the Free Press’s Helene St. James’ “off-day” notes:

The Wings (23-21-5) had a scheduled day off Sunday, and next play Monday at home against the Los Angeles Kings. Tyler Motte, out since Jan. 7 with an upper-body injury, has practiced three straight days, so he may be nearing a return.

I’m not certain what the Wings are going to do when Motte and Petry return, honestly. Elmer Soderblom’s probably headed back to Grand Rapids, but he looks nearly ready to play in the NHL; Albert Johansson has swiped Petry’s spot on the second defensive pairing, so Petry will have to battle Justin Holl for a spot on the 3rd D pair alongside the surprisingly solid Erik Gustafsson.

As for Monday’s game, the Kings are a bit of a powerhouse at 26-14-and-6, though they’re 2-4-and-1 over the course of their last 7 games, a 3-2 overtime loss to Columbus last night included. I posted an early Wings-Kings preview this morning, noting that defenseman Drew Doughty’s return from a broken leg is imminent…

St. James also posted something of a “morning line” given the Red Wings’ 2-0 victory over the Lightning last night, noting that goaltender Cam Talbot, who pitched a 28-save shutout, gave praise to his defense–and lucky bounces, which were what the Bolts blamed for their loss:

“That’s a team that has a winning pedigree,” Cam Talbot said after snapping the Lightning’s streak of 113 games without a shutout. “They know how to pull out these tight games. Kucherov is sitting there with the puck and he’s got options. You know he’s going to find somebody eventually. So give the guys in front of me a ton of credit, we blocked a lot of shots from the top, did a great job boxing out, let me see most of the pucks. Sometimes you just have to weather the storm and get a lucky bounce and we did a little bit of all that.”

Tampa Bay’s Lilleberg to have NHL Player Safety hearing for interference on J.T. Compher

FYI, via Sportsnet:

Tampa Bay Lightning defenceman Emil Lilleberg will have a hearing for an interference call against J.T. Compher of the Detroit Red Wings, the NHL Department of Safety announced Sunday.

The date and time of the hearing have yet to be determined.

The incident occurred midway through the second period of Saturday’s game with Detroit leading 1-0.

No news as to whether Nikita Kucherov might earn supplemental discipline for his trip of Michael Rasmussen into the frame of the empty net…

Update: “dudewithchronicpain” on Reddit posted the clip of Lillegren’s hit on Compher. It was a head shot. And “dudewithchronicpain,” I hope you feel better. Chronic pain sucks.

Update #2: The Tampa Bay Times’ Eduardo A. Encina’s reaction is…typical:

Continue reading Tampa Bay’s Lilleberg to have NHL Player Safety hearing for interference on J.T. Compher

A bit of praise for Marco Kasper and Albert Johansson

The Hockey News’s Sam Stockton has filed his morning-after-the-game notebook, and I’d like to focus on his discussion of the strong play of Marco Kasper and Albert “seven shots blocked” Johansson in last night’s 2-0 victory over the Tampa Bay Lightning:

Kasper scored the game-winner for the Red Wings, doing so on a deft twirling deflection off a JT Compher feed to the net front.  McLellan praised the “heavier” and “direct” game Kasper has played since being promoted to the top line next to Dylan Larkin and Lucas Raymond, and, even if the goal came with a mixed line following a penalty kill, those traits were on display.

“You look at the goal he got tonight, I know he wasn’t on the ice with Larkin in that case, but he got in on the forecheck, we kept a puck alive, he got himself free…he went to the net,” McLellan pointed out, while also stressing that Kasper wasn’t just benefiting from his line mates, those line mates are also benefiting from him and his work rate.  Kasper himself earned a reward for taking a hard route to the net.

Meanwhile, Johansson played a career high 20:49.  He started shifts in the defensive zone against Nikita Kucherov, something that would’ve been unthinkable under Detroit’s previous coaching staff, and he looked very much at home.  In the third period, after Tampa forward Jake Guentzel took an extra whack at Talbot following a wrap-around attempt, it was Johansson who intervened immediately.  In keeping with the evening’s theme, he had to absorb a bit of pain for doing so in the form of jabs from Guentzel, but he also showed off the “fierceness” McLellan lauded in him after the win over the Habs Thursday,

Per Natural Stat Trick, Johansson played 18:25 at five-on-five, and in those minutes, he earned a 66.25% share of on-ice expected goals, plus Detroit outscored the Lightning 1–0.  He also led the Red Wings with seven shot blocks.  Based on his present form, it’s awfully hard to imagine Johansson coming out of the lineup when indeed Jeff Petry does get back to full health.

Continued; I’ve gotten used to Kasper’s, “Everybody said that his production will come over time, and now ‘over time’ is here” strong play, but Johansson is still something of a revelation to me.

He’s been fantastic despite standing at 6′ tall and a team-listed 168 pounds, displaying the kind of savvy and poise you might expect from a 24-year-old who’s spent two years in the AHL and three full seasons in the SHL. Johansson knows how to leverage his stick and body to make up for his lack of size, and his positioning and skating are impeccable.

We all already know that Kasper is something of a fleet-footed bulldog out there on the ice; I didn’t expect Johansson to be so damned dependable, but it’s a fantastic surprise to see.