Both the Free Press’s Helene St. James and the Detroit News’s Ted Kulfan wrote practice notebooks which discuss Elmer Soderblom’s emergence as an NHL-ready player on the Wings’ roster.
Continue reading Soderblom’s shown that he belongs“He’s played really well,” coach Todd McLellan said. “That’s probably the simplest way of putting it.”
Söderblom, 23, used his second goal of the season in Tuesday’s Seattle Kraken outing to extend the Wings’ winning streak to seven consecutive games, catching a pass from Joe Veleno in the low slot area and flicking a backhand bar down.
“I was talking to him after the game,” Compher said. “It’s a really hard pickup on your backhand and it’s kind of right in his triangle, and he did a good job settling it and getting it under the bar.”
Against the Los Angeles Kings on Jan. 27, Söderblom, 6-foot-8 in bare feet and 7 feet on skates, used his big reach to snap a rebound into the net.
“Both of his goals have basically been the same thing — big man with good hands around the net,” McLellan said. “When you think about Elmer, you think about, ‘Well, can he use his size?’ He’s a big man. There’s different ways of using his size. When you talk like that, you think of these big hits and all that type of stuff, and he does do that. But he uses his size so effectively when he hunts pucks down. Players might be skating away from him, they may be a step or two faster, but out comes this long hook and they can’t skate through that. It’s off your tape and he’s got it again.”