Morning Griffins goodies: Setting up the Griffins-Stars series; on Shai Buium, Ondrej Becher and the illustrious Mark Newman

Of Grand Rapids Griffins-related note this morning:

  1. Andrew Streitel wrote a very, very good slate of game notes ahead of tonight’s game against the Texas Stars (8 PM at H-E-B Park Arena, and tomorrow at the same time, airing on FloHockey.tv), including the following:

Shine On, Captain


Yesterday, Dominik Shine was named the 19th captain in franchise history. He returns to Grand Rapids for his 10th season, becoming just the third player in team history to reach the milestone (Brian Lashoff 14, Travis Richards 10). During the 2024-25 AHL season, Shine posted career-high numbers in assists (32), points (46), power-play goals (5), game-winners (4), shots (149), and multi-point outings (11) to go along with 14 goals and 76 penalty minutes in 61 regular-season games. He also signed his first NHL contract on Jan. 27, 2025, and later that evening made his NHL debut against the Los Angeles Kings. Shine became the oldest skater to make his NHL debut since Evgeny Medvedev did so at 33 on Oct. 8, 2015, and the oldest Red Wings player to make his debut since Vaclav Nedomansky did it at 33 on Nov. 18, 1977. On the all-time regular-season franchise leaderboard, Shine ranks third in games played (483), tied for seventh in goals (75), tied for ninth in assists (109), ninth in points (184), sixth in penalty minutes (553), tied for eighth in short-handed goals (5), tied for seventh in game-winners (12), tied for first in unassisted goals (10), and tied for sixth in shots (797). 

2. The Grand Rapids Griffins also post a monthly magazine called “Griffiti.” Amongst this month’s stories are the following:

A) Shai Buium discusses his unconventional hockey roots with Kyle Kujawa:

Continue reading Morning Griffins goodies: Setting up the Griffins-Stars series; on Shai Buium, Ondrej Becher and the illustrious Mark Newman

Roughly translated: Nicklas Lidstrom watches Eddie Genborg; Brandsegg-Nygard’s debut goes ‘okay’

Of foreign language-related Red Wings note this morning:

  1. Red Wings prospect Eddie Genborg, who plays for Timra IK of the SHL, has found himself in the company of Red Wings legends of late. Hockeynews.se’s Linnea Andersson reports that both Nicklas Lidstrom and Niklas Kronwall have watched Genbrg play recently:

Eddie Genborg had eyes on him when Timra played Orebro. On the spot was NHL legend Nicklas Lidström, in his role as representative of the Detroit Red Wings, to probably get a closer look at the Timra talent.

Nicklas Lidström was in Orebro when Timra fell 5-3 [on Thursday]. He is today “Vice President of Hockey Operations” in the Detroit Red Wings – the team that chose to draft Eddie Genborg last summer.

Genborg had time to exchange a few words with him after the loss, but he isn’t sure if the visit really was for him. The only thing he knew was that Lidstrom was there – something he found out just before the game began.

“I talked to him a little bit after the game. I don’t really know, but I think it was just me who was drafted by Detroit there. It’s great that he was there,” Genborg told ST.nu.

Genborg was pleased with his efforts, and told us that he and Lidstrom talked a little about the start of the season–and about how he enjoys life in Sundsvall.

Genborg was told that Lidstrom was in place just before puck drop. In the past, Niklas Kronwall has also visited Timra to follow him. This time, Genborg tried not to put too much emphasis on one of the hockey world’s biggest names sitting in the stands.

“I try not to think about it that much. It’s just fun that he’s there and watching, but you can’t think about it too much, it probably just puts traps in your head then.”

2. Nitten.no also posted a column which discusses Michael Brandsegg-Nygard’s NHL debut:

Continue reading Roughly translated: Nicklas Lidstrom watches Eddie Genborg; Brandsegg-Nygard’s debut goes ‘okay’

Morning news: on fixable errors, rookie debuts, boo birds, ‘5 thoughts’ and an optimistic Monarrez (sort of)

The Detroit Red Wings dropped a frustrating 5-1 decision to the Montreal Canadiens last night in the Wings’ home opener, and this morning, a quintet of writers have weighed with more discussion about the Red Wings’ loss.

First, MLive’s Ansar Khan points out that, while the Wings gave up a gaggle of odd-man rushes due to neutral zone turnovers, the team believes that their errors are fixable–but only at a cost:

“You don’t give up two-on-ones; if a D’s down, a forward covers,” [coach Todd McLellan] said. “You manage the puck; you don’t turn it over. I thought we got off to a good start, but our game management, you’re going to hear that all year from me because clearly, it’s still a huge issue. We just played the game; we didn’t play to win the game.

“The players will say we can fix this. We can. Some of them have been doing it for years. It’s time. We just spent 3-3½ weeks at training camp dealing with these situations. If it happened once or twice in a game, OK. But there’s maybe six or seven outnumbered rushes at the end of the first period from the 10-minute mark on and it’s unacceptable. We’ll have to drill it back into them.”

The Canadiens scored five unanswered goals after Dylan Larkin opened the scoring on the power play at 3:50 of the first. John Gibson, in his Red Wings debut, allowed all five goals on 13 shots and was pulled for Cam Talbot with 3:48 remaining in the second.

“I thought it was a great start, really good intensity, and then the game kind of slipped away from us,” Moritz Seider said. “We weren’t detailed. They just kind of outworked us, out-skated us, got a lot of great opportunities around our net and nothing Gibby could have done to prevent goals.”

McLellan and players said they “hung (Gibson) out to dry.”

“We didn’t execute and everything they got, I feel like we let them get behind us,” Larkin said. “We seemed like we really couldn’t do the simple things, chipping pucks in and getting to our game on the forecheck. We shot ourselves in the foot so many times that we didn’t have time to get to our game and create offense. It was chaotic and a lot of the chaos was self-inflicted, and it was a strange, strange game and we just really did not help ourselves at all. And I do believe it’s all fixable.”

Second, Detroit Hockey Now’s Kevin Allen noted the following about the Red Wings’ rookie trio:

Continue reading Morning news: on fixable errors, rookie debuts, boo birds, ‘5 thoughts’ and an optimistic Monarrez (sort of)

Spotlighting Marco Kasper and Emmitt Finnie

Of Red Wings player-related note this morning:

  1. ESPN’s Greg Wyshynski lists 30 players which he believes will “break out” this upcoming season, as well as the reasons why said players are to flourish, and he suggests that Marco Kasper will prove that “the wait is over“:

Marco Kasper
C, Detroit Red Wings

Kasper was set up for success in his rookie season, spending a good portion of his season (273 minutes) with Dylan Larkin and Lucas Raymond on the team’s top line. For an encore, Kasper will be asked to drive his own line this season, potentially in the middle of Alex DeBrincat and Patrick Kane.

That line actually produced strong defensive results (1.2 goals against per 60 minutes) last season to go along with its offensive pop.

2. And The Athletic’s Sean McIndoe suggests that one of the Red Wings’ rookie trio is a player of “intrigue” to watch this season:

Emmitt Finnie, Detroit Red Wings

The rebuilding Red Wings are counting on their youth to carry them back to the playoffs, and some of that may come from an unlikely source. Two years after being the No. 201 pick in the draft, Finnie has been penciled in on the first line alongside Dylan Larkin and Lucas Raymond. That’s on the strength of a strong camp and exhibition season, one that’s won over a big chunk of the fan base. It’s a fun underdog story. Can it last? They rarely do, but rarely isn’t never.

Casting a vote for Simon

Alex DeBrincat earns an A+ for understanding the assignment here. NHL.com asked players on the media tour in Las Vegas which player they feel will be the NHL’s next break-out star, and most of them mentioned Macklin Celebrini or Wyatt Johnston. DeBrincat wasn’t having it:

A similar thing was said regarding Detroit Red Wings defenseman Simon Edvinsson, who is 6-foot-6 and 209 pounds.

“I think he has all the tools and obviously a big body that skates well,” said teammate Alex DeBrincat, who skated with Edvinsson in the offseason. “He can be a player that helps our team this year.”

Red Wings-Canadiens wrap-up: recovering from a Winged Wheel Wreck

The Detroit Red Wings dropped a 5-1 decision to the Montreal Canadiens in the Wings’ home opener, with Detroit taking a 1-0 lead, but surrendering 3 1st-period goals and 2 2nd-period goals en route to a difficult opening-night setback.

Things don’t get any easier as the Wings kick off a home-and-home series with the Toronto Maple Leafs on Hockey Night in Canada on Saturday night.

As you might expect, the Canadiens’ status as a 1-and-1 team had its press corps, both in English and French, exultant, suggesting that nothing can stop the great Canadiens machine. Sportsnet’s Eric Engels marveled at the ways in which the Canadiens’ newer players have “seamlessly” been integrated into the team

Continue reading Red Wings-Canadiens wrap-up: recovering from a Winged Wheel Wreck

Prospect round-up: Tyurin, Dower Nilsson register assists; Genborg solid; Svrcek languishes on Brynas’ 4th line

Of Red Wings prospect-related note on Thursday:

In the MHL, Nikita Tyurin had an assist, finishing at +1 in 25:31 played as MHK Spartak won 5-4 over MHK Dynamo Moscow:

In the SHL, Noah Dower Nilsson had an assist, finishing at +1 with 1 shot in 13:28 played as Frolunda HC won 6-1 over the Malmo Redhawks:

Anton Johansson remained sidelined with an injury as Leksands IF lost 3-1 to Linkopings HC;

Eddie Genborg finished at +1 with 2 shots and 1 hit in 16:26 as Timra IK lost 5-3 to Orebro Hockey:

And Michal Svrcek finished with 1 shot in 7:07 played as Brynas IF lost 1-0 to Skelleftea AIK. There is speculation that, because Brynas is hesitant to send Svrcek to the J20 league, that he may head to Windsor to join the Spitfires at some point this season:

Update: In NCAA action, John Whipple finished even in the University of Minnesota Golden Gophers’ 3-1 loss to Boston College;

And Trey Augustine stopped 18 shots as the University of New Hampshire defeated the Michigan State University Spartans 4-3.

Red Wings-Canadiens Tweetcap: Detroit loses 5-1 to open centennial season on a sour note

The Detroit Red Wings opened their 100th season with an Original Six match-up with the Montreal Canadiens.

Montreal, which dropped a 5-2 decision to the Toronto Maple Leafs on Wednesday (though they insisted they “played good enough to win“), dressed the same lineup that it iced in Toronto, minus Samuel Montembeault in goal.

Jakub Dobes faced off against John Gibson in the Wings’ crease, and the Red Wings stuck with what had worked with them in practice this week.

On Thursday night, the Red Wings started very well, generating a power play goal from captain Dylan Larkin only 3:50 into the 1st…

But a combination of poor neutral zone play, defensive errors and a rough night from John Gibson–and some fine play from a resilient Canadiens team–yielded 3 Canadiens first-period goals, 2 second-period goals (including a PPG marker), and, in the end, a 5-1 victory for Montreal.

John Gibson was pulled after giving up 5 goals on 13 shots against, and Detroit actually out-shot Montreal 31-17, went 1-for-4 on the PP to Montreal’s 1-for-3, and Detroit out-attempted Montreal 63-38, but again, unforced defensive errors and porous goaltending doomed the team.

Things will not get any easier: On Saturday, the Red Wings open a home-and-home series with the Toronto Maple Leafs; then the Wings entertain the Panthers and Lightning, and they also host the Edmonton Oilers before a 2-day break and a 3-in-4-nights slate in Buffalo, on Long Island, and at home against St. Louis, preceding a nasty 5-game West Coast swing.

Long story short, shit happens, and sometimes you fall flat on your face in your home opener. But the schedule does not afford the Red Wings any more “gimme” games.

PREGAME: The Red Wings hit the ice at LCA at 6:35 PM…

Continue reading Red Wings-Canadiens Tweetcap: Detroit loses 5-1 to open centennial season on a sour note

Steve Yzerman offers his thoughts on the Red Wings’ rookie trio

Red Wings GM Steve Yzerman made a surprise appearance on Thursday to discuss the Red Wings’ trio of rookies in Emmitt Finnie, Michael Brandsegg-Nygard and Axel Sandin Pellikka, as noted by the Free Press’s Helene St. James

“They’ve all looked good, so we felt that they’ve earned the opportunity and see if they can sustain it in the regular season, which we expect them to,” Yzerman said Thursday evening. “It was a very pleasant surprise that we weren’t necessarily expecting in the offseason.”

The Wings have tended to leave prospects in the minors till deemed well-and-ready for the NHL – last year, Marco Kasper was sent down after an outstanding camp, though he was recalled a week later – but this year, the three were on the 23-man roster from the start.

“Any young player, if we think they’re ready and we think they’re going to play and we meet with the coaching staff and what’s your plan, understanding the plan changes daily, but if they’re going to play and they’re ready to play, we’re more than happy to keep them,” Yzerman said.

‘They’ve been impressive. I’ve watched Finnie skate, and the poise and the smarts of Axel and his puck-handling skills back there. Michael’s shooting the puck and playing hard. He’s got a real element to his game. I think it’s obvious they’re talented young players. I’m hoping that translates now into the regular season. We’re expecting it, too, for all of them to have a positive impact.”

The Detroit News’s Ted Kulfan

Continue reading Steve Yzerman offers his thoughts on the Red Wings’ rookie trio