My name is George Malik, and I'm the Malik Report's editor/blogger/poster. I have been blogging about the Red Wings since 2006, and have worked with MLive and Kukla's Korner.
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Per the Free Press’s Helene St. James and MLive’s Ansar Khan, Jared Coreau has cleared waivers, and he will return to the AHL’s Grand Rapids Griffins, where he will probably serve as the Griffins’ playoff starter:
Jared Coreau cleared waivers, Red Wings have assigned him to Grand Rapids.
Rasmussen and 2016 first-round pick Dennis Cholowski will join the Griffins if their respective playoff runs end and Grand Rapids is still playing. Cholowski has four goals and six points in nine playoff games for the WHL’s Portland Winterhawks, who are 1-1 in their second-round series against Everett.
Rasmussen’s performance wasn’t a one-off: he has had multi-point performances in each of Tri-City’s six playoff games, for a total of nine goals and 10 assists. Four of the goals have come on power plays.
Rasmussen is listed at 6-foot-6 and 221 pounds. He usually plays center, but has been on the wing during the playoffs, which should help him make the jump to the NHL because it’s a less demanding position.
He showed promise during last year’s training camp, and is expected to push to stay in Detroit next season to help with the rebuild. Rasmussen, who turns 19 on April 17, will either have to make Detroit’s roster or he’ll have to go back for his last year of junior eligibility. Cholowski will either be in Detroit or Grand Rapids.
In case you’re unfamiliar with the NHL-Canadian Hockey League player agreement, 18-and-19-year-olds have to either make NHL rosters or be assigned to their Canadian Hockey League rights-holders. NHL teams have a sort of 10-game “grace period” in which the team can evaluate their players without tolling a year off their contracts, but come 10 games, that player’s either on the NHL roster, or he’s headed back to Major Junior for the balance of the CHL team’s regular season and playoffs.
As such, both Rasmussen and Cholowski–and the rest of the Wings’ CHL-playing prospects–can’t join the Grand Rapids Griffins until their CHL teams’ playoff runs end.
Per the Free Press’s Helene St. James on Twitter, Tyler Bertuzzi won’t reprise his role as the Grand Rapids Griffins’ go-to playoff scorer:
Red Wings have decided not to send Tyler Bertuzzi to Grand Rapids. They want him to have a big summer in the gym, get stronger. Last summer shortened by Griffins’ Calder Cup championship & injury. Has done everything he could at AHL level (2017 AHL playoff MVP).
#RedWings not assigning Tyler Bertuzzi to @griffinshockey saying “He needs a big-time summer in the gym.” Bertuzzi was AHL playoff MVP last season. Jared Coreau will be sent down if he clears waivers at noon, which is expected.
Bertuzzi won the Jack A. Butterfield Trophy in 2017 as AHL playoff MVP, picking up 10 goals and 19 points during the Griffins’ title run.
Recalled to Detroit mid-season, Bertuzzi had a good rookie year, with seven goals and 24 points in 48 games. He finished strong, complementing Henrik Zetterberg and Gustav Nyquist on the top line with his grit, physicality and net-front presence.
Prior to learning of the team’s decision, Bertuzzi said he was fine either way.
“You want to go try and win again but you want to stay healthy and have a good summer,” Bertuzzi said. “There’s pros and cons both ways.
“It would be awesome to win back-to-back. It’s been a long year. I had an injury the last two summers, so I think that’s a big factor, too, that I haven’t been healthy for the summers for training.”
Zetterberg, who will turn 38 at the start of next season, made it clear that he’s coming back for at least one more year. He has played all 82 games three years in a row and missed only five games the season before that. Even he couldn’t have predicted that after major back surgery in 2014.
“I didn’t practice since January,” Zetterberg said. “I wish I could practice every day and go out and fly around like some other guys do in here, but I know that I can’t do it,” Zetterberg said. “But you never know, have a good summer and I might be flying around.”
Zetterberg finished second on the team in scoring with 56 points (11 goals, 45 assists). He is 40 away from 1,000, a milestone reached by only four Red Wings (Gordie Howe, Steve Yzerman, Alex Delvecchio and Nicklas Lidstrom).
“There were days where I wasn’t sure if he was going to be able to play,” Blashill said. “He’s as tough a person as you’ll ever be around, like true toughness, being able to handle pain and endure that. Lots of days he’s good, so I don’t want to overdo it, but I think that the impressive thing isn’t that he’s played the games, but it’s the level at which he’s played. He’s still lots of nights an elite two-way player.”
Khan continues, and he posted a video of Zetterberg’s post-game comments:
Jamie died of an overdose of heroin that had been laced with fentanyl, a synthetic and far more potent form of the drug, according to an autopsy report and death certificate. For Ken, understanding how Jamie could overdose in a sober home environment meant exploring the dark path Jamie had traveled in the final weeks before his death, a journey that opened Ken’s eyes to something he had never before considered: the existence of a corrupt side to the billion-dollar rehabilitation industry in South Florida, where federal laws can be exploited by people who actually have no interest in keeping recovering addicts clean. Jamie, his father came to realize, got caught in an insurance scam known as “The Florida Shuffle.”
“It’s one thing to have an addiction and not being able to overcome it because the addiction overtakes you … but then when bad people get involved and they contribute to it, it makes you sick,” Ken says.
The story continues, and this is the kind of topic that we need to discuss because it’s not easy to talk about the most widespread addiction problem in the U.S. and Canada. We are countries struggling with everyday people addicted to prescription drugs, and it sucks, but the this stuff happens to everyday people like you and me, and the more we de-stigmatize addiction as an illness and a disease, not a sign of personal weakness, the better we can help people treat their illnesses.
Of prospect-related note in regular season action:
In the AHL, the Grand Rapids Griffins clinched a playoff spotvia a 4-1 victory over the Tuscon Roadrunners. Grand Rapids received a pair of 1st period goals from Eric Tangradi (his 30th and 31st of the season), 2nd-period markers from Turner Elson and Dan Renouf and a 22-save performance from Tom McCollum.
In playoff action, in the OHL, Kaden Fulcher stopped 21 of 23 shots in the Hamilton Bulldogs’ 3-2 OT win over the Niagara IceDogs. Hamilton leads Niagara 2-0 in the teams’ second-round series;
In the WHL, Dennis Cholowski and his Portland Winterhawks had off nights. Cholowski finished at -3 in Portland’s 6-0 loss to the Everett Silvertips, and Portland and Everett are now tied 1-1 in the teams’ second-round series;
And Michael Rasmussen had a heck of a night during a heck of a playoff run, scoring a hat trick and adding an assist, going +3 with 4 shots and a 3-for-3 faceoff record in the Tri-City Americans’ 4-1 win over Victoria.
Tri-City now leads Victoria 2-0 in the teams’ second-round playoff series, and Rasmussen has posted 9 goals, 10 assists and 19 points over the course of 6 games played for Tri-City.
Lane Zablocki finished at -1 with 2 shots and a 4-for-5 faceoff record for Victoria.
The WHL’s Twitter account posted two of Rasmussen’s goals:
The Detroit Red Wings’ 2017-18 campaign concluded with a 4-3 OT loss to the New York Islanders on Saturday night, giving the Red Wings a 30-39-and-13 record for 73 points registered over the course of 82 games played. That’s good for 27th place in the NHL. As it stands today, the Red Wings would pick 5th overall in the 1st round, barring the results of the NHL’s draft lottery on April 28th:
With Canucks getting at least one point, four of the bottom five NHL teams are from the Atlantic Division:
31. Buffalo
30. Ottawa
29. Arizona
28. Montreal
27. Detroit
The Detroit Red Wings’ 4-3 OT loss to the New York Islanders wasn’t a microcosm of the Red Wings’ season in the way it unfolded–instead of struggling to score goals, Detroit raced out to a 3-1 lead over New York…
But the Wings’ 3rd period unraveling thanks to defensive errors and poor special teams play were right from the 2017-18 season playbook, as was the Wings’ OT loss and loss on home ice.
The captain spoke for the team after the game, as noted by DetroitRedWings.com’s Dana Wakiji:
#RedWings Zetterberg: Hasn’t gone the way that we definitely hoped for, but the fans have behind us in good times and bad times, not just here in this arena but everywhere we go, we have a lot of fans. We thank them and at the same time apologize for the results.
#RedWings Zetterberg: It took a while to admit it, I will say. But we’re in a rebuild. But I think we’re doing a lot of right things. We have a lot of picks this summer, we got to be lucky and get some good players that could be here for a long time.
The Red Wings were unable to finish on a high note, but they face considerably less uncertainty going forward than the Islanders, as Newsday’s Andrew Gross noted:
Per the Grand Rapids Griffins, who just defeated the Tuscon Roadrunners 4-1 (on Eric Tangradi’s 30th and 31st goals of the season, goals by Turner Elson and Dan Renouf, and a 22-save performance from Tom McCollum):
That’s the final horn from Tucson. The Griffins win, 4-1, and clinch a playoff berth into the 2018 Calder Cup Playoffs!
— Griffins Game Day (@GriffinsGameDay) April 8, 2018