A bit of praise for Trey Augustine

It’s always nice when someone “talks up” a Wings prospect, so here’s Daily Faceoff’s Steven Ellis discussing Team USA goaltender Trey Augustine as part of his Team USA World Junior Championship team preview:

After being the United States’ starter the past two years – and his continued play as one of the top goalies in the NCAA this year – Trey Augustine (Detroit Red Wings) has the crease on lockdown this year. He’s the top goaltender in the tournament, and is one of the best goalie prospects across the NHL, period. Augustine is putting up some outstanding numbers as a college sophomore, registering an 11-2-1 record with two shutouts and a .930 save percentage. He has a great team in front of him, sure, but Augustine has managed to be an absolute star at every level he has ever played in and has a near perfect record at the World Juniors, too.

Continued

Tweet of note: Kiiskinen earns an ‘A’ for Finland’s WJC team

Via Red Wings Prospects on Twitter, EliteProspects’ Lassi Alanen reports that Red Wings prospect Jesse Kiiskinen has been named an alternate captain for the Finnish Lions at this year’s World Junior Championship:

A brief Red Wings-Canadiens preview with game notes

The Detroit Red Wings host the Montreal Canadiens tonight (7 PM EDT start on FanDuel Sportsnet Detroit/TSN2/RDS/97.1 FM) and head to Montreal tomorrow to take part in an old-fashioned home-and-home series against an opponent that believes it’s on the rise.

Montreal stands at 12-16-and-3, but they’ve split their past 4 games, and they smacked the Sabres 6-1 on Tuesday thanks to a Patrik Laine hat trick.

Montreal also sits only 3 points behind Detroit in the Atlantic Division standings, so if they split the series via a victory and an OT or shootout loss, they’ll tie the 13-14-and-4 Wings’ for 5th in the Atlantic.

Field Level Media posted a Wings-Habs preview which summarizes the Habs’ state of mind as Laine surges (and the Habs acquired defenseman Alexandre Carrier from Nashville on Thursday):

The Canadiens, who are 4-3-0 in their last seven games, are coming off Tuesday’s 6-1 home victory over Buffalo behind Patrik Laine’s three power-play goals. Laine has six goals in seven games since recovering from a knee injury.

Laine was acquired from Columbus during the offseason. He appeared in just 18 games last season due to a broken clavicle and a six-month stint in the NHL/NHLPA Player Assistance Program.

“Obviously, it’s nice to have. Any time you have a threat, a weapon, especially on the power play, that just makes you a lot more deadly,” forward Josh Anderson told the Montreal Gazette. “It’s nice. Special teams are so important these days. It has won games. It obviously gave us a huge boost (Tuesday).”

With Laine and Cole Caufield (17 goals), the Canadiens have a formidable scoring duo on the power play.

“We have more weapons with Patty. It’s about finding a way to have predictability for us and unpredictability for the other team,” coach Martin St-Louis said. “They can move around, change spots sometimes, because the opponent has to respect both of them. We’re learning how to play together on the power play and how we can maximize everybody’s strengths.”

The Hockey News’s Karine Hains posted a game preview with stats and historical context

Continue reading A brief Red Wings-Canadiens preview with game notes

Two things: On the Wings’ stead and Larionov’s potential

Of Red Wings-related note this morning:

  1. The Free Press’s Helene St. James wrote an article which discusses the state of the Wings after the team earned a “bonus day off” on Thursday:

With the Wings having just played Wednesday, beating the Philadelphia Flyers, 6-4, that adds up to four games in six days — and Wednesday was especially taxing for several players.

When defenseman Simon Edvinsson left in the first period with an upper-body injury — no update was available Thursday — it forced the coaching staff to deploy the five defensemen who were left onto the ice more often than normal. Ben Chiarot led the workhorse brigade with 29:14 of ice time — that’s just short of having played half the game, and roughly eight minutes more than Chiarot usually averages.. Moritz Seider logged around 28 minutes, about three above his average. Justin Holl and Jeff Petry also saw more shifts than usual; the only defenseman who didn’t was Erik Gustafsson, who was a minus-2 in in 15:30 of ice time.

The day off also reflects that the Wings (13-14-4) have put together some winning hockey of late, taking six points from their last four games. Now they have an opportunity to keep that going against the Canadiens, who share the Atlantic Division with Detroit and sit below them in the standings. This is the first time since around Thanksgiving that the Wings seem to be building a bit of traction, and banking more points is crucial to their attempts at climbing into the playoff picture.

Continued; we’ll find out about Edvinsson at the Wings’ morning skate;

2. Detroit Hockey Now’s Bob Duff posted the gist of a Russian article in which Islanders GM Lou Lamoriello praises Torpedo Nizhny Novgorod coach and Red Wings alumnus Igor Larionov:

Continue reading Two things: On the Wings’ stead and Larionov’s potential

Tweet of note: Augustine, Plante made U.S. WJC team roster

Via Red Wings Prospects on Twitter, Wings prospects Trey Augustine and Max Plante both made the final cut for the United States’ World Junior Championship team roster:

They will be joined by Axel Sandin Pellikka, who will play for Sweden, and Jesse Kiiskinen, who will play for Finland, as Red Wings representatives at the 2025 World Junior Championship in Ottawa.

Update: Here’s a bit about Plante’s status from the Hockey News’s Sam Stockton:

Plante’s place on the roster was less assured, in part because of an injury that limited him to just five games in the first half of his freshman season at the University of Minnesota-Duluth.  Plante was not initially included on the roster for this week’s USA selection camp in Plymouth, MI, but then received a late invitation.

Tuesday, before Plante had officially been named to the team, USA general manager John Vanbiesbrouck said of the situation, “Max was a late add just based on his hand and wrist.  He was just too good to leave out of our group, and so we watched him the last four weeks.  When somebody’s wearing a splint, it’s kinda hard, but he’s just playing too good.  You gotta give him that shot, and he deserves to be here.”  After camp, the Americans had four cuts to make, and Plante was not among those sent home, proving that he wasn’t just too good to omit from camp but also from Team USA’s final roster.

Prospect round-up: Johansson takes 22 PIM’s, MBN returns from Norway’s WJC team

Of Red Wings prospect-related note in Europe today:

In the SHL, Noah Dower Nilsson finished at -1 with a shot on goal in 16:12 played as Frolunda HC lost 4-2 to HV71 Jonkoping;

Anton Johansson finished at -1 with 1 shot in 17:48 played–and he took TWENTY-TWO penalty minutes over the course of an end-of-game brawl during Leksands IF’s 2-1 loss to the Malmo Redhawks;

And Michael Brandsegg-Nygard has returned from Norway’s Division 1B World Junior Championship team, and he finished even with 3 shots in 15:24 played as Skelleftea AIK won 3-0 over Timra IK.

Axel Sandin Pellikka is absent from Skelleftea AIK due to preparations to play for Sweden at the 2026 World Junior Championship.