Walleye trade Cole Fraser’s rights for the rights to defenseman Matt Anderson

The Toledo Walleye have made a “rights” trade, sending former Red Wings draft pick Cole Fraser’s rights to the South Carolina Stingrays for defenseman Matt Anderson, a 24-year-old, 6,’ 194-pound defenseman:

Per the Toledo Blade’s Mark Monroe:

Anderson played five seasons at the University of Minnesota-Duluth. He had 28 points (3 G, 25 A) in 181 college games.

A native of Shakopee, Minn., Anderson helped lead Minnesota-Duluth to back-to-back NCAA championships in 2018 and 2019.

The 6-foot and 194-pound defenseman also played in 17 games over two seasons for first-year Walleye coach Pat Mikesch when they were both with the Green Bay Gamblers of the USHL.

“He’s an extremely versatile and strong skating d-man,” Mikesch said. “He plays both right and left d sides.”

Anderson turned pro at the end of the 2021-22 season and appeared in five games for the Stingrays. As a rookie last season, Anderson played in five playoff games for South Carolina under former Walleye player Brenden Kotyk.

Tweet of note: Penguins release lineup for Tuesday’s exhibition game vs. Red Wings, and it’s a spare one

The Detroit Red Wings know their enemy, or at least they will know which players the Pittsburgh Penguins are using for tomorrow night’s home exhibition opener (7 PM EDT start on Bally Sports Detroit Extra), per Sports Illustrated’s Nick Horvat:

It’s not exactly Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, Erik Karlsson, Kris Letang and Tristan Jarry as the starting lineup, is it?

Record-Eagle: Wings continue to improve over course of training camp

The Traverse City Record-Eagle’s Jordan Puente filed a final report from Red Wings training camp this evening:

On the ice, Lalonde saw his players continue to improve since the sold-out Red and White game on Sunday.

“In our Red and White game yesterday, you could see more organization in our structure. I know it’s a small thing, but the guys looked like they were on the same page,” Lalonde said. “It’s still a huge work in progress with a lot of mistakes to clean up.”

Many players entered Monday without a clear decision on whether they made the team or not, but Lalonde is using the eight preseason games to give players plenty of opportunities to make a name for themselves.

“Everyone is going to get plenty of game time, some more than others, obviously there is a purpose for that,” he said. “Gives them a chance to find their identity and how they can fit into the bigger picture.”

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Khan: Coach Lalonde knows that the Wings have to prove their worth this season

As MLive’s Ansar Khan notes, Red Wings coach Derek Lalonde knows all too well that his team has to prove its critics wrong:

“You try to push the noise away and that’s the media,” Lalonde said. “I stopped reading media because it’s so negative on us. … Some people have us no chance at making the playoffs. I think the highest article I read is a 14 percent chance of making the playoffs. Everyone is writing us off. I get it, it’s not a knock on our guys, it’s just the reality of the division, the conference.”

The Red Wings broke training camp Monday in Traverse City and open their eight-game preseason Tuesday against Pittsburgh at Little Caesars Arena (7 p.m., Bally Sports Detroit; WWJ-AM 950).

These exhibitions, as always, won’t reveal much about the team. Lineups will be loaded with young players looking to grow and gain experience, many of them prior to heading to AHL Grand Rapids. Questions about the Red Wings following a flurry of offseason changes will start to be answered when the regular season opens Oct. 12 at New Jersey.

“We’ll knock the noise away. It’ll be about our process and just doing things correctly,” Lalonde said. “Very similar to where we were last year. No one gave us a fighting chance and in the end they were right. But late in the season, game 57, we were in that playoff (spot). We exceeded expectations. Hopefully, it’ll look the same this year.”

Continued; I think that the exhibitions are very important unto themselves. No, the record that the Wings post during the exhibition season won’t tell the tale as to how they do this upcoming season, but the battle for jobs on the roster is real, as is establishing the pecking order for prospect and depth player call-ups. There’s much to watch during exhibition hockey.

Impressions from practice on the final day of Red Wings’ training camp

The Detroit Red Wings began preparing for their exhibition season with a pair of hour-long practices at Centre ICE Arena on Monday, concluding their time in Traverse City. The team packs up its gear and returns to Detroit today, just in time for the exhibition season.

Detroit made its first cuts on Sunday, but the Wings still have 57 players on their roster (including Carter Mazur, Matt Luff and Ben Chiarot), and they’ll need the warm bodies, because the team’s about to embark upon an 8-games-in-12-nights exhibition game slate starting Tuesday at Little Caesars Arena vs. the Pittsburgh Penguins (7 PM on Bally Sports Detroit Extra).

On Monday, the Red Wings’ skaters took part in a pair of one-hour practices–one for Team Red, and one for Team White. The two-team situation is going to be the norm for the Red Wings from now until the end of the exhibition season, with one “team” playing one night, and the other “team” playing the next. There will be movement of players from team to team as necessary to try out line combinations and special teams formations, but the general structure of the two teams remains the same.

I asked coach Lalonde if training camp was about establishing structure, and the exhibition season, details, and he stated that that’s exactly how things work in terms of the teaching process. The Red Wings worked on a significant amount of center-tracking today, 5-on-5, 4-on-4 and 3-on-3 full-ice attack-and-regroup drills, with the emphasis on competition for pucks and bench changes to ensure that shift length was starting to come into play.

Continue reading Impressions from practice on the final day of Red Wings’ training camp

Bultman discusses Lucas Raymond’s strong training camp

The Athletic’s Max Bultman offers 5 training camp observations this afternoon. Among them:

If there was one player I was eager to see coming into this training camp, it was Lucas Raymond. He’s likely going to be the biggest X-factor for the Red Wings season, and I’ve picked him to be the team’s breakout player. After five days, I thought his training camp reinforced that belief.

Raymond looked quick, slippery and dangerous — and just so happened to score the game-winning goal on the last small-ice three-on-three game of camp Monday morning. That goal drew a game-like celebration from his teammates, and is exactly the kind of moment you want to see from a player coming off a sophomore slump in 2022-23 into an important season.

The biggest talking point, of course, has been his added strength, up 12 pounds from his listed weight last season. Red Wings coach Derek Lalonde pointed to puck battles, staying on his feet more, and keeping plays alive as ways that added strength could show up in his game this fall.

Certainly, Raymond’s calling card is what he can do with the puck on his stick, and being able to fend off defenders to keep it or win battles to get it back both further that.

I thought Raymond was again quite noticeable in the Red and White game Sunday too, which is the closest thing to true game speed we saw here, but the preseason will offer an even better viewing. Lalonde said Raymond will start out next to Dylan Larkin and Alex DeBrincat in the exhibition opener at home Tuesday night against Pittsburgh.

Continued (paywall)

Stockton discusses the Red Wings’ special teams play

The Hockey News’s Sam Stockton wrote a lengthy article which examines the Red Wings’ Red vs. White Game while emphasizing and breaking down its second period’s worth of 1-minute power plays, and Stockton believes that the team needs to make some specific tweaks to adjust to the strengths of its own penalty-kill, never mind that of other teams:

I don’t disagree with [coach Derek] Lalonde’s assessment that the Red Wings power plays generated a solid volume of chances (especially in Clip #1 above), but they did struggle to create quality opportunities in the slot.

The Red Wing PK deserves some credit for this.  That unit jumped from a 73.8% success rate in the final year of the Jeff Blashill era to a 78.1% success rate in year one under Lalonde, and it looks well on its way to more progress this year.  

It’s no secret that Steve Yzerman has made a point of adding big bodies to his blue line, which makes quite a bit of sense in a wedge plus one.  Those big D-men can take care of either post and use their size and strength to take away net-front opportunities within that structure.

It should also be said that you’d expect a natural uptick in fluidity, timing, and chemistry from Detroit’s power plays with more time.  The Red top unit we saw above features two players new to the Detroit line-up this season, so it’s no surprise to see some growing pains as that group discovers its rhythm this early in the pre-season.

Still, the struggles with breaking down the opposing structure and moving the PK box shouldn’t be ignored either.  I’m not sure that [Shayne] Gostisbehere makes a ton of sense on the flank with the other members of the top unit.  While a proven power play performer, his strength isn’t threading passes into the interior from that position.

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Kulfan’s notebook: Coach Lalonde ready to take the next step

As the Detroit News’s Ted Kulfan notes, Red Wings coach Derek Lalonde is satisfied with the lessons he imparted to his charges over the course of training camp, and now he’s ready to get the exhibition season underway:

Monday’s practice at Centre Ice Arena concluded the training camp portion of the preseason. Although appreciating the hospitality and setup in Traverse City, the Wings were excited about returning to Detroit and beginning the eight-game exhibition season.

“It’s all part of it, anxious to get this (next) part going,” Lalonde said. “Now the game process. We had some good teaching from everything we covered (Sunday) and it’ll be good step into our game.”

Lalonde was pleased with the five-day, on-ice camp.

“Sometimes I’m focused on just being organized and everything goes smoothy,” Lalonde said. “Half of my thought process is that. The other half is how the guys look, individually how they look, and who is competing for spots.

“For the most part I’m happy with the way camp has gone.”

Continued