Tweet of note: Kasper confirms he’s GR bound if he doesn’t make Detroit’s roster

My apologies as this Tweet from the Hockey News’s Ryan Kennedy slid under the radar yesterday.

We all know that Marco Kasper is going to play for the Grand Rapids Griffins, not Rogle BK of the SHL, if he doesn’t make the Red Wings over the course of training camp and the exhibition season, but it was good to hear Kasper confirm that fact at yesterday’s NHLPA Rookie Showcase:

Talking about Kane rumors and Hart-winning additions

I don’t believe that Patrick Kane has any intention of signing with the Detroit Red Wings. I’m certain that, under the right circumstances, Kane would like to rejoin DeBrincat, but as Kane is recovering from hip resurfacing surgery, and, as he’s attempting to win a Stanley Cup, sliding into the lineup of the Red Wings at or around the middle of the 2023-2024 season just doesn’t make much sense to me.

In my opinion, he’s going to a team that can contend for a Stanley Cup championship, and that’s not this year’s Red Wings team (though stranger things have happened).

Anyway, Detroit Hockey Now’s Bob Duff examined three occasions in which the Red Wings signed former Hart Trophy winners as free agents, and it should not come as a surprise that all three additions propelled the Red Wings to Stanley Cup Final appearances.

And here’s what Duff has to say about the Kane rumors:

Will Patrick Kane be joining the Detroit Red Wings? At this stage, such talk is nothing more than mere speculation. However, what is known is this – when the Red Wings are adding a player who won the Hart Trophy with another NHL club, it’s always a move leading to happy endings in Hockeytown.

Kane was the Hart Trophy winner with the Chicago Blackhawks in 2015-16. Published reports are indicating that he would have some interest in reuniting with his old Chicago teammate Alex DeBrincat in Detroit. Will it happen? Who knows?

What is certain is that on three previous occasions, the Red Wings were adding a past Hart Trophy winner from another team to their lineup. And in each instance, those additions were leading to Stanley Cup final appearances for Detroit.

Duff continues, discussing Andy Bathgate, Brett Hull and Dominik Hasek coming to Detroit; as for the Kane stuff, again, stranger things have happened, and he does have a history here as having played for Detroit Honeybaked (while being billeted by Pat Verbeek’s family) and the NTDP, I just don’t see him signing here.

Shapiro discusses the Red Wings’ power play entries

Sean Shapiro discusses the Red Wings’ power play entries in a “Wing Wednesday” article on his Substack this morning, using photos and video to explain his points of emphasis:

The Red Wings have two “non-negotiable” aspects on the power play breakout. It’s a philosophy stolen from Derek Lalonde’s time with the Tampa Bay Lightning and he used it when he was running the power play for Team USA at the 2023 IIHF World Championships.

  1. Break out together
  2. Finish your routes together

It’s a swarm mentality, attack with strength, and avoid solo runs without the rest of your teammates.

When the Red Wings power play is clicking, these non-negotiable elements are pretty easy to track.

You’ll notice all five players in the 200-foot buildup from the defensive zone. The entire unit hits the blue line in sync with the puck carrier, and the non-puck carrying players continue skating paths into the zone.

Continued (paywall)

A bit about Dylan Larkin’s status as the Wings’ active games-played leader

The Hockey News’s Jonathan Tovell was tasked with noting the active games-played leaders for each and every one of the NHL’s 16 Eastern Conference teams, and he had this to say about Red Wings captain Dylan Larkin:

Detroit Red Wings: Dylan Larkin, 584 games – Let’s get this out of the way – Larkin could play for the Red Wings for another decade of 82-game seasons, reach 1,404 contests and still not set a new record for most games played for the Detroit franchise. In fact, he would only be in fifth place behind Steve Yzerman (1,514), Alex Delvecchio (1,550), Nicklas Lidstrom (1,564) and Mr. Hockey, Gordie Howe, whose 1,687 matches are the most NHL games played with a single franchise ever. Larkin’s newly signed eight-year contract that lasts through 2030-31 is a good start, as he currently ranks 32nd all-time and can get to 24th if he plays at least 75 more games.

Continued; it’s a good start!

Tweets of note: Spot Cossa and Kasper at the NHLPA Rookie Showcase

Red Wings prospects Sebastian Cossa and Marco Kasper participated in the NHLPA’s Rookie Showcase in Arlington, Virginia today, and you can see the pair in the following Tweets by the NHLPA:

Connor Bedard obviously enjoyed most of the spotlight today.

Getting detail work done (and sorting out AA’s health issues) ahead of the TC trip

I had to do a significant amount of “real life” chores today to prepare Traverse City trip, from getting my dry cleaning in to Parkside Cleaners to calling Norm’s Total Automotive to find out when I may bring my 17-year-old Chrysler Pacifica in for oil change, steering and brake problems (oh joy!), to buying extra chewing gum at Walgreens and setting up an Amazon cart so that I have essential office supplies and hotel room stuff…

And we squeezed in a 45-minute telehealth appointment for Aunt Annie, whose ulcerative colitis is acting up. After a rambling meeting with her nurse practitioner, we decided to tweak her supplements and cross our fingers regarding a couple of medications that she’s already taking as she’s really in an uncomfortable place right now.

Continue reading Getting detail work done (and sorting out AA’s health issues) ahead of the TC trip

Kulfan profiles J.T. Compher

The Detroit News’s Ted Kulfan filed a profile of Red Wings free agent signing J.T. Compher, who the Red Wings brought in to stabilize their center depth:

Compher, [GM Steve] Yzerman believes, will help the Wings in a variety of ways, and those types of players are valuable.

“I like his versatility as a hockey player,” Yzerman said after the announcement of the signing. “He’s a natural centerman, he’s a right-shot centerman, which we don’t have at this time. We just drafted one in Nate (Danielson), but we’ll give him time to develop into an NHLer. We’ve got a right-shot centerman (Compher) who has played all three forward positions, who has played on the power play, does kill penalties. He’s a very versatile player for us and that ability to move around, to me, makes him very valuable.”

Compher, 28, signed a five-year contract worth $25.5 million ($5.1 annual average value) to join the Wings and reunite with former Michigan teammates Dylan Larkin and Andrew Copp. Compher (6-foot, 190 pounds) is coming off a career-best 52-point season in Colorado, with 17 goals and 35 assists.

The ability to play all three forward positions, being on both the power play and penalty kill, and coming from a Colorado organization that won a Stanley Cup recently but also went through an extensive and painful rebuild — which Compher was there for — should benefit the Wings.

“We had some success in Colorado but it took a lot of building,” Compher said upon joining the Wings. “My first year (in Colorado, 2016-17) we were the worst team in the league. I’ve seen both sides of it and I know what it takes. I’m excited to be with this group and build toward the ultimate goal of winning a championship. It starts with making the playoffs.

Continued

THN’s Stockton discusses the Wings’ offseason moves as a response to their dreadful losses vs. Ottawa last February

The Hockey News’s Sam Stockton looks back at the Red Wings’ horrible set of back-to-back losses vs. the Ottawa Senators last February as they apply to how the Wings chose to alter their rebuild this summer:

The Red Wings’ biggest role of the unrestricted free agent dice is meant to address just that [lack of structure].  J.T. Compher—whom Detroit signed to a five-year, $25 million deal—wasn’t a splashy signing.  He’s coming off the most productive season of his career, and even that amounted to just 52 points.  However, Compher’s 200-foot acumen (it’s not just defense but an ability to control the entire ice surface) will help make the 2023-24 Red Wings a more stable operation than their predecessors.

Acquisitions on the back end like Jeff Petry, Shayne Gostisbehere, and Justin Holl are meant to serve a similar purpose.  You can quibble with the individual contract (or in Petry’s case acquisition cost), and you might not like that it makes it harder for a player like Simon Edvinsson to break into the regular lineup.  However, the vision here is to instill a baseline level of competence on defense that Detroit lacked in ’22-23, when you couldn’t in good faith say that the Wings had six NHL-caliber D at their disposal night in and night out.

Of course, the marquee acquisition of the summer, Alex DeBrincat, reflects a different story, but the fact that he comes from Ottawa cannot be ignored in this conversation.

Imposing greater structure couldn’t be the Red Wings only response to last season’s short-comings; Detroit had to bridge the gap in offensive firepower to a team like Ottawa, and it did so via a direct tact—poaching DeBrincat in exchange for Kubalik, a B-list prospect, and a pair of draft picks.

With Compher, Detroit looks to make itself a stabler team.  With DeBrincat, the Wings become more explosive.  They still won’t want to live in shootouts night in and night out, but they have a shiny new toy on the occasions when they do.  DeBrincat represents a goal-scoring threat opponents will have to game-plan around; there hasn’t been one of those in Detroit for a while.  Meanwhile, getting the ball rolling on Dylan Larkin’s wing figures to get DeBrincat rolling in a way he never hit in his lone season in Ottawa.

Continued

Sportsnet suggests that Alex DeBrincat must deliver for Detroit

Sportsnet’s staff posted an article in which they discuss players from the NHL’s 16 Atlantic Division who are under pressure to perform this upcoming season, and they spotlight Red Wings trade acquisition Alex DeBrincat:

As Steve Yzerman keeps adding veteran players to his roster, the Red Wings are taking an almost expansion-like approach to their build, accumulating other teams’ cast-offs to (hopefully) put together a unit of motivated individuals determined to prove people wrong. That’s sometimes what this plan feels like, anyway.

This past summer Yzerman added Alex DeBrincat, who was a different sort of acquisition in that he wasn’t some other team’s cast-off. DeBrincat was acquired by Ottawa last season to be a difference-making goal scorer, but he didn’t really deliver on those expectations and then had no real desire to stay put. Rather than slow walk to free agency, the Senators had to trade him out.

Now with his hometown Red Wings, DeBrincat has a new four-year contract and the same expectations the Senators had for him. Can he get back up to 40 goals? The Red Wings have a lot of “pieces” but, so far, not enough difference makers. They need DeBrincat to have a significant presence right away if they’re to rise above the other rebuilders in the Atlantic.

Continued