Per the Toledo Walleye:
Newsy on the hire of Walleye head coach Pat Mikesch. 🗣️ pic.twitter.com/XzVgahxP8v
— Toledo Walleye (@ToledoWalleye) July 13, 2023
Per the Toledo Walleye:
Newsy on the hire of Walleye head coach Pat Mikesch. 🗣️ pic.twitter.com/XzVgahxP8v
— Toledo Walleye (@ToledoWalleye) July 13, 2023
Red Wings defenseman and Kitchener, Ontario native Ben Chiarot will be taking part in a charity street hockey tournament in Waterloo, Ontario on August 12th. The Observer-Extra’s Bill Atwood relays the details thereof:
Back for its second year, the Scotland’s Yard Road Hockey Classic will raise money for Waterloo Wellington’s first positron emission tomography (PET) computed tomography (CT) scanner. Without this equipment, many cancer patients have to travel elsewhere, such as Hamilton or Mississauga, to receive scans, said Ashley Howat, chief giving officer at the Grand River Hospital Foundation.
“It just gets expensive for families. A lot of the times when you’re doing that, especially with a child who’s going through that treatment, one parent, at least, is putting a job on hold in order to make sure that they can make all appointments, that treatments are being received and they’re caring for their sick child,” Howat said.
To date, the foundation has raised $2.5 million of the $7 million price tag for the scanner. Named for Scottie, the daughter of local couple Brian Santos and Joy Stewart, who was diagnosed with cancer at just three months old, Scotland’s Yard aims to raise $50 million for the foundation over a 10-year period. Scottie, who will turn 4 soon, is now considered a cancer survivor, Howat said.
Led in part by foundation board member Jacqueline and Ben Chariot – a Detroit Red Wings defenseman – the August 12 tournament will see around 10 current and former NHL players participate. Professional women’s players Loren Gabel and 2014 Olympic gold medalist Laura Fortino will also be in attendance.
“Part of the fact that they get to play with the kids is what really makes it for them, and that’s what all of them said last year: it was the kids that made it and they had fun. So, most of them from last year have come back and now we have more, including a women’s gold medal winner, because for all of the teams that have females on them they’re playing with their idols,” Howat said.
The tournament will go from 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Registration for teams of six players plus a goalie is $600, and $50 for each additional player. Each team is guaranteed to play at least three games. The top youth fundraising will win an autograph session and a professional photo shoot with the NHL and women’s players. The top adult fundraising team will receive four tickets to a Red Wings home game.
Red Wings 2023 draft pick (47th overall) and US NTDP alumnus Brady Cleveland, an incoming freshman at the University of Wisconsin, spoke with his local TV station, Wausaw, Wisconsin’s WSAW-TV NewsChannel 7 for their “Hilight Zone” Podcast. Here’s his 11-minute interview with Noah Manderfeld:
The Red Deer Advocate’s Ian Gustafson spoke with two of Red Wings 9th overall pick Nate Danielson’s youth hockey coaches regarding the talent and hard work involved in Danielson’s ascent to a top-10 pick in last month’s 2023 NHL Draft:
Danielson first started getting noticed when he suited up for the U15 AAA Red Deer Rebels.
Head coach of the Rebels Justin Jarmolicz said he was happy to see Danielson selected so high in the draft.
“To be in the top 10 in the draft is unreal,” he said. “To have a legend like Steve Yzerman call his name it was pretty fun to watch. Honestly, he’s just grown in leaps and bounds. He’s gotten so much bigger and stronger. His game hasn’t changed a whole bunch since Bantam… He’s always been so good at playing and understanding the game. He’s taking off and it’s pretty awesome to see.”
Danielson played for the U15 Rebels from 2017-2019 and really took a massive step statistically in his second year at the Bantam level. He potted 26 goals and 33 assists for 59 points in 29 games during the 2018-19 season as a 14-year-old.
“He always talks about being a really good 200-foot centreman that likes to meet the challenge of playing other team’s top players and he was like that when he was with us too,” Jarmolicz said. “He’s a really responsible player that has a lot of offensive gifts and vision. You’re starting to see that even when he was a first-year U15 player. Just the stuff he could create by making plays, not many other guys see especially at that age.”
Even with the talent on display as a youngster, Jarmolicz explained he never could have imagined Danielson as a top 10 NHL draft pick.
“That’s definitely a feather in his cap for the hard work he’s put in to get himself there and we’re all super proud of him,” he said.
This afternoon, Detroit Hockey Now’s Bob Duff discusses the reasons why the Red Wings’ free agent signings and offseason trade acquisitions chose to come to Detroit:
The team may have fallen on hard times in recent years, but the legacy that the Red Wings wove through most of the 1990s and though the first decade of the 2000s still carries gravitas with today’s players.
“I think there’s a lot that attracted me to being a Red Wing,” forward J.T. Compher said. “First off, playing in Michigan (for the Wolverines) and growing up in Chicago, both things helped me see the great legacy and tradition the Red Wings have. I have a lot of respect for the organization.
“I had some really good talks with Steve and the coaching staff on what they’re trying to build, how they’re trying to build it. In terms of this year and the future, it sounds like a great place to play hockey.”
It was that latter aspect the also ending up drawing defenseman Justin Holl to Detroit.
“One of the things that was appealing to me was what the roster looks like,” Holl said. “I know in terms of playing against them last year there’s a lot of good pieces and there’s a lot of promise in this group. I think we have a chance to do something special.”
This afternoon, Detroit Hockey Now’s Kevin Allen profiles Red Wings prospect (and Soo Greyhounds defenseman) Kevin Gibson, who was drafted 42nd overall by the team last month in Nashville:
At a time when the Red Wings are committed to getting bigger, stronger and harder to play against, drafting Gibson made too much sense [to pass him up].
“Big right-shot D man,” said Kris Draper who is an assistant general manager and director of amateur scouting. “He’s got good size. A puck-moving D. He’s got good hockey sense. Skates well, has a bit of an edge to his game.”
His shot from the point has plenty of sizzle.
The Red Wings liked the entire package, enough to view him as a second-round pick. The NHL’s Central Scouting had him ranked 31st among North American skaters. Craig Button slotted him 63rd. Red Line Report had him pegged at 73rd.
Gibson suffered a lower body injury that kept him out of lineup for several weeks, but he returned in time to make Canada’s U18 team for the World Championships.
“We were able to see him play obviously against some pretty high competition and in some pretty good situations,” Draper said.
Per DetroitRedWings.com’s Daniella Bruce:
Good morning fam!! Don’t forget to tune into @971theticketxyt tonight at 7pm for a special off-season edition of Inside Hockeytown. @KenKalDRW & I will be talking about everything @DetroitRedWings !! PLUS we’ll have a special guest joining us👀. Tune in!! #LGRW
— Daniella Bruce (@daniellabruce_) July 13, 2023
Via Toledo Walleye correspondent Jordan Strack:
Daily Faceoff’s Matt Larkin estimates the “Stanley Cup Windows” of the NHL’s Eastern Conference teams this morning, and he has the following to say about the Red Wings:
Window Opening: Detroit Red Wings
A week ago, I would’ve placed Detroit in the Foggy Window section. Their rebuild under Steve Yzerman had progressed in the sense that they were amassing close to a critical mass of young talent to build around: Moritz Seider, Lucas Raymond, Simon Edvinsson, Sebastian Cossa, Marco Kasper, Nate Danielson, Axel Sandin-Pellikka and more. But the existing veteran group Yzerman was merging with them looked subpar outside of captain Dylan Larkin. The Wings have been busy the past two summers but have added a lot of middling and/or aging talent: Andrew Copp, David Perron, Ben Chiarot, J.T. Compher, Justin Holl, Klim Kostin, Shayne Gostisbehere, Daniel Sprong…but all that changed with the Alex DeBrincat acquisition and four-year extension, secured last weekend. Detroit finally added a legitimate front-line talent to take the pressure off its younger forwards, and as long as all the veteran depth additions over the past two seasons aren’t playing too high in the lineup, they can elevate Detroit’s floor. The Wings have improved their points percentage in three straight seasons. They still missed the playoffs by a dozen points in 2022-23, but they could cut that deficit to half a dozen this time around, and once you’re that close, anything can happen.
Per the Toledo Walleye:
BREAKING: The Toledo Walleye have announced Pat Mikesch as the fourth head coach in franchise history.
— Toledo Walleye (@ToledoWalleye) July 13, 2023
Welcome to T-Town, Pat! 🤝
👉 https://t.co/U6k09ksjW3 pic.twitter.com/Zkz1OJROLa
Here’s the Walleye’s press release:
Continue reading Tweet of note: Toledo Walleye officially name Pat Mikesch coach