Day-of-the-trip fundraising

Okay, here’s the last fundraising post before the trip:

You really stepped up last night, and for that I’m super grateful. The $600 gulf between getting up to Traverse City and actually having the money to pay the hotel bill is down to about $200, and we’ll be at the halfway point when we hit the mark.

So we’ll see how the day goes, I’ll cross my fingers while driving up to Traverse City, and here’s hoping.

The second $1,500 is going to be a lot harder to raise than the first, but right now, it’s about reaching that halfway point, $200 away.

As I said yesterday, this is definitely a “no donation is too small” period because those smaller donations pave the road up I-96, US-127 and M-72 west (that’s the route I take to avoid I-75 construction) to Traverse City.

Let’s see what we can do. And again, thank you so much for your readership and support. I’m gonna do my best to make sure that I grind out strong content in TC for you.

So, if you’re are willing to lend an assist, you can use PayPal at https://paypal.me/TheMalikReport, Venmo at https://venmo.com/george-malik-2, Giftly by using my email, rtxg@yahoo.com, at https://www.giftly.com. And you can contact me via email if you want to send me a paper check. I’m also on Cash App under “georgeums.” Still trying to figure that out, but it’s another option if you need it.

A Red Wings season preview from Buffalo

The Buffalo News’s Mike Harrington has posted a set of Atlantic Division previews eying the Buffalo Sabres’ division rivals in Montreal and Detroit, and here’s what he has to say about the Red Wings:

Detroit Red Wings

Around the boardsWhile Ottawa made a splash in the trade market, Yzerman is the one who was most active in the free-agent market. But the big question as a result is how do Yzerman and new coach Derek Lalonde meld a team out of all their acquisitions with the likes of returning core members Seider, Dylan Larkin, Lucas Raymond and Tyler Bertuzzi? It’s not easy. And 19-year-old defenseman Simon Edvinsson,their 2021 first-rounder, also seems poised to make his debut.

Topping all of it is the pressure building in the market: The Wings have missed the playoffs in six consecutive seasons after qualifying the previous 25 years, winning four Stanley Cups and playing in eight conference finals. Losing has been presumed in Buffalo for a while. It’s not expected in Detroit at all.

New and notable: Yzerman traded with St. Louis to get new starting goalie Ville Husso and gave him a three-year contract. In free agency, he signed forward Andrew Copp (five years), defenseman Ben Chairot (4), forwards David Perron and Dominik Kubalik (2) and defensemen Olli Maatta and Robert Hagg (1). Only Copp came in at more than $5 million, which is good because Larkin and Bertuzzi will both be UFAs after the season. Lalonde learned under Jon Cooper in Tampa Bay, but he’s a first-time NHL head coach. Nobody knows what that will mean.

Continued; I think that the Red Wings do face playoff pressure, but fans will be satisfied to see progress made in terms of becoming a more competitive, consistent team, and I’m definitely curious to see how the team begins coach Lalonde’s tenure given the turnover in terms of the coaching staff.

DHN’s Brown discusses Simon Edvinsson’s chances of making the team at the season’s start

Detroit Hockey Now’s Nate Brown posted “2 truths and a lie” about Simon Edvinsson, and this one–a suggestion that Edvinsson might start the year in Detroit–isn’t much of a stretch:

Sure, Yzerman went out and signed Ben Chiarot, Robert Hagg, and Mark Pysyk, all of whom add to the blue line. Chiarot stands to be a first or potentially a second pairing guy. Where does that leave Edvinsson? If you take into account what Yzerman said back in July, maybe he’s in a pretty good spot. Especially now that he signed some depth.

“His skating his excellent. We’re optimistic,” Yzerman said. “We’ll give him an opportunity. If he’s ready to play and play a regular role that would be great for us. We’ll just kind of let the whole thing play itself out, but the World Juniors will be a great stepping stone coming into training camp to try to make an impression and earn a spot on the team.”

More on that World Juniors comment later.

Yzerman’s goal beyond filling the team with premium talent is making sure that his young and upcoming prospects are surrounded by the right players. Though Nick Leddy’s numbers weren’t eye-popping in Detroit, his experience in the league was able to help Seider along the way. Marc Staal’s mentoring also factored into another season with Detroit.

The same is being applied here, though Seider is now in the fold and likely an early front runner to have an A sewn onto his sweater. Seider might be an anomaly in that sense, but Yzerman has now in Seider what they need. Edvinsson will continue to build onto that.

Continued; I’m not expecting Edvinsson to make the team out of training camp unless he both impresses and there’s an injury on the blueline, but we saw both things happen in order to afford Lucas Raymond a shot with the big club out of training camp and the exhibition season a year ago.

CBC to air ‘Summit 72’ documentary tonight, for next four weeks

As an FYI: tonight at 8 PM EDT, the CBC will air the first episode of a four-part documentary celebrating the 50th anniversary of the 1972 Summit Series between Canada and Russia.

Here’s a preview/summary from the CBC’s website:

The 1972 Canada-USSR Summit Series of Hockey changed hockey forever, playing out dramas of national identity, pride, politics, and ideology while the world watched, enraptured, during the Cold War.

In anticipation of the 50th anniversary of the series, Summit 72 will premiere on Wednesday, Sept 14 at 8 p.m. (8:30 NT) on CBC and CBC Gem. As the only documentary series sanctioned and supported by 1972 Team Canada players, Summit 72 will have unrestricted access to the official game tapes and a trove of archival footage.

This series will tell the definitive story of the legendary 1972 eight-game ‘Super Summit’ through a modern lens, and explore its legacy and lasting influence on Canadian national identity, framing it against the political and cultural climate of the times in both countries, and around the world. 

The series will also explore how Canada and its relationship to hockey has changed since then, and what seeds of change were made visible in this clash of cultures. 

With never-before-seen 16mm archival footage restored in stunning 4k, and exclusive interviews with key players, Summit 72 will bring an unforgettable moment in Canadian history to life on screen as never seen before. Audiences will relive — or experience for the first time — the adrenaline-fuelled, edge-of-your-seat drama of one of the most monumental cultural proxy battles of the Cold War, and trace its many reverberations in the zeitgeist right up to the present day.

Continued

Wings fantasy hockey praise and jabs from The Athletic

The Athletic’s Shayna Goldman posted a column this morning which discusses players for fantasy hockey poolies who she believes will receive a “scoring bump” or might hit a scoring slump this upcoming season, and she offers both a compliment and a jab regarding the Red Wings’ captain…

Dylan Larkin, C, DET: It was a bounce-back year for Larkin in Detroit, but the second half of the season was particularly tough for the Red Wings. Growth from some of their young stars, Moritz Seider and Lucas Raymond, some key free agent additions, and ideally more stable goaltending should help avoid that late-season collapse. This season, the Red Wings shooting center should be in a better position to succeed, which should help him continue to show that a lackluster 2020-21 was just an outlier. 

And she suggests that one David Perron’s going to have a difficult time in Detroit because the Red Wings are apparently still a bad team:

David Perron, RW, DET: We always remind managers to set “The Bad Team Effect” aside as much as possible and look for the best players. But when a player like Perron goes from the Blues’ versatile forward group to the Red Wings, we also have to acknowledge that the quality of the team around him could weigh on his scoring. This is a very good player who we expect to be very productive at even strength and on the power play, but just keep those new surroundings in mind and anticipate him scoring a few points fewer than the projection. 

Continued (paywall); Shayna is a frickin’ brilliant multi-talented columnist, so I’ll simply say the truth here: I disagree.

Two things: A pair of Swedish defensemen to watch in Traverse City

The Red Wings’ 2022 Prospect Tournament gets underway tomorrow in Traverse City, Michigan, and both MLive’s Ansar Khan and The Athletic’s Corey Pronman posted lists of prospects to watch in Traverse City and throughout the league, respectively.

Khan’s article lists 7 Red Wings prospects of note, including a Swedish rearguard who I’m going to be curious to see…

Albert Johansson: He is a bit under the radar, overshadowed by several other young defensemen and prospects in the organization. But the Red Wings believe Johansson can be a solid NHL defenseman one day. He’ll begin his AHL career in Grand Rapids this season after appearing in 141 games over the past four years with Farjestad BK in Sweden’s men’s league. He’s not big (6-0, 168) but skates well and is a good stickhandler.

Continued; Pronman’s one-prospect-per-team article discusses the other Swedish defenseman the Red Wings will be breaking in:

Detroit Red Wings — Simon Edvinsson, LHD: After his great 18-year-old season in the SHL, I thought Edvinsson looked like a strong candidate to be an NHLer in 2022-23. After a shaky summer world juniors though, I’m more 50-50 on that idea. It will make his camp fascinating and it will be interesting to see how the highly-toolsy defenseman does with the NHL pace and if he’s ready to be an everyday guy at that level.

Continued; Edvinsson was not at his best at the World Juniors, but between sustaining a pre-tournament injury, getting food poisoning and never finding his stride, there were some mitigating factors going on. I’m not saying that Edvinsson’s middling World Juniors performance is excused, but there are explanations as to why he wasn’t at his best.

‘Twas the night before the Traverse City trip…

I’m all packed up–though I haven’t packed the car yet–and ready to head up to Traverse City to attend and cover the Red Wings’ prospect tournament and training camp.

There’s just one small problem, and that’s the fact that I’ve still got to raise approximately $600 to actually pay half of my hotel bill, whose just-short-of-$1,000 bill will come due early on Thursday morning.

The blunt and honest truth is that having to pay $350 in repairs for my Pacifica’s stupid wiring hit hard, and while fundraising has continued at a good clip, I’m ready to go, the car’s ready to go, everything’s packed and just needs to be stuffed in the trunk and backseat so that I can camp in a hotel room for two weeks…

But the money’s not quite there. So I have to do a second fundraising post in one day, and ask for help getting to the halfway mark (and yes, that’s what we’re aiming for. It’s gonna take another $1,200 to bring me home, but let’s take one thing at a time here).

If you can lend a hand in paving the road from South Lyon to Traverse City, no matter how small the donation, this is where the rubber meets the road.

So, if you’re are willing to lend an assist, you can use PayPal at https://paypal.me/TheMalikReport, Venmo at https://venmo.com/george-malik-2, Giftly by using my email, rtxg@yahoo.com, at https://www.giftly.com. And you can contact me via email if you want to send me a paper check. I’m also on Cash App under “georgeums.” Still trying to figure that out, but it’s another option if you need it.

Tweet of note: Bally Sports Detroit’s John Keating interviews Red Wings coach Derek Lalonde

FYI:

Great chance to visit with new ⁦@DetroitRedWings⁩ head coach Derek LaLonde at ⁦⁦⁦@HighlandsDet⁩ on top of #RenCen. You’ll see it in coming weeks on ⁦@BallySportsDETpic.twitter.com/ECGLRaHtjV— John Keating (@JohnKeatingBSD) September 14, 2022