A bit more about Pius Suter’s attributes and potential impact

The Red Wings’ signing of Pius Suter to a 2-year, $6.5 million deal was an astute signing, and 97.1 the Ticket’s Will Burchfield has a bit more about Suter

In Suter, the Wings are getting a potential piece of their future. He’s a two-way center who played second-line minutes on a Blackhawks team that spent much of last season chasing the playoffs. He flashed his offensive upside with 27 points in 55 games and garnered votes for Rookie of the Year.

5’9 but quick on his skates, Suter figures to assume a second- or third-line center role in Detroit. The Wings needed more depth down the middle after Luke Glendening departed for Dallas in free agency, and Suter fits the timeline of their rebuild. He’s a growing player for a growing team.

As does Dobber Hockey’s Michael Clifford:

In real life, this is a great bet by Detroit. Even with Dylan Larkin, the team is thin at centre. Frans Nielsen is 37 years old and I think they’d rather have Robby Fabbri on the wing. Both Joe Veleno and Michael Rasmussen are potential centres here, but they have to prove something first. At least Suter has two-thirds of a season in, and a good one at that. It gives them the safety of Larkin-Suter at the top and then the younger guys can get in softer minutes down the lineup. And if Suter doesn’t work out, it’s only a two-year deal and they don’t have to worry about his money impacting their young players and available cap space down the road.

Two-thirds of a season isn’t a lot to go off of, but Suter had slightly above-average defensive impacts and that’s pretty good for a rookie on a bad defensive team. Add that to his offensive puck-possession game, and I’m getting the feeling this is a true two-way centre in the making.

Suter seems to have a good transition game and a developing defensive game that is already average. At worst, that seems like a third-line centre, particularly on a rebuilding team. He was good on the power play too, though Chicago did have a lot of talent. Nevertheless, if he can bring some PP spark to a team that needs it, that could be big for them, too. He looks at least like he’ll be a goal-scoring centre, so at worst I think a smaller, slightly worse Jeff Carter. In a full year with 18+ minutes a night, he has 25 goals in his sights and could easily push 30.

The Wings have the help on the, erm, wings, too. They have Fabbri, Bertuzzi, Vrana, Zadina, and maybe even Mason Raymond. There will be talent for Suter to play with both at 5-on-5 and on the power play. I truly believe that if things go right for him this year, he can get 30 goals and 55 points. He won’t bring much peripherals besides some shots, though. Expect less, around 25 goals and 45 points.

Pius Suter is a fine middle six center on a fair deal pic.twitter.com/9HGZDxuTW0— dom at the athletic (@domluszczyszyn) July 28, 2021

Khan: Glendening bids farewell to the Wings, is ready for playoff challenge with Stars

After Luke Glendening signed a 2-year, $3 million contract with the Dallas Stars, he spoke with the media regarding his decision to leave his hometown Red Wings, and MLive’s Ansar Khan took note of Glendening’s remarks:

“It was probably one of the toughest decisions of my life, leaving what I’ve known, what’s been comfortable to me,” Glendening said. “But you never know if you don’t try.

“Obviously, going to miss the people, the fans in Detroit. I’ve created some unbelievable friendships here. I grew up in Grand Rapids, so to have my friends and family be so close was great, but really excited for this opportunity in Dallas. It’s something I couldn’t pass up on.”

Glendening, 32, has spent nearly his entire hockey career in the state, playing four years at Michigan and then signing with the AHL Grand Rapids Griffins.

He has a connection to Stars general manager Jim Nill, who was the longtime Red Wings assistant GM in charge of Grand Rapids when the Griffins won the Calder Cup championship with Glendening in 2013.

“When I first got to Detroit, we were still battling to stay in the playoff hunt,” Glendening said. “Last couple years have been hard. I’m really excited. I have a chip on shoulder, and I think these guys do, and that’s part of the reason I thought it was a great fit.”

Continued

Kulfan, St. James offer highlights from Gagner and Oesterle’s Zoom calls

The Red Wings posted videos of the press conferences held by Sam Gagner and Jordan Oesterle this afternoon, and the Detroit News’s Ted Kulfan took note of Gagner’s remarks regarding his 1-year, $2 million contract…

“It was kind of my intention all along (to stay in Detroit), I really enjoyed my time last year,” Gagner said. “Right from the end of the season until now, it was my thought process to hopefully be back with the Wings and really excited to get done.”

Gagner is a respected veteran presence in the locker room, and his influence among the many young Wings’ forwards was something the organization didn’t want lose.

“You need veteran players to help lead the way, but you have to be able to play,” Gagner said. “I still have a lot of game left. I kind of found myself in a new role last year that I really enjoyed, being able to play on the penalty kill and power play, kind of anywhere in the lineup in different positions is something that I will consider an asset.

“I’m just kind of looking forward to getting back there and helping the team grow any way I can.”

And the Free Press’s Helene St. James took note of Oesterle’s comments about signing a 2-year contract with his hometown team:

“It’s something I dreamed about since I was a little kid,” Oesterle said. “We had season tickets to Joe Louis. I feel there’s minutes for me to be able to grab. They have a lot of very skilled, young defensemen and then some older guys that kind of are teaching them the ways, and I’m kind of right in the middle gap. So I think it’s a great place for me to join and hopefully grab a role and grow with it.”

Oesterle, 29, has 65 points and a minus-37 rating in 252 career games. He went undrafted out of WMU, where he was teammates with DeKeyser from 2011-13 and won a CCHA championship in 2012. Oesterle debuted in the NHL in 2014-15 with the Edmonton Oilers, where he played 25 games over three seasons. He appeared in 55 games with the Chicago Blackhawks in 2017-18, then joined the Coyotes. His best offensive year came in 2018-19, when he had six goals and 20 points in 71 games with Arizona.

Oesterle got married July 16, and the prospect of where he might play next came up when he chatted with DeKeyser.

“We talked about it being a possibility, and luckily it worked out,” Oesterle said. He didn’t let his parents know until it was official. “I kept it on the backburner, didn’t let them know until it came true. They were very pleased and excited to have my wife and I come back home.”

Update: Here’s more from Oesterle via Detroit Hockey Now’s Bob Duff:

Continue reading Kulfan, St. James offer highlights from Gagner and Oesterle’s Zoom calls

Red Wings post Zoom videos of Sam Gagner, Jordan Oesterle’s press conferences

The Red Wings posted the Zoom pressers of Sam Gagner and Jordan Oesterle speaking with the media this afternoon:

Oesterle ? #LGRW pic.twitter.com/2axaLnIUMI— Detroit Red Wings (@DetroitRedWings) July 28, 2021

Red Wings sign Pius Suter

The Red Wings snagged the one unrestricted free agent I’d hoped they’d target, 25-year-old sniper Pius Suter:

The Score’s John Matisz reported it first…

Hearing Pius Suter is close to signing a multi-year deal with the Red Wings.— John Matisz (@MatiszJohn) July 28, 2021

Update: At a fair price…

Pius Suter ended up making a decision quicker than he thought. He gets a two-year deal with Detroit at $3.25M AAV.— Chris Johnston (@reporterchris) July 28, 2021

And the Red Wings soon confirmed it:

UPDATE: The Detroit #RedWings today agreed to terms with center Pius Suter on a two-year contract. pic.twitter.com/2LLsXycHFj— Detroit Red Wings (@DetroitRedWings) July 28, 2021

Wrote about Suter’s fit in Detroit Monday night: https://t.co/IdfB7wQbHN https://t.co/yH3YpoTLb0— Max Bultman (@m_bultman) July 28, 2021

Detroit signs Pius Suter to a 2-year contract— David Pagnotta (@TheFourthPeriod) July 28, 2021

Suter had a hat trick against the #RedWings on Jan. 24. Had 5-1-6 in 8 games vs. DRW. https://t.co/0EP4CYSO8w— Dana Wakiji (@Dwakiji) July 28, 2021

As soon as @m_bultman let us know that Pius Suter wasn’t qualified, I wanted the Wings to sign him. He was dominant against Detroit, at least, and he’s a fine goal-scorer and superb all-round forward.

Now the Wings have him. Brilliant signing.— George Malik (@georgemalik) July 28, 2021

And, as some of you have noted, Pius Suter played with Bertuzzi and Fabbri in Guelph of the OHL.— George Malik (@georgemalik) July 28, 2021

#RedWings under yzerman:

STEALTHY!

no one broke signing of pius suter until they did.— gregg krupa (@greggkrupa) July 28, 2021

Continue reading Red Wings sign Pius Suter

Red Wings sign depth defenseman Ryan Murphy

Per Elliotte Friedman:

Ryan Murphy two-way with DET— Elliotte Friedman (@FriedgeHNIC) July 28, 2021

28-year-old right-shooting defenseman who spent last year with the Henderson Silver Knights. The 5’11,” 187-pound native of Markham, Ontario posted 27 points in 37 AHL games last year, after starting the year with Dynamo Minsk.

Update: It’s official:

The Detroit #RedWings today signed defenseman Ryan Murphy to a one-year contract. pic.twitter.com/8vM95RUy5L— Detroit Red Wings (@DetroitRedWings) July 28, 2021

My mistake. Ryan Murphy. 5-11, 181, Right shot, played for AHL Henderson and KHL Minsk last season. No. 12 overall pick by Hurricanes in 2012. https://t.co/sUqtAZ0boG— Ansar Khan (@AnsarKhanMLive) July 28, 2021

Silver Knights captain Ryan Murphy is going to Detroit.

He was on an AHL contract last season and won defenseman of the year. https://t.co/ov7ZZYP0ul— Ben Gotz (@BenSGotz) July 28, 2021

Silver Knights captain and top defenseman in the AHL is going to Detroit. https://t.co/R82yq4BaJM— Danny Webster (@DannyWebster21) July 28, 2021

Update: Here’s the Wings’ press release:

Continue reading Red Wings sign depth defenseman Ryan Murphy