Former Wings scout Jeff Finley lands with the Jets

According to Illegal Curve’s Dave Minuk, former Red Wings chief amateur scout Jeff Finley has found a new home:

With the announcement that Marcel Comeau was retiring after the conclusion of the 2019 NHL Draft there were a pair of big shoes to fill in the organization.  Comeau began as a scout with the Atlanta Thrashers, became Director of amateur scouting in 2003 and continued in that capacity for the Jets when they moved to Winnipeg until 2015 when he stepped down but continued to work in a scouting capacity.

Today the team announced that they hired Jeff Finley as Comeau’s replacement.  Finley has spent the past seven seasons in the Red Wings organization amateur scouting department which included being their chief scout for the last three seasons.  Folks around here may remember Finley as a member of the Winnipeg Jets 1.0 in the lame duck season before the team relocated to Arizona.

Two things: Cadillac, MI given $20,000 as 2nd place finisher in Kraft Hockeyville competition; Mitch Callahan heads to Germany

Of disparate hockey-related note this afternoon:

  1. According to the Cadillac News’s Rick Charmoli, Kraft and the NHLPA have given Cadillac, MI $20,000 to help the 2nd-place town in the Kraft Hockeyville USA competition to improve their facility and purchase equipment for young players:

After being named one of the four finalists this past spring, the Wex and its supporters celebrated finishing in second place for the Kraft Hockeyville USA 2019 competition by hosting a barbecue Thursday.

 At the event, Shopper Marketing Analyst at The Kraft Heinz Company Emily Kosmin was in Cadillac to deliver a check for $10,000 to the facility for the second-place finish.  Kraft’s Hockeyville was in its fifth year of providing finances to ice rinks across the nation through a social media nomination and polling process. 

  During the competition, residents of a community are asked to submit photos, videos and stories as to why their local ice rink is so important to them. It was those submissions that led to the Wex becoming a finalist.

   Cadillac Area Visitors Bureau Joy Van Drie said the donation is special because it infuses dollars from outside the area into the community that will support the community. In addition to the $10,000 to be used toward the facility, the National Hockey League Players’ Association also donated $10,000 to be used toward equipment purchases for the youth hockey programs in Cadillac as part of its Goals and Dreams fund.

2. Also, in the Red Wings alumni category, Eishockeynews.de reports that former Wing and Grand Rapids Griffins forward Mitch Callahan has signed a one-year deal with the Augsburger Panther of the DEL.

Wakiji examines Seth Barton’s 2018-19 campaign

DetroitRedWings.com’s Dana Wakiji examines Red Wings prospect Seth Barton’s 2018-19 campaign this morning, discussing Barton’s freshman season at UMass-Lowell and speaking with Wings director of player development Shawn Horcoff regarding the lanky defenseman:

Quotable: “Seth is a guy that we didn’t know too much about as a development staff last year. He came in and he impressed obviously in camp. He was just a small, scrawny kid but had good vision, moved the puck well, and then thanks to injury, got thrust into a bigger role in college and did very well. We were really happy with his year last year. He’s another kid though that just needs to put strength on. It’s going to take time. He’s in that process and he’s doing well.” — Shawn Horcoff, Red Wings director of player development

Continued

Duff: Hicketts’ future uncertain amidst Wings’ defensive logjam

The significant number of defensemen already under contract to the Red Wings means that there is tremendous competition for the few open spots on the Red Wings’ blueline.

In the case of the recently re-signed Joe Hicketts, Hockeybuzz’s Bob Duff wonders aloud where the now 23-year-old free agent signing fits into the picture five years into his career as a Wing:

Hicketts, 23, signed as an undrafted free agent in 2014, has played just 16 games for the Wings over the past two seasons. While he’s certainly shown plenty of jam and a bit of an offensive upside, the diminutive 5-foot-8, 180-pound blueliner has also displayed a knack for getting caught out of position via his over-aggressive approach to defending.

“It’s not being erratic, not making big mistakes,” Wings coach Jeff Blashill has listed as the key to Hicketts making it for good as an NHLer. “It’s a hard balance for Joe because he’s a gamer. He wants to go make plays. He wants to make things happen.

“You want to be able to do those things without making the big mistakes and causing the big chances against. I think that’s the biggest thing. If he can play his game without making those big mistakes then he’s a real effective hockey player. I like Joe a lot. He’s a real good player.”

Last season, Hicketts led all defensemen in assists and points with AHL Grand Rapids, collecting 3-24-27 numbers in 64 games.

Duff continues, and I’m afraid that the Wings will have to watch the contracts of Mike Green, Jonathan Ericsson and Trevor Daley expire before players like Hicketts, Madison Bowey, Dennis Cholowski, Vili Saarijarvi, Jared McIsaac, Gustav Lindstrom and Oliwer Kaski are given some room to breathe.

Daniel Carcillo weighs in on Greg Johnson’s death

The Detroit News’s Ted Kulfan spoke with concussion research advocate Daniel Carcillo regarding the death of former Red Wings forward Greg Johnson, and Carcillo suggested that a history of concussion issues may have contributed to Johnson’s suicide:

“There’s been a pretty steady amount of death it seems,” Carcillo said. “I didn’t know Greg personally but when you hear something like that about a former player  and I’ve battled a fair share of mental health issues  it definitely hits home.

“You want to be respectful to the family, but you also have to talk about it honestly and talk about what happened, because in an effort to educate people about possible signs or symptoms  or getting a discussion going about suicide, mental health, concussions  it all ties in to each other.

“In talking (to former players, teammates of Johnson’s) you get the sense he was a really good guy, from that region of Thunder Bay (Ontario), down to earth, and you feel for everybody involved.”

Continued; I’ll be blunt here–until there’s an autopsy, I believe it’s too early to suggest that Johnson died due to the cumulative effects of brain injuries.

Yes, former and current NHL players are dealing with what is clearly a health crisis regarding cumulative concussions, but suicide is the result of a unique set of circumstances in most cases, and those circumstances have to be respected.

Tyler Bertuzzi will be taking part in a Nick Foligno-led fundraiser for pediatric care in Sudbury on August 11th

Via the Columbus Blue Jackets’ Anthony Allocco, Blue Jackets captain Nick Foligno is holding a charity game on August 11th to raise funds for pediatric care in his hometown for Sudbury, Ontario, and Tyler Bertuzzi will be taking part in the event:

The NHL vs. Docs fundraiser, hosted by CBJ captain Nick Foligno, will take place August 11 in Sudbury, ON with the goal of raising funds and awareness of expanding pediatric care options in the Greater Sudbury area.

After raising $215,000 a year ago, this year’s lineup of NHL talent could push the fundraiser above and beyond that benchmark. Representing the Blue Jackets will be Foligno, Cam Atkinson, Josh Anderson, Pierre-Luc Dubois and Seth Jones. Also in attendance will be; Tyler Bertuzzi, Matt Duchene, John Travares and Marc Staal.

NHLPA.com’s Chris Lomon also wrote an article about the event:

Foligno will welcome several familiar NHL names to this year’s event. Many of the players have been to past editions, but others, like Tavares, will be taking part for the first time.

The 31-year-old forward is grateful for the widespread support he’s receiving from his fellow NHLPA members, including brother and fellow NHL forward Marcus, Cam Atkinson, Josh Anderson, Tyler Bertuzzi, Pierre-Luc Dubois, Matt Duchene, Seth Jones, Marc Staal, and John Tavares.

“I always say that hockey players are the most generous people in the world when it comes to charities and their time,” offered Foligno.

“These guys don’t really have a personal tie to what I’m doing, but they know the cause is near and dear to my heart. They know how much this means to kids too. They realize the importance of it all. A lot of these guys are from small communities as well, so they appreciate the importance of something like this and what it means to a place like Sudbury.

Filip Hronek, super sophomore?

The Hockey News’s Steven Ellis predicts fantasy hockey break-out stars who might shine as sophomore NHL’ers, and he suggests that poolies pay attention to Filip Hronek as the 2019-2020 season approaches:

Filip Hronek, D, 21 (Detroit)
Do the Red Wings have a gem on their hands? As the team looks destined to finish near the bottom of the standings in 2019-20, Hronek will be given ample opportunities to become a leader on the back end after a solid half-season in Detroit. Even though he only played in 46 games, tallying five goals and 23 points, his 19:57 average ice time was the third-best among all rookies, and only Dahlin (0.54) averaged more points per game among first-year defensemen with at least 45 games played. Hronek will start the season on the second pairing, but if Mike Green runs into health issues – and let’s be realistic: the odds of him playing 82 games is unlikely – Hronek could be playing top-pairing minutes quite quickly.

Continued

Griffins post a short interview with Gustav Lindstrom

The Grand Rapids Griffins spoke with Red Wings prospect Gustav Lindstrom at last month’s summer development camp, and the result is a 58-second “getting to know you” interview:

?We caught up with @detroitredwings defensive prospect Gustav Lindstrom at last month’s Training Camp. pic.twitter.com/KWdKVuf57x— Grand Rapids Griffins (@griffinshockey) July 18, 2019

Stanley Cup to visit Southwestern Ontario next week

According to the Goderich Signal-Star’s Kathleen Smith, Ryan O’Reilly will be bringing several trophies to Goderich, Ontario next week…

Huron County’s hockey hero Ryan O’Reilly will be returning to celebrate winning the 2019 Stanley Cup as part of the St. Louis Blues squad and he isn’t coming home empty-handed.

O’Reilly will return to Huron County on Thursday, July 25 and will be bringing with him not only the Stanley Cup, but also the Conn Smythe Trophy, the Selke Trophy and the Campbell Conference Trophy.

Scheduled to celebrate with a community that helped shape the hockey player he has become, O’Reilly will lead the first parade through Seaforth with the Cup at 9:35 a.m.

The parade will start at the Seaforth Area Fire Department and photo opportunities for fans will follow from 10 a.m. until 11:45 a.m.

From there O’Reilly and his family will travel with the trophies to Goderich, where he will take part in a media scrum at Goderich Town Hall shortly before 1 p.m.

And then the Cup is coming to Sarnia, per a Sarnia & Lambton County This Week’s staff report:

Continue reading Stanley Cup to visit Southwestern Ontario next week

Bruins hire former Wings amateur scout Andrew Dickson

In the FYI department, per the Boston Herald’s Marisa Ingemi:

The Bruins also announced the addition of Andrew Dickson as an amateur scout. He served the past seven seasons as a scout with the Red Wings organization, and before that with the Blue Jackets. Dickson, 48, played in the ECHL and in the NCAA with Colgate.