Jimmy Howard’s new mask embodies the ‘new Hockeytown’

Red Wings goaltender Jimmy Howard started training camp wearing a white mask, but he’s sporting this one, painted by Ray Bishop, today. It includes the new “Hockeytown” font on both sides of the chin:

Continue reading Jimmy Howard’s new mask embodies the ‘new Hockeytown’

TCRE’s Cook remembers Charlie Inman

Centre ICE Arena has seemed a little less grumpy without Charlie Inman there, and that’s a shame. For those of us who knew the Centre ICE volunteer in one form or another, the grumpy old man who wasn’t so grumpy once he got to know you–and Charlie was everywhere at Centre ICE, so you were bound to get to be known–was in fact a kind man who treated everyone like they were the star of the show.

Charlie was literally at Centre ICE on Sunday the urn of his ashes, a sand-colored jar with the word “Believe” on it and the autographs of Red Wings players on the stand below it, was at the rink along with his family, who dropped the puck for the Red vs. White Game, and then held a memorial service at Charlie’s place of work.

The Traverse City Record-Eagle’s James Cook paid tribute to Inman, and I can only say, “Me too, me too” when it comes to Cook’s admiration for the man who wielded a cane with a silver skull on its top:

Charlie had a gruff exterior, especially when first meeting him.

That eroded a little at a time, piece by piece each time you crossed paths.

The “curmudgeon” slowly morphed into someone who greeted you with a smile, opened doors. It took years of covering Red Wings events for that to happen, but it did. It was a process. After all, I didn’t have the instant credibility of being on skates as his adopted family of Red Wings did.

“Charlie sometimes had a gruff exterior,” Becki Van Horn, a bookkeeper at Centre Ice for 18 years, said in a Record-Eagle article about Inman’s passing in July. “It was to mask his big heart on the inside. He did anything and everything he was asked to do. Rarely, if ever, said no to a challenge as a volunteer. He was truly one of a kind and will be sorely missed.”

Cook continues, and his article is worth your time…

MSM takes on the Red vs. White Game at the Red Wings’ training camp ’18

Of MSM-related note from over the course of Sunday evening:

1. MLive’s Ansar Khan found out where the phrase on the backs of every Red Wings player came from, and Khan folded it into his recap of the Red vs. White Game:

Detroit Red Wings coach Jeff Blashill wants his team to be harder to play against, play with an edge, compete from the opening faceoff to the final horn.

He wants to see “Sixty Minutes of Hell” during the regular season.

That’s the motto Blashill has adopted during training camp, one that’s emblazoned on T-shirts players are wearing while working out.

It’s borrowed from former Arkansas basketball coach Nolan Richardson, who preached a “40 minutes of hell” playing style that pressured opponents all over the court and resulted in much success for the Razorbacks in the early 1990s.

Blashill has seen a higher compete level during the first three days of camp at Centre I.C.E., including Sunday’s Red and White intrasquad scrimmage.

“As competitive as a Red/White game as I’ve seen,” Blashill said. “Not much space. It was closer to a real game than just a scrimmage.”

Khan continues at length, and (2) the Detroit News’s Ted Kulfan picks it up from there, discussing Filip Zadina’s performance in the scrimmage. Zadina played on a line with Andreas Athanasiou and Thomas Vanek:

Continue reading MSM takes on the Red vs. White Game at the Red Wings’ training camp ’18

Impressions from the Red vs. White game at the Red Wings’ training camp ’18

Team Red won the Red vs. White game 4-2, rallying from a 2-goal, Darren Helm-engineered deficit on goals by Evgeny Svechnikov, Christoffer Ehn, Andreas Athanasiou and Filip Zadina.

The game was fast-paced, about as physical a scrimmage as I’ve seen and intense as players jockeyed for roster positions and playing time, so the two 25-minute periods (which included 3-on-3 play for the final 5 minutes of each period, and penalty shots awarded for rule infractions) flew by, and afterward, Helm, Svechnikov, Zadina and coach Jeff Blashill, who watched his assistant coaches man the benches, spoke with the media.

In terms of player assessments for the day, on a team-by-team and line-by-line basis:

Continue reading Impressions from the Red vs. White game at the Red Wings’ training camp ’18

Red Wings reassign 10 players

From the Detroit Red Wings:

Red Wings reduce training camp roster by 10

Sixty-one players remain in Traverse City for final two days of camp

DETROIT – The Detroit Red Wings today assigned forwards Zach Gallant and Brady Gilmour and defensemen Cole Fraser, Jared McIsaac, Alec Regula and Reilly Webb to their respective major junior teams. Additionally, the Red Wings released forwards Pavel Gogolev, Maxim Golod and Nicolas Guay and goaltender Justin Fazio from their amateur tryouts.

Continue reading Red Wings reassign 10 players

On Hicketts’ aim to earn a roster spot

The Detroit Red Wings appear to be leaning toward bringing in a skilled defenseman in either Filip Hronek or Dennis Cholowski to fill their #6 spot, but if the Wings were to choose a more physical player as their #6/7 defenseman, physical defender Joe Hicketts might fit the bill. Hockeybuzz’s Bob Duff spoke with Hicketts regarding his attempt to land a job on the Wings’ roster:

“This year there is that chance,” said Hicketts, 22, who had three assists and a plus-five rating in a five-game NHL audition last season. “Last year, you want to make an impression, but realistically, I was prepared with the contract situation and everything else going on that it was probably be another year in (AHL) Grand Rapids.

“But this year they’ve got spots open, they’re talking about getting young with guys earning jobs and I’m here with that in mind. It’s to earn a job and prove I can play a full 82-game schedule in the National Hockey League.”

Someone who’s always been reluctant to commit to a youth movement, even Detroit GM Ken Holland appears to be acknowledging that’s the direction this team must now take.

“Training camp, from my perspective, we’re going to give lots of kids an opportunity,” Holland said. “On the back end, there’s an opportunity for sure for one young defenseman to make our team. If a second one can make it then we’ll assess what we’ll do with our roster.”

Continued

 

The Athletic’s Bultman on Wings try-out Pavel Gogolev

Red Wings prospect Pavel Gogolev isn’t going to make the team out of training camp, but the 6,’ 168-pound Peterborough Petes forward is learning on the fly as a prospect tournament and main training camp try-out.

The Athletic’s Max Bultman spoke with Gogolev, his coach, Rob Wilson, and his agent, Randy Robitaille, about Gogolev not being drafted and his opportunity to increase his stead among teams that may be able to pick Gogolev in next year’s draft:

Working with Detroit’s development staff, including former NHLers Shawn Horcoff and Dan Cleary, he has a chance to not only get noticed, but to get better.

“They played in the NHL, so I’m trying to take everything that they tell me and try to take every good note from it,” Gogolev said at the prospect tournament. “There’s a lot of good players here — first-round picks from last year, from two years ago. I’m just trying to learn from them a little bit and take the step forward.”

Still, it would be naïve to think the evaluation side wasn’t in play here too.

Gogolev could, in theory, be selected in the draft next season, particularly if some improvement gets him over the hump. He already jumped from 11 points in his first OHL season to 47 last year.

Or, he could impress enough in Traverse City to earn a contract with Detroit. That’s still a wide open question, but Gogolev has at least made an impression on the Red Wings’ development staff.

“(He’s) a kid with a really good skill set,” Horcoff, the team’s director of player development, told The Athletic. “I’ve seen him play some really good games during the year. I just think like any other young kid it’s going to be consistency with him and trying to figure out that you don’t have to make a play every single time you have the puck. But I love his personality. He comes to the rink, he’s a happy kid, he wants to learn. We had him at development camp and he was great.”

Bultman continues

Dylan Larkin talks with Fox Sports Detroit’s Trevor Thompson regarding the Captain’s “C”

Fox Sports Detroit’s Trevor Thompson spoke with Dylan Larkin regarding the possibility that he could be the next captain of the Red Wings, and Larkin isn’t averse to the idea, but it doesn’t sound like he’s ready to immediately assume the mantle:

 

Audio from the Red vs. White Game at the Wings’ training camp ’18: Helm, Svechnikov, Zadina, Blashill

Team Red defeated Team White at the Red vs. White Game by a 4-2 tally, with Andreas Athanasiou registering a goal and an assist for the red team, Filip Zadina finishing a fine pass from “AA” for a beautiful goal, and Darren Helm scoring 2 goals for the white team.

After the game, Helm discussed his goals and his overall comfort level as he played on a line with Gustav Nyquist and Frans Nielsen, as well as the presence of young players pushing for jobs…

Evgeny Svechnikov discussed his play during the game, his increasing level of self confidence and his decreasing level of self-criticism:

Filip Zadina discussed his performance in the game, being able to play alongside Andreas Athanasiou and Thomas Vanek, and whether he feels that he can give more by playing “his game”:

Finally, coach Jeff Blashill addressed a myriad of topics over the course of an 8-minute interview, mostly discussing who impressed him during the Red vs. White game in terms of rookies, veterans and young stars, he discussed the team’s decision to award penalty shots for penalties called as the team hasn’t worked on its PP or PK yet, and the coach was queried regarding the pecking order of the young players on defense:

Mitch Albom speaks with Henrik Zetterberg regarding the end of Z’s playing career

The Free Press’s Mitch Albom spoke with Henrik Zetterberg on Saturday, and the two discussed the end of Zetterberg’s career as an NHL player:

Do you know how Zetterberg spent the first morning of his retirement? He watched practice. He hung by the ice and saw the younger players zipping past. He watched the scrimmage drills. It wasn’t torture. It was what he wanted to do.

“I spent some time with the trainers here, and with the guys, and seeing the people in Traverse City that have been taking care of us and me for 15 years. This is an unbelievable spot for us.

“It was a bit different today,” he admitted. “Because of everyone that reached out yesterday. It’s been amazing. You never knew that you had that many former teammates and coaches and fans. It’s been very emotional, but still, it’s been good. It was good to be here today, to watch the guys scrimmage.”

And that is that. No press conference. No video package. No parading out the family or the friends. We forget how lucky we have been in Detroit to have three straight Red Wings captains who are the embodiment of low-key, no-ego, hardworking and grateful men. By the time Zetterberg was effacing those traits, we’d grown so totally used to them, thanks to Yzerman and Lidstrom, we expected them.

But that only speaks to how special Zetterberg was. To start a humble trend is to get noticed. To continue it is to live up to a legacy that, by definition, leaves you out of the biggest spotlights.

Continued