Tweet of note: Darren McCarty to promote Tim Horton’s ‘Camp Day’ on Wednesday in Southfield

Of Twitter-related note from the Red Wings: Darren McCarty will be appearing at a Tim Horton’s in Southfield, Michigan tomorrow to promote Camp Day:

Roughly translated: Lucas Raymond speaks with NHL.com/sv about the 2023-2024 season

Red Wings forward and current restricted free agent Lucas Raymond was profiled by NHL.com/sv’s Sebastien Noren today, and here’s a rough translation of said profile:

The 2023-2024 season in the rear view mirror: Lucas Raymond

Detroit Red Wings forward accounted for his definitive breakthrough: “It’s something to build on”

During the offseason, NHL.com/sv looks back on the past season. In this series of articles, we’ve picked the 21 most popular players on the site, and studied how they performed in 2023-2024. From Elias Pettersson to Adrian Kempe and Auston Matthews: here’s the 2023-2024 season in the rear view mirror.

Today: Lucas Raymond

After experiencing an up-and-down second year in the league, Lucas Raymond had his definitive breakthrough this past season. The 22-year-old from Gothenburg led the Detroit Red Wings with 72 points (31 goals + 41 assists) in 82 games, and he set new personal bests in all categories.

Raymond was one of the big reasons that the Red Wings were in the race for a wild-card spot until the end of the regular season, and he’s blossomed into a key player for Detroit, which took a big step forward as a team in 2023-2024.

The Red Wings have been a rebuilding team for several years, but this past season, they shifted gears, and they came very close to making the playoffs for the first timie since 2017. Recording 91 points, Detroit ended up just outside the playoff cut in the Eastern Conference, with the Washington Capitals clinching the final wild-card spot with the same number of points but more regulation time wins.

“It was so close now, and it’s hard. But with some distance from it, we’ll feel more satisfied,” Raymond says. “We have learned a lot; this was a good experience for the guys who haven’t been in this situation before. When I look back upon my first two years here, we were out of the playoffs very early, and we were just playing meaningless games toward the end. And even though we missed now…It was big for us and for our team to play games that mattered right down to the end.

“We have something to build upon.”

Continue reading Roughly translated: Lucas Raymond speaks with NHL.com/sv about the 2023-2024 season

A little bit about ‘Taxi’

The Hockey News’s Sam Stockton posted a “Getting to Know” feature on Red Wings 2024 1st round draft pick Michael Brandsegg-Nygard, and you may not know about MBN’s nickname as of yet:

One unique aspect of Brandsegg-Nygård’s game is that he is foregoing the usual NHL nickname convention (diminutive of last name plus -y or -er) for something more entertaining.  Cleary also revealed that Brandsegg-Nygård goes by the nickname “Taxi” on the ice, a soubriquet he inherited from his father.

Brandsegg-Nygård’s father Richard’s family drove a cab, so when Richard’s mother dropped him off for hockey practice or a game, she did so in the cab, and the name nickname “Taxi” came to be.  When it was Michael’s turn to be dropped off at the rink, the family car and were business were unchanged, so that nickname added a new generation.

Continued; he’s not on EliteProspects, but Richard Brandsegg-Nygard was a pro hockey player for Valerenga, MBN’s parent team.

IceHockeyGifs shares part of a Swedish-language interview with Simon Edvinsson

Red Wings prospect Simon Edvinsson gave an interview to Norra Halland’s Christian Johansson, and the interview is paywalled, but IceHockeyGifs on Twitter shares some of the interview with us:

5 Wings prospects crack The Athletic’s Wheeler’s ‘Top 100 drafted prospects’ list

The Athletic’s Scott Wheeler posted a list of his top 100 drafted prospects this morning, and the Red Wings are represented by Simon Edvinsson at #29, Axel Sandin Pellikka at #37, Michael Brandsegg-Nygard at #39, Nate Danielson at #49 and Marco Kasper at #62. Here’s what he has to say about Sandin Pellikka (one paragraph out of two, anyway):

Sandin Pellikka is an individually talented, competitive 5-foot-11 defenseman with natural scoring instincts and the tools to execute. He’s got really good edges and mobility and has shown improved speed in straight lines to pull away from chasers (with more room for growth there still). He walks the line to get shots through at a high level, wants the puck in the offensive zone and has the skill and shot to make things happen when teammates find him off the point or as the trailer off the rush (which he often activates into). He keeps his head up in the neutral and defensive zones and is a confident puck carrier on exits and entries. Though he’s not big, he’s athletic and he plays hard and physical and engages in battles in the defensive zone with some sneaky strength. He’s got a good stick. He does a good job maintaining gaps and matching opposing forwards step for step skating backward, and times his close-outs and pinches effectively. He can really shoot it with a pinpoint accurate shot, a wrister that comes off hard and an eagerness to put pucks on net from the point. There are times when he can wait too long to make his decisions and I wouldn’t call him super creative, but he makes good choices more often than he’s careless and he has progressed really rapidly. He’s got a chance to be an impactful, maybe even high-end offensive defenseman and defensively capable second-pairing one. When he’s on, he can control the game in all three zones.

Continued (paywall)

White Lake’s Austin Baker takes his first developmental steps

The Red Wings drafted White Lake Township’s Austin Baker, a 6,’ 190-pound left wing, 203rd overall during last month’s NHL Draft. Baker may be a 7th round pick, but he’s delighted to have been drafted by the Red Wings as one of three National Team Development Program picks in 2024 (see: Max Plante and John Whipple).

This morning, Detroit Hockey Now’s Tim Robinson profiles Baker via a subscriber-only article:

“[Development camp]’s super cool,” Baker said. “I got the chance to skate with [Pavel Datsyuk] when I was younger at one of his camps. Seeing him out there now, I’m a little older, he was trying to teach me something out there, so that was pretty cool.”

He worked at the camp, of course, but admits to a little rubbernecking.

“I’m just kind of taking everything in right now,” he said during camp earlier this month. “Just learning from the older guys. (Niklas) Kronwall’s out there, too. Some cool guys walking around. Just kind of taking everything in.”

Baker played for the U.S. Team Development Program the past two years, and is a Michigan State commit. But he’s going to spend another year in the USHL this winter, playing for the Sioux Falls Stampede.

“I think Michigan State’s got a really great organization,” Baker said.”They’re gonna have a really good team next year. I think I’ve still got a lot more to prove in the USHL.”

Continued (paywall) with comments from Sioux Falls Stampede coach Ryan Cruthers…

Khan discerns the Red Wings’ defense and goaltending situations

Yesterday morning, MLive’s Ansar Khan attempted to determine what the Red Wings’ forward lines might look like come opening night, and this morning, Khan examines his probable defensive pairs and goaltending hierarchy.

I think that Khan’s got the goaltending down pat, but that’s a little easier to say in mid-July than to watch shake out in September:

1. Cam Talbot

2. Alex Lyon

3. Ville Husso

Lyon didn’t play the first five weeks of the season as the No. 3 goalie and ended up appearing in more games (44) than any Detroit goalie due to Husso’s injuries. Uncertainty about whether Husso will be healthy and how effective he’ll be prompted the Red Wings to sign Talbot, who’s coming off a strong regular season and can handle a heavy workload at age 37. A lighter workload (25-30 games) should be good for Lyon. Having a No. 3 goalie – if that’s where Husso lands on the depth chart – at a $4.75 million cap hit is far from cost-effective, but the club’s hands could be tied. Husso probably isn’t tradeable and sending him to Grand Rapids would not provide much cap relief ($1.15 million).

Continued (paywall, sorry); at this point, it really does appear that the Wings will award Talbot the #1 job and utilize Lyon as the team’s back-up goaltender.

I don’t really know what will happen with Husso, because the Wings would have to eat a big portion of his salary to move him.

NHL.com checks in on the Red Wings’ offseason alterations

NHL.com’s Dave Hogg takes a look at the state of the Detroit Red Wings this evening, discussing the Wings’ offseason additions, player departures, and what the Red Wings still need to do to complete their offseason:

What they still need: With Tarasenko joining Patrick Kane, Alex DeBrincat and Lucas Raymond, the Red Wings have a lot of scoring potential on their top two lines, but these four players are not known as strong defensive forwards. That’s going to put a lot of pressure on Larkin and J.T. Compher to forecheck and retrieve pucks. Detroit also needs a strong defensive defenseman for its second pair. Moritz Seider faced the League’s toughest competition last season, which cost him on the offensive end. A stay-at-home veteran could take much of that pressure off him.

Continued; I don’t disagree that the Red Wings do need a second-pair, right-shooting defenseman pretty significantly, but I’m not sure that he exists on the free agent marketplace.

Once the Wings have signed restricted free agents Jonatan Berggren, Lucas Raymond, Moritz Seider and Joe Veleno to contract extensions, and the team’s salary cap situation sorts itself out, perhaps the Wings will swing a late-summer trade for the kind of player they need…

But I think that it’s increasingly likely that the Wings will have to wait until at least the start of the regular season, if not until the 2023-2024 trade deadline, to fully address that particular need.

Also of note from Hogg:

Continue reading NHL.com checks in on the Red Wings’ offseason alterations

Allen issues letter grades for Steve Yzerman’s offseason moves (thus far?)

Kudos to Detroit Hockey Now’s Kevin Allen for stirring things up on a hot and sticky July evening.

I’m a little hesitant to issue grades to Steve Yzerman’s most significant offseason moves as of yet, because I am hoping that the Wings’ offseason moves aren’t yet finished, but Allen offers some nuanced grades this evening, and it’s an interesting way to start a discussion of the Red Wings’ offseason–thus far–as a whole:

Trading Jake Walman/Re-Signing Patrick KaneGrade:  A-

This feels more like landing a new player than re-signing an old one because many believed Kane would leave for a higher salary or more term that Yzerman could offer.

Yzerman didn’t really have the salary cap room to to support re-signing Kane. Projections had Kane able to get offers in the $5 to $6 million range. It seemed as if teams might give him term as well.

Give Yzerman credit being creative enough to keep Kane in a Detroit jersey. First, he traded Walman and his $3.4 million salary to the San Jose Sharks. Walman fell out of favor in Detroit last season, but the reason they traded him was to clear up the cap space.  The price for doing that was giving the Sharks a second-round pick. It was the pick they got for Gibson.

The second-round pick was going rate to move that much salary. The St. Louis Blues a second-round in 2025 to take center Kevin Hayes and his $3.4 million.

Yzerman had more work to do to land Kane. He used the over-35 bonus option to give himself more buying power. He offered Kane a $4 million base salary, plus $2.5 in bonus opportunities. Some of those bonuses are easily makeable, like $1.5 million for playing 10 games. Those bonuses will be paid out of next season’s camp.

Continued; Allen sticks with the cause-and-effect theory regarding all of the salary cap-shedding moves that the Red Wings’ management group made this offseason.

I cannot deny that sending Walman to San Jose opened up cap space, but the trade in itself still makes me cringe.

Anyway, give Allen’s article a read, and weigh in if you wish in the comments session.