FYI:
The Stars-Red Wings Traverse City prospect games will be Sept 14-15
— Sean Shapiro (@seanshapiro) July 23, 2024
FYI:
The Stars-Red Wings Traverse City prospect games will be Sept 14-15
— Sean Shapiro (@seanshapiro) July 23, 2024
The Red Wings are currently enjoying a second “buyout window” after reaching a pre-arbitration contract agreement with Joe Veleno on Friday.
As such, both The Athletic’s Max Bultman and the Hockey News’s Connor Eargood have wondered aloud today whether the Wings should exercise the option to buy out one of the millstones on the roster.
As Bultman notes, it’s not going to be easy to buy out Justin Holl this summer…
Why didn’t Steve Yzerman buy out Justin Holl’s contract? His contract is unmovable. His cap hit is an expensive one for a player sitting in the press box. — Mark F.
They likely didn’t want to be on the hook for four years of dead cap that would have come with a buyout. It wasn’t a massive number ($1.13 million each year), but four years is a long time to pay dead cap. The Red Wings’ management team likely believes Holl can play. Whether Lalonde uses him is another question, but I don’t get the sense from Yzerman that he thinks Holl is a lost cause.
Your point about the cap hit sitting in the press box is good, but the Red Wings probably don’t expect to be quite as lucky injury-wise this season as they were in 2023-24 — and if that’s the case, Holl could play more this season.
But if he doesn’t and he’s again a $3.4 million scratch for most of the season, I’d have to imagine they’ll explore a buyout next year, for just two years of dead cap at the same $1.13 million cost.
And Eargood wonders whether the Wings will buy out goaltender Ville Husso:
Continue reading Holl, Husso likely to remain Red Wings despite Detroit possessing a second buyout window (after signing Joe Veleno pre-arbitration)Per the NHL Network:
Tuesday means SuperStar Summer on NHL Network!
— NHL Network (@NHLNetwork) July 23, 2024
Today, we're focusing on Brett Hull!
10am ET/7am PT: Game 6 of 1999 SCF
12pm ET/9am PT: Hull's 4-goal game in 1995
2pm ET/11am PT: Hull's hat trick vs. St. Louis in 2002
4pm ET/1pm PT: Game 6 of 2002 WCQF pic.twitter.com/fNXkGoBDLM
Of prospect-related note from Twitter/X:
Skellefteå AIK has started training again after summer break, and Brandsegg-Nygård comments on where he’ll be this season:
— IcehockeyGifs (@IcehockeyG) July 23, 2024
”- My mind is on playing here [SHL], and I think – almost know – that I’ll be playing here.”#LGRW https://t.co/E6aINADMOc
2. And Red Wings Prospects shares some news regarding the World Junior Summer Showcase:
After a goal in two exhibition games Jesse Kiiskinen will be coming to Plymouth Michigan for the World Junior summer showcase. #LGRW https://t.co/Y4DmCRTCOk pic.twitter.com/LARTvYL9vC
— Red Wings Prospects (@LGRWProspects) July 23, 2024
USA 2024 WJSS Team Blue Roster
— Red Wings Prospects (@LGRWProspects) July 23, 2024
has 3 Red Wings Picks:
Trey Augustine(2nd round’23)
Max Plante(2nd round’24)
John Whipple(5th round’24)#LGRW
The Athletic’s Max Bultman posted a mailbag feature this morning, and the first question he answers involves the time that it’s taking for the Red Wings to sign restricted free agents Lucas Raymond and Moritz Seider to long-term contract extensions:
In my view, the biggest reason they have yet to be completed is because of their importance: If Seider and Raymond sign long-term, their new deals (along with Dylan Larkin’s contract, which runs through 2031) will form the long-term foundation of Detroit’s cap structure. From Seider and Raymond’s perspective, such deals would cover the majority of their prime earning years.
Both sides need to try to maximize the potential value of a long-term deal. As with any contract, it’s hard for both parties to do that at the same time.
Another potential reason it’s taking this long involves the effects of the rising salary cap — this year and the expected rises in the future. It’s easy to see the potential for wide discrepancies between team and player on what a fair deal should look like in this new market, especially one that could stretch up to eight years, with the potential for seven new cap raises in that span. Using percent-of-cap adjustments helps to mitigate that in Year 1, but there’s still some potential for sticker shock on the team side, compared to what Seider and Raymond’s peers have signed for in the past few years.
Detroit will get deals done with both players. But the big question at this stage is whether it leads to a bridge for Seider and Raymond. I wouldn’t recommend that route with Raymond, as his production seems the likeliest to shoot up again, but it would involve less long-term guesswork for all parties.
Continued (paywall); if I may be blunt, the Red Wings are negotiating against some pretty dumb $10+ million-average deals that other young players have been awarded by teams like the Sabres, and those “comparables” are definitely tying up some time in terms of negotiating more realistic cap numbers for Raymond and Seider.
Detroit Hockey Now’s Bob Duff posted a subscriber-only profile of Red Wings goaltending prospect Trey Augustine this morning, with Duff noting that Augustine played in 35 NCAA games for Michigan State University, 4 games at the World Junior Championship and 4 games at the men’s World Championship:
Taken to the senior worlds as the third goalie for USA Hockey. Augustine, 19, was pressed into action by an injury to Red Wings goalie Alex Lyon, and managed to win a couple of games.
“I’ve had some pretty unbelievable opportunities,” Augustine admitted. “I’m super glad for everyone that’s helped me get to this position I’m in today. It’s super cool and obviously I’d like to have some more cool ones in the future.”
Teaming with Augustine at the worlds, Lyon remarked at how wise beyond his years the teenaged puckstopper was proving to be.
“Obviously when I hear stuff like that it means a lot to me,” Augustine said. “Alex is a great guy. He kind of taught me a lot in the time he was there. I think just kind of seeing him prepare, seeing how serious he takes it on game days, it was super different than what I’ve seen from my past teammates. Very grateful that he was around.”
Continued (paywall); as Duff notes, Augustine is a kind of quiet young man, but he’s sharp and is a bit of a rink rat (according to teammate Red Savage), which may have something to do with his tremendous work ethic.
The Red Wings aren’t getting the same Vladimir Tarasenko that the Russian forward was when he was 25, but the 32-year-old winger provides thick body at 6’1″ and 219 pounds, and he possesses a wee bit of a mean streak, as Detroit Hockey Now’s Bob Duff notes:
“For sure,” Detroit GM Steve Yzerman said, acknowledging the uniqueness of Tarasenko on his club’s roster. “A left-shot winger, a bigger body, a different-type player than our other wingers like Lucas (Raymond), Patrick Kane, Alex DeBrincat. He’s a scorer, a straight-ahead guy who’s big and strong and will go to the net. We feel it’s a really good addition.”
There are different methods through which a bigger player can utilize their body to bring successful outcomes on the ice. Tarasenko isn’t a Brendan Shanhan type. He’s not going to be banging bodies, dropping the mitts and collecting Gordie Howe hat-tricks.
Nor is he James van Riemsdyk. Tarasenko won’t be camping out at the net front, tipping home pucks and knocking in rebounds.
His big game is more about maximizing his frame to get and maintain possession of the puck in the offensive zone.
“He’s obviously a skilled guy, a great shooter, but he works so hard,” said Kane, Tarasenko’s teammate with the New York Rangers in 2022-23. “He’s hard on pucks. He wins a lot of pucks back, and he’s got a great knack for getting open as well, so I think it’d be a good fit.”
This evening, the Detroit News’s Ted Kulfan discusses the Red Wings’ decision to draft 20-year-old center Ondrej Becher with the 80th overall pick in this past June’s NHL Draft.
“It just looked like everything potentially that he had as a 17-, or 18-year-old kind of hit as a 19-year-old,” said Kris Draper, the Wings’ director of amateur scouting/assistant general manager, after the draft. “He got a great opportunity and took advantage of it and was comfortable in it. He certainly put up great numbers. His skating is something that when you watch him play, he has that extra gear. He’s just sort of starting to come into his own and starting to feel comfortable about the type of player that he could possibly be.”
Becher realizes there’s plenty of more work ahead.
“I have to work hard every day, more than even before,” Becher said at the conclusion of the Wings’ development camp earlier this month.
Becher exploded for 96 points (32 goals, 64 assists) for Prince George (WHL) last season, and also had an impressive world junior championship for his native Czechia, with 10 points (seven assists) in seven games.
Considering Becher had 38 points for Prince George the season before, it was a monumental offensive improvement for a 6-foot-1, 184-pound center who many scouts actually grade out better defensively. Becher felt concentrating on the defensive end this past season helped him achieve success all over the ice.
“I start(ed) playing more defensively, so I become two-way player now,” Becher said. “I wasn’t a two-way player before. I try to improve in defensive zone, and I did. That’s why I am here now.”
Continued; as Kulfan notes, the Red Wings aren’t quite sure where Becher will play this upcoming season. The WHL’s Prince George Cougars can only have 3 20-year-old players on their roster, so Becher may be traded to another WHL team, or he may end up playing for Grand Rapids or Toledo.
From Twitter/X:
ONE LAST HOORAH – THIS WEDNESDAY!
— Saginaw Spirit (@SpiritHockey) July 22, 2024
🗓️ Wednesday, July 24th
⏰ 6:00 Season Ticket Holders | 7:00 General Public
📍 Dow Event Center
🎟 FREE pic.twitter.com/7XFiRzIcV6
The Hockey News’s Connor Eargood asks, “How long until the Red Wings get aggressive in their rebuild?” today, and I’m afraid that the answer is “they won’t.” I don’t expect Steve Yzerman to be anything less than methodical and patient with the Red Wings’ slow-but-steady growth as a team, regardless of how much cap space he has to play with.
Here’s Eargood’s argument:
The 2026 offseason projects to see a paradigm shift for the Red Wings’ approach. In that offseason, Yzerman has set himself up with a blank canvas on his cap sheet with a number of prospects ready to join the fold as NHLers. The table is set for this offseason to be the one where Detroit can swing for the fences, where the rebuild shifts into the contention window.
The biggest reason 2026 is the turning point is sheer cap flexibility. Just five current forwards — Larkin, DeBrincat, Copp, Compher and Rasmussen — will still be under contract by then, while RFA Lucas Raymond is likely to join them with his upcoming extension. On the blue line, the only defensemen under contract will be Moritz Seider on his upcoming extension and Simon Edvinsson as an RFA that offseason. In net, Yzerman doesn’t have a single contract extending past 2026.
Such a clear cutoff date for so many contracts might point to instability in the long term. Having a cohort of just six to eight players under contract for more than two seasons shows a lack of longevity for the current roster, a sign of immense change to come. But that’s all fine and well for Detroit, because the current roster isn’t one it’s planning to rely on down the road. The open contract situations of 2026 lend themselves to the construction of a more long term roster, where the Red Wings can pick and choose who they want to keep around to surround the arrival of some high-upside prospects to the NHL fold.
he maturation of prospects by 2026 projects to fill a lot of the open roster slots, if all goes according to plan. By leaving so many spots open, Yzerman has left paths for prospects like Jonatan Berggren, Marco Kasper and Carter Mazur to become contributors and earn their place by unseating established veterans. The Red Wings should also get more recent picks like Nate Danielson, Axel Sandin Pellikka and Michael Brandsegg-Nygard into the lineup by 2026, too, again bringing them along on their own timeline by forcing players to beat out established vets. In net, goaltender Sebastian Cossa should be in position to play NHL games by then, and the lack of goalies under contract allows Yzerman to decide whether to make him the starter or bring in some help.
Continued; I won’t deny that a $92 million-estimated salary cap will help the Red Wings, as will the maturation of their top prospects…
But I don’t see the Red Wings’ management stopping adding veterans who they believe are necessary to the rebuilding process just because 2026 seems like the date by which most of the Wings’ prospects will fold into the NHL roster.
For better or worse, Yzerman gets a little overly aggressive when free agency hits, sometimes to roster flexibility’s detriment, and until we know who’s available to “swing for” in the summer of 2025, and whether the Wings land their big fish or have to move on to Plans B or C, like they did this summer…
I’m not willing to make the kind of admirable predictions that Eargood is willing to suggest. I’m more conservative about that sort of thing, and that’s just me.