HSJ: Dylan Larkin, playoff believer

As the Free Press’s Helene St. James notes, Red Wings captain Dylan Larkin is optimistic as to whether his team might make the post-season cut 82 games from now:

“Our record right now is zero, zero and zero,” Dylan Larkin said. “We have to show up and play together, be committed, which are all things we’ve been talking about with Newsy’s opening meeting.”

Yzerman said earlier this week that “playoffs or bust” does not apply, but to players like Larkin, who hasn’t experienced playing past the regular season since the Wings last advanced in 2016, it’s not too early to talk about the possibility.

“Going into this season, I know Steve and Newsy have not really set an expectation,” Larkin said. “The guys in the room, we talked about it last year — we want more. There’s a good attitude. There’s guys that have come in that have been on teams that have been locks for the playoffs. There’s veteran players, guys going into contract years. I like the dynamic of everyone on our team and we’re going to rely on each other to keep pushing and get off to a great start and remain consistent.”

Lines are likely to change from day to day, but Larkin started camp on a line with Lucas Raymond and newcomer Alex DeBrincat. J.T. Compher and Daniel Sprong, also new to the team, were on a line with Robby Fabbri. With Copp potentially on a line with Michael Rasmussen and David Perron, the Wings project to have three lines that can score.

“I think it’s great to have that competition,” Larkin said. “You saw it last year with DP coming in and he’s an offensive guy. And now Alex and J.T., Daniel Sprong is another guy that had a really good year last year. So it’s just going to keep pushing us. We need to score more goals and we know that and we have a group that I believe can do it.”

Continued

Press release: Toledo Walleye sign Chase Gresock

Per the Toledo Walleye:

(Toledo, OH) – The Toledo Walleye and forward Chase Gresock (GREE-sock) have agreed to terms for the 2023-2024 season.

The Powell, Ohio native joins the Walleye after spending the last two years in the state playing college hockey at Bowling Green (2022-2023) and Miami of Ohio (2021-2022). Gresock appeared in 36 games last season for the Falcons, picking up 11 goals with 20 assists for 31 points with 12 penalty minutes and a plus-4 rating. His 20 helpers and 31 points were both career-bests. The year prior he skated in 21 games with 19 points (9G, 10A) for the RedHawks.

The 25-year-old started his college career by appearing in three seasons with Merrimack College that included two seasons as team captain (2019-2021). In total, Gresock collected 104 points (46G, 58A) in 135 games over five collegiate seasons. He did make his pro-debut at the end of the last season by skating in two games with the San Jose Barracuda of the AHL with no points.

Wyshynski’s ‘Bold Prediction’: Raymond unleashed

Per ESPN’s Greg Wyshynski’s “Bold Predictions” for all 32 teams:

Detroit Red Wings

Lucas Raymond has his breakout

How many times have we seen this with a great young offensive player: solid rookie season, slight step back statistically and then BOOM in Year 3? Raymond had 23 goals and 57 points in 82 games as a 19-year-old rookie but saw those numbers fall to 17 and 45, respectively, as a second-year player, with his ice time dipping as well. A lower-body injury was a factor, but so was the sophomore slump.

Dylan Larkin said Raymond had “a chip on his shoulder” after last season, and the young winger had a strong summer of training to add muscle to his frame. To put in Detroit terms: I like the engine in this year’s model.

Continued (paywall)

Tweets of note: First day of training camp

From, well, a lot of people:

Continue reading Tweets of note: First day of training camp

Anders Eriksson remembered in latest of Regner’s ‘How Swede It Is’ articles

DetroitRedWings.com’s Art Regner’s latest “How Swede It Is” article involves Anders “Bubba” Eriksson:

When asked to sum up his time in Detroit, the affable Eriksson became reflective.

“My name will always be on the Cup; it will always be in the Hall of Fame and that is the coolest thing. That is something I can show my kids and say, I’m on this,” Eriksson said. “The 25th anniversary was so much fun, to see everybody. You’re picking up where you left off. Even if it was 15-20 years ago. That’s what I love about (hockey) and that’s why I do what I do here now in Florida.

“When we won (the Cup) in Washington, my dad was there and met Slava (Fetisov). That was his favorite player. He didn’t really know what to say and do. He talks about it to this day. Those are things that are so incredible, I cherish them every time. He has all Red Wings stuff in his office. My dad is 80 now and he talks about it. ‘I remember when I talked to Slava Fetisov and he called me Big Papa.’ It is way beyond anything that my dad was part of it and saw that. That’s a huge thing for me.”

Continued

A preseason power ranking for your morning perusal

Bleacher Report’s Lyle Fitzsimmons offers a set of preseason power rankings, and the Red Wings end up about where you’d expect them to end up:

#22 DETROIT RED WINGS: Another year to gauge the Steve Yzerman plan. Alex DeBrincat is the headliner among a handful of notable additions, and the Red Wings hope his scoring boosts an offense that was 24th in 2022-23.

Continued; meh. It’s the first day of training camp for most teams. I’m not putting too much stock in power rankings. And the Red Wings finished below the playoff line, so they’re not going to be ranked highly.

Kulfan, St. James offer ‘questions’ and ‘storylines’ for training camp

Both the Detroit News’s Ted Kulfan and the Free Press’s Helene St. James offer training camp questions and/or storylines this morning, so we’re going to combine their articles into one entry.

Among Kulfan’s questions:

▶ 3. Will all the new faces mesh with the remaining players? That’s always a question as training camp arrives. But rarely has there been as dramatic of a roster shakeup as this one with the Wings, with so many new faces.

Given the experience level of most of the new players, there’s a good chance the jelling and getting comfortable with each other shouldn’t take that long.

But it’ll be a work in progress, for sure.

▶ 4. How does Alex DeBrincat fit in? The Wings finally have an elite, proven goal-scorer who returns home (DeBrincat is from Farmington Hills) who is expected to boost an offense that needs a spark.

DeBrincat has scored 41 goals twice in a season while in Chicago, and that type of production would go a long way toward the Wings inching closer to a playoff berth.

It’s exciting to think what DeBrincat and Dylan Larkin can be capable of if the two, as expected, play on the same line.

Kulfan continues (paywall)…I am curious to see how long it takes for the roster to “gel” given that 40% of it changed over the course of the summer…

And the Free Press’s Helene St. James offers five “storylines” to watch for as training camp begins:

Power play units: Expect there to be an emphasis on special teams during camp, so that the coaching staff can get a feel for which units should get the most looks during exhibition season. Alex DeBrincat, Jeff Petry and Shayne Gostisbehere headline the newcomer cast that should give the Wings an actual advantage when they have an extra skater, something that has been missing the last several years. The coaching staff will have choice selections in putting together the two units, with solid options for players to play in front of the net, along the wall, and on the point. A functional power play would go a long way towards making the playoffs.

Line combinations: With DeBrincat on the top line next to Dylan Larkin, the Wings suddenly look like they can field two real scoring lines, with either newcomer J.T. Compher or Andrew Copp centering the second line and David Perron and Lucas Raymond on the wings. With Copp and Michael Rasmussen showing chemistry before a February injury ended Rasmussen’s season, those two could end up on the third line, with Robby Fabbri. That’s a group with scoring potential, too, in addition to sound defense.

Continued; I’m very curious to see which prospects respond to the increased competition well, and which prospects and/or try-outs’ play falls off now that the NHL’ers are in town.

Duff: Theodor Niederbach’s ice time dinged by Modo’s signing of former Griffin Danny O’Regan

I had a bit of a laugh when I read that Modo Ornskoldsvik of the SHL signed former Grand Rapids Griffins forward Danny O’Regan. Between O’Regan signing with Modo and Luke Witkowski signing with Tappara of the Finnish Liiga, it’s been a busy 24 hours for former marquee names on the Griffins’ roster.

All is not well, though, according to Detroit Hockey Now’s Bob Duff, who reports that the signing of O’Regan hurts the cause of Wings prospect Theodor Niederbach:

Modo’s plan is to insert O’Regan, a right-shot center who’s also played on the wing, on the right side of their top line. That’s where Niederbach was performing in MoDo’s season opener.

In that game, a 2-1 overtime loss to fellow Red Wings draftee Axel Sandin Pellikka and Skelleftea, Niederbach was skating 18:49 of ice time, finishing even with one hit. It’s Niederbach’s third season in the SHL. He spent all of the 2021-22 campaign with Frolunda. Starting out last season with Rogle, Niederbach was dropping down to MoDo in the Allsvenskan (Swedish second division), helping the club regain promotion to the SHL.

Continued; as Duff notes, Niederbach’s rights expire on June 1st of 2024, so the Red Wings will have to make a decision as to whether to sign him before that date. At this point, I’d say that it’s 50/50 that the 5’11,” 172-pound 21-year-old Niederbach actually signs with Detroit. He’s got real playmaking skills, but he’s very inconsistent.