Sportsnet suggests that Alex DeBrincat must deliver for Detroit

Sportsnet’s staff posted an article in which they discuss players from the NHL’s 16 Atlantic Division who are under pressure to perform this upcoming season, and they spotlight Red Wings trade acquisition Alex DeBrincat:

As Steve Yzerman keeps adding veteran players to his roster, the Red Wings are taking an almost expansion-like approach to their build, accumulating other teams’ cast-offs to (hopefully) put together a unit of motivated individuals determined to prove people wrong. That’s sometimes what this plan feels like, anyway.

This past summer Yzerman added Alex DeBrincat, who was a different sort of acquisition in that he wasn’t some other team’s cast-off. DeBrincat was acquired by Ottawa last season to be a difference-making goal scorer, but he didn’t really deliver on those expectations and then had no real desire to stay put. Rather than slow walk to free agency, the Senators had to trade him out.

Now with his hometown Red Wings, DeBrincat has a new four-year contract and the same expectations the Senators had for him. Can he get back up to 40 goals? The Red Wings have a lot of “pieces” but, so far, not enough difference makers. They need DeBrincat to have a significant presence right away if they’re to rise above the other rebuilders in the Atlantic.

Continued

Khan profiles Wings 2023 pick Trey Augustine

MLive’s Ansar Khan posted a profile of Red Wings 2023 2nd-round pick Trey Augustine, who’s an incoming freshman at Michigan State University. The goaltender fills a need in terms of providing depth at the position for a Wings team that’s sold on his long-term potential:

“He’s a goaltender who’s had an unbelievable two-year run at the development program,” Kris Draper, Red Wings assistant general manager and director of amateur scouting, said. “He’s won everywhere he’s been. We had a lot of conversation about the goalies in this year’s draft. Phil (Osaer, the team’s head of goaltending scouting and development) kept coming back to Trey.”

They were particularly impressed by his performance for the U.S. at the World Under-18 Championship, especially in the 3-2 overtime victory over Sweden in the gold medal game.

“The last 15 seconds was pure entertainment and chaos and he came up with about three huge saves,” Draper said. “The demeanor that he came out with in a gold medal game facing a four-on-three penalty kill, you’re just kind of sitting there watching the way he handled himself. We loved the poise. We loved the control.”

Said Augustine: “It was just about making the next save and giving the team an opportunity to end the game. We killed the penalty and scored a couple minutes later. Winning a gold medal means a lot to me and for my country as well.”

Continued

Regner profiles Red Wings prospect Dylan James

DetroitRedWings.com’s Art Regner has posted a profile of Red Wings prospect Dylan James, who was drafted 40th overall in the 2022 NHL Draft. James had an up-and-down freshman season with the University of North Dakota, but that was to be expected:

And after compiling 16 points (8-8-16) in 36 games his freshman year at the University of North Dakota, the 19-year-old is focused on the process of improving his overall game as the competition increases.

“I thought I did pretty well from the start to the end (of last season),” Detroit’s 40th overall pick in the 2022 NHL Entry Draft said on July 4. “I wish I started a little bit better, but I feel like it was just getting comfortable with the coaches and understanding what they wanted. I feel like my adaptation to the level of play got better throughout the year.”

Navigating his first college hockey season was difficult at times, but James said he appreciated when Red Wings director of player development Dan Cleary offered advice throughout the year.

“He would get in touch with me every couple months,” James said. “Tell me something I would need to work on and how I’ve been playing. It’s good to hear what he has to say. He had a good career in the NHL, so I’ll take what he says to heart.”

Cleary said he felt James “had a good season” as a freshman with the Fighting Hawks.

“He came in and had to find his way,” Cleary said on July 5. “Some weekends, he made freshman mistakes and would sit. But that’s all part of it. At the end of the day, I always look at it as where are you at the end of the season? At the end of the season, he was trending upward.”

Continued

Bultman discusses the Petry trade as a family affair

The Athletic’s Max Bultman discusses the Jeff Petry trade this morning as it applies to the Petry family.

Jeff’s father, Detroit Tigers analyst and alumnus Dan Petry, was aware that his son wanted to be flipped to the Red Wings after Montreal re-acquired Jeff for assets in the Erik Karlsson-to-Pittsburgh deal last month, but Dan had to keep the trade-in-the-works a secret for a week:

“As much as I would have liked to have said something to them like, ‘Hey, be on the lookout, this is in the works’ and everything,” Dan Petry said, “I couldn’t say anything.”

Fortunately, he didn’t have to wait long. Nine days after Petry was dealt back to Montreal on Aug. 6, he got the call he and his family had been waiting for: The Canadiens were sending him home to Detroit in exchange for defenseman Gustav Lindström and a conditional fourth-round draft pick in 2025.

Jeff Petry had allowed himself to think about this idea over the course of his career. He had grown up watching the Red Wings, with a Red Wings-themed bedroom, playing out in his mind the idea of one day wearing their jersey. Then he reached the NHL, and the possibility became even more real.

“You keep thinking in your head, ‘OK, when is that opportunity going to come? Can it come?’” he said. “And for me, I always thought about, OK, wanting to play one year here maybe at the end of my career, or whenever the opportunity came.”

Continued (paywall) with discussion of Jeff’s hockey-playing youth and upbringing…

DHN’s Duff snags Czech article about the Filip Hronek trade

Former Red Wings defenseman Filip Hronek spoke with iSport.cz’s Pavel Rysany for a behind-the-paywall article, and Detroit Hockey Now’s Bob Duff posted the text available to readers from all over the world this morning.

As Duff notes, Hronek tells Rysany that the trade which sent him to the Vancouver Canucks for a 1st round and 4th round pick was a shock:

Looking back, the defenseman can readily admit that the news he was going to the Vancouver Canucks just prior to last season’s NHL trade deadline caught Hronek completely by surprise.

The call came out of the blue, from Red Wings GM Steve Yzerman.

“He said they changed me,” Hronek explained to Czech website isport.blesk.cz. “You don’t even know that business is baking. I had absolutely no signs that anything was going on. It all happened very quickly.

“I was surprised, but these things belong to hockey. It happened, it was meant to be. I thought there was no point in thinking about it again.”

Duff continues, and there’s nothing said by Hronek that’s controversial, but the Czech is certainly difficult to translate. Kudos to Duff for giving it a go.

Roughly translated: Nicklas Lidstrom speaks with Expressen’s Nordstrom regarding the Wings’ Swedish prospects

Red Wings executive vice president Nicklas Lidstrom spoke with Expressen’s Gunnar Nordstrom recently, and here’s a rough translation of Nordstrom’s blog entry regarding said discussion:

That’s why Lidas believes in the playoffs for Detroit

Los Angeles. During Nicklas Lidstrom’s time with the Detroit Red Wings, a playoff spot was a given.

Yes, there were also four Stanley Cup titles during the Swedish star defenseman’s time with the team.

Detroit has now missed the playoffs for seven years in a row.

The idea is that there will be a change to that in the 2023-2024 season.

The management, where Lidstrom is a part as the vice president of hockey operations, has strengthened the team with nine new players.

“We’ve strengthened the whole team, and I think we should be a playoff team in the spring,” says Nicklas Lidstrom to Expressen, who tells us that he and his family are not affected by the floods after the rainy weather in Vasteras.

“Our house is located by the water, but it’s high enough up that we haven’t been affected by the floods,” he says.

Continue reading Roughly translated: Nicklas Lidstrom speaks with Expressen’s Nordstrom regarding the Wings’ Swedish prospects

Time to kick our fundraising drive into September gear

It’s Labor Day, and a week from today, if all goes well, Aunt Annie and I will be packing for our never-before-tried trip to Traverse City with an elder care twist.

In all honestly, aside from a couple of tremendous donations from benefactors both mysterious and not-so-mysterious, fundraising has been really difficult.

That’s okay; it’s usually particularly hard to raise money in the “late summer,” and I know that many of you are kind of GoFundMe’d out at this point…

Continue reading Time to kick our fundraising drive into September gear

Harsh words for the Wings’ cap management, and, well, management

Daily Faceoff’s Scott Maxwell is examining the NHL’s 32 teams’ respective salary cap situations, and he has particularly harsh words to say about the Red Wings’ salary management:

30. Detroit Red Wings (2022: 22nd)

Good Contract Percentage: 24th (2022: 16th)
Quality Cheap Deals: 9th (2022: 15th)
Contracts with No-Trade/No-Move Clauses: 28th (2022: 9th)
Dead Cap Space: 24th (2022: 27th)
Quality of Core: 20th (2022: 26th)
Cap Space to Skill Differential: 21st (2022: 9th)

Steve Yzerman’s direction with the Red Wings continues to be at-best confusing and at-worst misguided. Last season saw the Wings rank poorly on this list due to a questionable 2022 offseason that saw Yzerman load up on older players to complement a core that wasn’t ready to be competitive yet. He backtracked at the deadline when that didn’t pan out, but come summer of 2023, he’s done the exact same thing, and it’s dropped the Wings even further down the list.

Sitting in the 20’s in five of the six categories certainly doesn’t do you any favors, and a lot of that is due to the back-to-back summers of spending in free agency. Some of the contracts like David Perron, Daniel Sprong, Shayne Gostisbehere, and James Reimer look favourable, but the additions of Andrew Copp and Ben Chiarot last year and J.T. Compher and Justin Holl this year drag that way down, not to mention that a lot of these signings have some no-trade/no-move clauses attached to them to hinder another category. All of that builds to a roster that doesn’t grade out well, and even with more than $5 million in cap space, the system thinks a team of this quality should have more cap space.

However, they did see some marginal improvement in couple areas. They see their quality of core get better as Dylan Larkin and Alex DeBrincat’s contracts kick in (and more importantly, Chiarot no longer qualifies as a core player), and their dead cap space went down with Frans Nielsen’s buyout all wrapped up. Where they look best, though, is with their quality cheap deals, as their rebuild has given them plenty of quality young players on entry-level contracts like Moritz Seider and Elmer Soderblom. But, there’s still a lot left to be desired with their cap situation, which is disappointing when you consider that all that’s left of the cap hell Ken Holland left behind is Justin Abdelkader’s buyout penalty.

Continued;

I don’t know how to elucidate my point other than to say what I feel to be true.

Yzerman is still in the early stages of a real from-the-ground-up rebuild of the Detroit Red Wings, which may take a decade or more to reach its fruition.

You don’t want to hear that, and I don’t want to hear that, but Yzerman had to burn down what Holland left him before really starting the rebuild in earnest. When you are starting a rebuild, you have to overpay in terms of both salary and term of contract. You make a couple of mistakes, and you assuage for them as best you can.

And you get panned for “not having a direction” and being a fraud and all that bullshit.

Thankfully, the Red Wings’ GM is not concerned with the court of public opinion, and while I don’t think that any of us truly know where the Red Wings will end up this upcoming season, I do believe that the team is building a stable of prospects, depth players and the kind of atmosphere which will eventually attract the kind of marquee free agents which will help the Wings assuage for shitty draft lottery luck.

Yzerman is playing the long game against an impatient fan base, and he’s going to get slagged at times over the next couple of seasons. It’s trendy right now to bash him as a fraud, in fact, and that aggravates me. But he’s got a thick skin and a lot of hockey knowledge, and, if only eventually, I believe that his vision for the team will prevail.

Paying fans have every right to want to push the timeline forward, and most of their constructive criticism is healthy. But this hating-on-Yzerman bullshit is short-sighted.

The Hockey News predicts that the Red Wings will finish 7th in the Atlantic Division

The Hockey News’s Adam Proteau predicts the order in which the NHL’s Atlantic Division teams will finish this upcoming season, and he’s predicting that the Red Wings will finish 7th, behind the Boston Bruins:

Why they’re picked in this position: We don’t believe the Red Wings will be closer to the bottom of the Atlantic than the fourth or fifth spot in the division, but the truth is, many of the moves Detroit GM Steve Yzerman has made in the off-season don’t strike us as being moves that can push them back into the post-season for the first time since 2015-16. 

In particular, the free-agent signings of Compher, Holl, Petry and Reimer aren’t needle-movers in a positive sense. We do like the acquisitions of DeBrincat, Sprong, Fischer and Gostisbehere, but there’s so much competition in the division and only four or five playoff spots to be had. The question becomes, which team above Detroit in last season’s standings will be worse than them this year? The answer to that is not many at all.

We don’t want to count out the Wings altogether – if starting goalie Ville Husso posts a strong season, Detroit could nip at the heels of teams like the Sabres, Senators and Bruins and squeeze out a playoff berth. However, Detroit doesn’t have enough generational talents to keep up with the Joneses in the Atlantic, and that may prove to be the reason why they wind up on the outside of the playoff picture this year.

Should that prove to be their fate, Yzerman will be facing heavy criticism for the first time in his tenure as the Wings’ GM. But that’s what’s going to happen to an organization that, for years and years, was the gold standard for being a playoff team and a genuine Cup threat. Detroit’s players need to justify Yzerman’s investment in them, or more consequential moves could be made next summer.

Continued; we shall find out whether the Red Wings are able to battle their way up the Atlantic Division standings shortly.