DetroitHockey.net examines the Red Wings’ Summer Development Campers’ jersey numbers

DetroitHockey.net’s Clark Rasmussen examines the jersey numbers assigned to the Red Wings’ 2023 Summer Development Camp participants this morning:

Jersey numbers in development camp are almost always meaningless but sometimes we see interesting patterns from them.  This year, the somewhat remarkable thing is that only six returning players (Marco Kasper, Carter Mazur, Redmond Savage, Sam Stange, Tnias Mathurin, and Sebastian Cossa) kept the same number as last year.  Of those, Mazur’s #43 had been reassigned to Mark Pysyk in the interim, while Savage’s #67 went to Joel L’Esperance in Detroit’s training camp last fall.

Another player, Amadeus Lombardi, is wearing a different number from last development camp but it’s the same number as he wore last fall in Detroit’s main camp, when he switched from #96 to #78 to accommodate Jake Walman’s switch to #96 last summer.

For the newest Detroit draftees, Nate Danielson was assigned the #29 that hasn’t been used since Thomas Greiss had it, Axel Sandin Pellikka got the #84 that was assigned to camp invitee Julien Anctil last year, Trey Augustine got the #80 worn in last year’s camp by invitee Pierce Charleson, Andrew Gibson got the #26 that was assigned to Pontus Andreasson in last fall’s training camp, Brady Cleveland took the departed Adam Erne’s #73, Noah Dower Nilsson got the #83 previously assigned to William Wallinder, Larry Keenan was given the #86 that had been worn by camp tryout Ivan Ivan, Jack Phelan got the #87 that was assigned to Jacob Mathieu in last fall’s training camp, Kevin Bicker got thew #89 that hasn’t been worn since Sam Gagner had it, Rudy Guimond was assigned the #68 worn in training camp by John Lethemon, and Emmitt Finnie got the #88 previously assigned to Liam Dower Nilsson, which will be worn this season by Daniel Sprong.

With Noah Dower Nilsson having taken his number, Wallinder switched to the #54 worn last year by Steven Kampfer.  Meanwhile, Noah’s brother Liam moved to the #62 worn in the 2022 development camp by Theodor Niederbach (and in last fall’s training camp by Drew Worrad) to accommodate Finnie getting #88, with Niederbach switching to the #70 worn last season by Oskar Sundqvist.

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Bultman discusses the Red Wings’ depth chart after its free agent signings

The Athletic’s Max Bultman examines the Red Wings’ depth chart after the team’s numerous free agent signings:

[At forward, the] big questions here are: Who plays alongside Larkin and Raymond, and where does Compher slot? It’s possible, frankly, that they could answer each other, with Compher slotting right into the Tyler Bertuzzi role.

That would probably take a big preseason performance from Kasper, though, to show he’s ready to handle the 3C job, because with how strong Rasmussen looked on the wing, you have to think he’ll start right there next to Copp next season.

And given all those moving parts — plus Detroit’s desperate need for a right-handed center — the safest expectation is probably to see Compher down the middle, listed here as the “third line” but realistically interchangeable with Copp’s.

In that scenario, Perron’s smarts, battle level and wall play would fit with Larkin and Raymond, and conveniently keep the three most likely members of “PP1” together at even strength, so that’s the one I went with here. (It’s worth noting in the alternative, though, Perron would make one heck of a first linemate and mentor for Kasper.)

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Duff on Compher

Detroit Hockey Now’s Bob Duff posted an overnight article discussing new Red Wings center J.T. Compher’s belief that his new employer can turn things around:

“I’ve seen both sides of it and I know what it takes,” Compher said. “[The Avalanche’s Stanley Cup run] was a fun journey to be a part of for sure. It’s hard, it’s not easy at all. It sounds simple but one team wins the Stanley Cup every year.

“We had plenty of teams we thought could do it over the years. Even the year we won there were challenges and adversity to go through. You learn a lot about yourself and teammates when you get in those tight series in the playoffs.”

Arriving in Detroit via unrestricted free agency, Compher agreed to the five-year deal with an AAV of $5.1 million. He’s a former Michigan player who was a captain with the Wolverines and a teammate there of current Red Wings Dylan Larkin and Andrew Copp. He could also find himself slotting into the Detroit depth chart between Larkin and Copp.

Larkin is the No. 1 center for the Red Wings. Ideally, the Detroit brass would like to see Copp skating as the club’s third-line center. That means they’ll need someone to anchor the second forward unit. Compher is capable of delivering those goods.

“I played a little second-line center in the playoffs with Colorado the year we won,” Compher said. “That was good for my confidence, it was good experience. Just continued trusting my own game.”

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Tweet of note: Wings prospects discuss their potential ‘Day Jobs’

The Red Wings’ prospects participating in the 2023 Summer Development Camp weighed in on their potential jobs, should they not end up playing hockey as a profession:

Impressions from the first day of the Red Wings’ 2023 Summer Development Camp

Now, the Red Wings’ brass insists that the team’s annual Summer Development Camp isn’t about evaluating players for jobs–because there are no jobs on the line–as much as it is about exposing players to the “Red Wings’ way,” both on and off the ice.

Over the course of five days, the Wings’ prospects and free agent invites alike work with power skating coaches, skill development coaches and goaltending coaches on the ice, and off the ice, they’re taught the proper ways to work out, approach nutrition, sleep, how to cook and even how to deal with the demands of both traditional and non-traditional media in this non-stop world.

You send me to the Red Wings’ annual Summer Development Camp to make some observations, however, so that’s what I’m going to try to do, bearing in mind that this camp is indeed about player development: it’s the fall Prospect Tournament and the Red Wings’ training camp and exhibition season which determine whether players earn spots on Detroit’s roster.

I do know that the development camp matters in terms of setting the players up with a strong foundation for their skill development (both on and off the ice) over the course of their amateur and minor pro careers, however. I know that because there were as many as fourteen members of the Red Wings’ front office and scouting staff watching on Sunday.

The idea here is to build a strong foundation for self-improvement and guided improvement under the eyes of the Wings’ player development department, and that means that people like assistant director of player development Dan Cleary, European development consultant Niklas Kronwall, and the rest of the Wings’ front office are made available to the players over the course of their seasons, should they wish to consult with Detroit’s best in order to self-improve.

Continue reading Impressions from the first day of the Red Wings’ 2023 Summer Development Camp

Wojnowski talks ‘rebuild fatigue’ for both the Pistons and the Red Wings

The Detroit News’s Bob Wojnowski reflects upon the moves made by the Detroit Pistons and Detroit Red Wings over the course of the past two weeks’ worth of drafts and free agency periods this evening, noting that neither team has added the star player they were hoping to find as of yet:

Both teams improved their future outlooks and were salary-cap responsible, but neither got significantly better in the short term. Disappointing? Sure. Surprising? Not really. Out of necessity and circumstance, Yzerman and [Pistons GM Troy] Weaver keep making moves for a future that remains hazy, and distant.

By nature, I think both would prefer to be aggressive deal-makers. Amid playoff droughts of seven seasons (Wings) and four seasons (Pistons), fans want bigger and bolder, understandably so. Many saw two prime possibilities, and both teams passed.

Yzerman apparently didn’t aggressively pursue Ottawa scoring wing Alex DeBrincat, figuring the cost in trade assets and cap space was too high. DeBrincat, 25, is a two-time 40-goal scorer who would seem to fit on the scoring-starved Wings. He does have defensive deficiencies, and as we’re learning with Yzerman, defensive deficiencies matter. That’s one reason he traded Tyler Bertuzzi, who just signed a one-year, $5.5 million contract with Toronto.

DeBrincat is in limbo, as teams perhaps find his price tag too steep. If it comes down, maybe the Wings revisit it. There hasn’t been a trading-and-signing frenzy around the NHL. No team dealt a single first-round pick. Stars mostly stayed put. Instead of spending upwards of $8 million per season for DeBrincat, Yzerman opted for former Michigan center J.T. Compher at $5.1 annually over five years. Compher, 28, is coming off his best season with the Avalanche and is a good two-way player. He figures to plug in as a second-line center behind Dylan Larkin.

Yzerman loaded up with veteran depth guys, including two goalies, and decent players on one-year prove-it deals, such as Hurricanes defenseman Shayne Gostisbehere ($4.125 million salary). Seattle forward Daniel Sprong, 26, could be an under-the-radar prize with a one-year contract ($2 million) after a career-high 21 goals. Same with forward Klim Kostin, 24, acquired from Edmonton to provide a much-needed physical presence.

Savvy and solid, not spectacular. Same with the Wings’ two first-round picks — center Nate Danielson and defenseman Axel Sandin Pellikka. Same with the Pistons’ two first-round picks — Thompson and Marcus Sasser.

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Khan on Compher’s desire to join the Red Wings

MLive’s Ansar Khan posted a profile of Red Wings free agent signing J.T. Compher this evening, discussing the former Colorado Avalanche center’s decision to join the Red Wings on a 5-year contract:

Compher rattled off reasons why he joined the Red Wings, including familiarity with the area having played for the U.S. National Team Development Program in Plymouth prior to three seasons at Michigan. He also cited good conversations with general manager Steve Yzerman and coach Derek Lalonde.

“There are a lot of attractive parts about playing for the Red Wings,” Compher said. “I think at the end of the day it was my conversation with Steve and hearing about the direction of the Wings and what he was trying to build. I really believed in what he’s doing, the sort of people they want to bring in. You want to have a great team on the ice, but you need to have good guys in the room.

“But overall, it was the direction of the team, the desire to win. I could hear it in their voice. That’s what we want as players, a chance to build and try to win championships.”

Larkin and Copp gave Compher the lowdown on what it’s like playing for the Red Wings.

“They said they love the room and they have a really good group of guys that want to win,” Compher said. “I was excited to work together and try to make the playoffs and push the team into being as good as it can be. They both had really good things to say about management and coaches.”

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Allen profiles Shayne Gostisbehere

Detroit Hockey Now’s Kevin Allen posted a post-press conference profile of Red Wings free agent signing Shayne Gostisbehere:

Even Gostisbehere’s hockey start was unusual. He grew up in South Florida where his French father was a professional jai alai player. His older sister was a high level figure skater and Gostisbehere’s first memories of going to an ice rink were trying to find a place to sleep there when he accompanied his sister to her pre-dawn practices. Soon, he was always hanging out at the rink.

“I had a grandpa from Montreal, so that helped a lot,” Gostisbehere said. “He was a season ticket holder to the (Florida) Panthers and I went to every game as a kid. Just fell in love with the game.”

Union College was the only college that recruited him strongly. He was passed over in the NHL draft the first year he was eligible. Gostisbehere was undersized and scouts weren’t sure he was big enough to handle the rigors of the NHL.

But he proved himself with the Philadelphia Flyers, finishing second in the Calder Trophy voting after scoring 17 goals. He also enjoyed a 65-point season with the Flyers before falling out of favor there. Two strong seasons Arizona has restored his confidence. He also played impressively for the Carolina Hurricanes when he was dealt there before the trade deadline

“I’ll forever be grateful and thankful for the Coyotes organization giving me that opportunity over the last couple of years,” Gostisbehere said. “It’s spring-boarded me into the opportunity I got with Carolina.”

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Wyshynski explains why Bertuzzi signed with Toronto

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