“I really enjoy it,” Fabbri said of playing center. “It was nice to get some games in last year before the pause. That’s my natural position, I’ve played it my whole life and I feel comfortable there and effective.”
Moving Fabbri to center, said Blashill, was an organizational decision, Blashill having talked it over with general manager Steve Yzerman.
“We were going to play Robby there through the year but he only got those two or three games, but he looked good in those games,” Blashill said. “He gives a chance to have a No. 2 center, a guy who can who can play in the top-6 in that position, and he’s excited about it.”
Fabbri showed glimpses of being an offensive instigator last season, after arriving from St. Louis. Playing with Zadina and Ryan, two wingers with elite shots, gives Fabbri an opportunity to create offense, and provide the scoring the Red Wings badly need down the lineup.
“It’s tough to rely on the big three (first line) all the time,” Fabbri said. “When you’re getting production from all four lines, that’s when you get rolling from game to game.”
The AHL released a press release heralded by superb AHL scribe Patrick Williams, stating that 28 AHL teams will take part in the 2020-2021 AHL season, which begins on February 5th (hopefully). The Grand Rapids Griffins are one of those teams, and they’ll play in a revised Central Division (one without the Milwaukee Admirals, who are opting out of this season):
28 teams will be participating in @TheAHL‘s 2020-21 season, which opens Feb. 5
Atlantic — BRI, HAR, PRO Canadian — BEL, LAV, MAN, TOR North — BIN, HER, LV, ROC, SYR, UTI, WBS Central — CHI, CLE, GR, IOW, RCK, TEX Pacific — BAK, COL, HEN, ON, SD, SJ, STO, TUC#AHL— PATRICK WILLIAMS (@pwilliamsNHL) January 4, 2021
AHL announces it will play with 28 teams. Charlotte, Springfield, Milwaukee are opting out.— John Shannon (@JShannonhl) January 4, 2021
Griffins president Tim Gortsema says the AHL will start distributing schedules around the league tomorrow. Gortsema expects the AHL to play a division-heavy schedule.— Jamal Spencer (@JamalSpencerTV) January 4, 2021
[Vladislav] Namestnikov has the advantage of having lived in the metro area since he was a kid. On the other hand, defenseman Troy Stecher drove in mid-December from Vancouver to Detroit – with his Bernese Mountain dog, Phoebe.
“We’re living out in Birmingham,” Stecher said. “We’ve found a couple parks here and there’s a good trail I’ve been walking around. People are very friendly in the neighborhood saying good morning every day, saying hi. I’m sure they have no idea who I am. It’s a beautiful town. I’m very happy I’m living out there.”
Stecher noted that while he knew Dylan Larkin also had a similar dog, “he’s got a Bernedoodle, it’s got a little poodle it in so it’s a little smarter than my dog.”
Stecher broke up [35-hour] the trip. The first night he stayed in Billings, Montana, where he said he felt comfortable because “it’s pretty outdoors-y, so I figured they’d allow my dog in the hotel.
“The second night I drove to Minnesota. I actually stayed with Brock Boeser, who I played with in Vancouver and I actually played with him at North Dakota, so we’ve become really, really good friends. And then I went to Madison, Wisconsin, where my girlfriend lives. I spent two nights there to break up the trip. And then on Friday I came in here and started my quarantine.”
Continued; St. James also adds this from Bobby Ryan:
“My wife and I have been able to get out and have some dinners in the outdoor bubbles,” Ryan said. “See the area. My wife is excited – there’s no Trader Joe’s in Canada, or Nino Salvaggio, so those stores are costing me a bundle right now.”
Detroit Red Wings forward Vladislav Namestnikov called it a “dream come true” to play for the same team that his uncle, Slava Kozlov, helped win two Stanley Cup championships.
“I grew up watching the Red Wings’ games, so it’s extremely special for me,” Namestnikov told reporters Monday during the team’s training camp at Little Caesars Arena. “Every time I show up to the rink, it’s like ‘oh my God, dream come true.'”
Beyond the legend of the “Russian Five,” who helped Detroit capture the 1997 and 1998 Stanley Cup titles, Namestnikov has an everyday reminder of his uncle: Kozlov’s photo on the wall of the Red Wings dressing room.
“I sit directly across from it, so when I look up, I see him,” said Namestnikov. “So it’s very exciting for me, for my family that I’m playing for the Red Wings.”
Vladislav Nametnikov talked today about playing for the same team as his uncle, Slava Kozlov, whose photo is among those on the wall in the Red Wings dressing room. pic.twitter.com/4YHItSX1ib
“The intensity will be high,” Blashill said in a Zoom call Monday with reporters. “Guys understand we have to use these scrimmages as springboards to get ready for the season and get ready for games and to figure out who will be in what spots. We don’t have exhibition games. The intensity will be higher than one of the red and white scrimmages in Traverse City where you have eight more exhibition games three more weeks (before the regular season begins). We’ll treat it as much more serious and get a lot out of it. We’ll use the scrimmage as a good evaluation.”
As NHL camps opened Monday for the 24 teams that took part in the summer’s Return To Play, the Wings — and the six other teams that didn’t qualify — already were on their fourth consecutive day of on-ice practice. The seven teams that didn’t qualify were allowed three extra on-ice days.
The pace and intensity has pleased Blashill, who even feels the Wings are a little further ahead than normal in terms of establishing how they want to play.
With no exhibition games, no traveling around, and the coaching staff setting a schedule of scrimmages and practices, the first week has been effective.
“One thing for sure, generally you get into exhibition season and the exhibition games are god but you don’t get enough practice time as a group,” Blashill said. “From a preparation standpoint, if we could normally have this, when you’re not traveling and keeping the group together, it’s easier to implement your systems quicker. I do think we’re further ahead. We get to choose when to play the exhibitions (scrimmages) and what makes the most sense, and allows us to implement all of our systems on ice or video, prior to playing the scrimmage.”
Here are the Zoom calls held with Red Wings coach Jeff Blashill, defenseman Troy Stecher and forward Vladislav Namestnikov from a little earlier today:
The Detroit Red Wings drafted Michael Rasmussen ninth overall in 2017 because of the offensive ability he displayed as a junior.
Now they have other ideas.
“Ultimately, I think he can become a real big, lockdown-type center that can play against other teams’ best players,” coach Jeff Blashill said. “That could really put him in a position to be an extremely valuable five-on-five player. Then he’s always got the real good net-front ability on the power play.
“So, he’s got two things that he can really separate himself from other guys. Now he’s just got to prove it every day. I think the mental toughness it takes to fight through the number of injuries and frustration is going to be critical for him.”