Fundraising update: time’s ticking down as we make progress

Okay, I wanted to let all of you know where we stand in terms of fundraising:

I’ve got about $740 of the $1,200 I need to pay for the hotel and get up to Traverse City in my Paypal account…

And another $283 in my Venmo account to pay for groceries and about $90 on dry cleaning (my aunt won’t let me leave on a business trip without dry cleaning my clothing, I did use a coupon at least).

So I leave on Wednesday, and I still need to raise about $500 to get out of the driveway and up to Traverse City.

It’s going to take another $1,000 to finish off the $1,980 hotel bill, I’ll need grocery and gas money for the two weeks I’m actually up in TC, and I can’t pay my bills unless we fundraise for the $348.30 that I spent out of my State of Michigan paycheck to fix the Pacifica’s headlight wiring.

Long story long, even when we hit the halfway mark, it’ll be “halfway,” but we’re close and we’re in progress.

If you’re are willing to lend an assist, you can use PayPal at https://paypal.me/TheMalikReport, Venmo at https://venmo.com/george-malik-2, Giftly by using my email, rtxg@yahoo.com, at https://www.giftly.com. And you can contact me via email if you want to send me a paper check.

‘One thing to remember’ about the reloaded Red Wings

Sportsnet’s Rory Boylen posted “one thing to remember” about each and every one of the NHL’s 32 teams as training camps approach, and he offers this tidbit about the Red Wings:

Detroit Red Wings: The rebuilding team that made some winning moves

Entering Year 4 of the Steve Yzerman rebuild, the Red Wings made some surprising veteran additions over the summer. It’s not that this collection of players (Andrew Copp, David Perron, Ben Chiarot, Dominik Kubalik, Olli Maatta) will necessarily be playing leading roles when the Wings emerge, but together add a significant veteran presence and many complementary skills to the young core already in place. The Wings should be harder to play against this season than they have been in a while.

Continued; let’s hope.

Kulfan’s notebook: on Cross Hanas

The Detroit News’s Ted Kulfan wrote a notebook article in which he discusses turning-pro prospect Cross Hanas’ experiences at the Wings’ summer development camp:

Few Red Wings prospects appreciated this summer’s Red Wings development camp like Cross Hanas did. Because of the pandemic, the Wings canceled the camp the past two years. So, Hanas, a 2020 second-round draft pick, actually met many of his fellow prospects in the Wings’ organizations for the first time during July’s camp. It was nice to put an actual face to a name.

“You’re drafted with these guys, but you haven’t met them yet,” Hanas said during the camp. “You’re all in the same situation, trying to make the team and what (staff members) were saying in our meeting is that we’re all pretty much future teammates. So, build some relationships and you’ll have them for a long time.”

That “team” feeling will be in full force this week when the Wings participate in the Prospects Tournament at Traverse City’s Centre Ice Arena. The five-team tournament (Detroit, Toronto, Columbus, St. Louis, Toronto) actually begins Thursday, but the Wings don’t begin playing until facing Columbus at 3 p.m. Friday.

Hanas will be one of the forwards the Wings look to for offense in a lineup that looks deep on defense, but somewhat unproven up front.

A good tournament, plus showing progress during the main training camp and possibly some Wings exhibition games, could set up Hanas, 20, in Grand Rapids to begin his pro career. If there’s no room on the Griffins’ roster, or the organization sees benefit for Hanas to play more junior hockey, then being sent to Portland (WHL) for a fifth junior year is the alternative. Hanas has a plan in his mind for where he wants to be in October.

“I’m going to work toward playing in the AHL,” Hanas siad. “If they (the Wings) end up not wanting me there then I’ll get sent back to Portland for my 20-year-old year. (But) I’m determined to play in the AHL next year for Grand Rapids. I’m ready for that next step coming into pro hockey.”

Continued

Press release: ECHL officials to work Red Wings’ prospect tournament

This is a good thing, per the ECHL:

The ECHL announced on Monday that eight ECHL on-ice officials, along with Director of Officiating Operations Stephen Thomson, will work the 2022 NHL Prospects Tournament in Traverse City, Michigan from Sept. 15-19. This marks the 10th consecutive tournament that ECHL officials have worked games.

Debuting in 1988 with four teams, the NHL Prospects Tournament will feature five clubs this year – Columbus Blue Jackets, Dallas Stars, Detroit Red Wings, St. Louis Blues and Toronto Maple Leafs.

Thomson will be responsible for the selection and scheduling of the officials for each game of the tournament and will assist any playing or rule situation that takes place during the tournament. The officiating staff for the tournament includes four referees and four linesmen.

Continue reading Press release: ECHL officials to work Red Wings’ prospect tournament

DetroitRedWings.com’s Mills discusses defenseman Shai Buium

DetroitRedWings.com’s Jonathan Mills posted an article in which he discusses Red Wings prospect and 2021 draft pick Shai Buium, who said this about having won an NCAA Division 1 hockey championship during his freshman season at the University of Denver:

“I wanna be a role model for the freshmen,” said Buium, who was the Detroit Red Wings’ 36th overall pick in the 2021 NHL Entry Draft. “We have two new incoming defensemen that I want to show them the way, hopefully pick up a bigger role and do the same thing. It’s hard to win, so we’re gonna try to do that again.”

This past season, the 6-foot-3, 209-pound blue line prospect registered 18 points (3-15-18) in 39 games with Denver, including a plus-20 rating. He also was named the NCHC Rookie of the Week on Feb. 14.

“I’m really happy about the way that I’ve developed my defensive game,” Buium said about his 2021-22 campaign. “The coaches and all the other D-men on the team have helped me a lot, especially at the start where you’re learning the new game of college and getting used to it.”

Before stepping on Denver’s campus, Buium tallied four goals and 22 assists in 50 games with the USHL’s Sioux City Musketeers in 2020-21.

The 19-year-old said he views himself as an offensive defenseman.

“I like to get creative in the offensive zone, make plays and try to score goals as much as I can,” Buium said. “But I like to pass the puck.”

Continued

Two prospect items of note from The Athletic

Here are two Red Wings prospect-related items from The Athletic:

  1. The Athletic’s Corey Pronman answered a Red Wings-related question in his prospect mailbag this morning, and I think this one is accurate:

How many prospects, and which ones specifically, do you think will make the Red Wings full-time this season? — Chris C.

Simon Edvinsson I think is 50-50 to make it. Jonatan Berggren has an outside chance but is probably more of a call-up. I think most of their prospects have a better chance of being injury- or performance-issue call-ups rather than stealing a veteran’s job in camp. I could see defensemen like Donovan Sebrango, Albert Johansson or Jared McIsaac getting games if guys go down for example.

Continued (paywall); training camp, injuries and the Wings’ defensive depth = it’s going to be hard for Edvinsson to make the team out of camp, though it could be done.

I agree that Berggren will probably start out later this season as an injury replacement, and we’ll see at least one of the Wings’ Grand Rapids goalies at some point, though I’m not certain whether one views Victor Brattstrom or Jussi Olkinuora as prospects at this point…

2. And The Athletic’s Scott Wheeler posted an article in which he discusses prospects who his assessments misjudged, saying this about the still-developing Joe Veleno:

C Joe Veleno (Detroit Red Wings — No. 30, 2018)
My final draft ranking: No. 13

Ahead of the 2018 draft, you could often find me arguing that Veleno had been doomed by his exceptional status, that the talent around him to that point in Saint John was never going to allow his numbers to pop, and that he was closer to the player who’d produced 21 goals and 59 points in 43 games after the trade to Drummondville than the one who’d posted a still-respectable 31 in 31 to start the year in Saint John.

I loved his skating. I loved the way he pushed pace and played through the middle. I loved his commitment to the defensive zone and the detail that was layered throughout his game. And while I wrote that he didn’t have first-line upside, I felt he had a real good chance to become a second-line centre. But there was also always a chance that his softer skills never got the level they’d need to get to for him to reach a top-six ceiling, and his bottom-six reality today was always a legitimate outcome.

So where he’s landed isn’t one of the surprises of this list to me. I should have adjusted his ranking accordingly, given the likelihood that his skills inside the offensive zone didn’t take off. He was also a January 2000, which placed him on the older side of the draft, so maybe I should have been more cognizant of the fact that he was closer to what he’d been in his time in Saint John rather than being poised for a breakout after what he’d shown in Drummondville. I also think I overemphasized his two-way game. While his work rate is still a part of his game, I’m not sure he’s actually a plus-level player defensively per se.

Continued; ouch. Proclaiming a 22-year-old with one real NHL season to his name a bust is pretty harsh.

Khan speaks with Red Berenson regarding the Summit Series

Ahead of the CBC’s documentary on the 50th anniversary of the Summit Series, Summit 72, which will start airing on Wednesday at 8 PM EDT on Channel 9, MLive’s Ansar Khan spoke with former University of Michigan coach Red Berenson regarding participating in the highly-charged hockey summit between Canada and Russia in 1972:

“Canada was trying to push them around, outmuscle them [early in the series],” Berenson said. “That wasn’t working. They didn’t shy away but they didn’t retaliate, so we’d end up with the penalty. They found a way to get even. They did a lot of kicking your feet out from under you and jabbing with their sticks. When they could, they got their licks in. There definitely was animosity. It just got more emotional as it went.”

Canada coach Harry Sinden faced tough lineup decisions.

“I remember talking to Harry one day and said, ‘Harry, you got to go with the guys that are playing because they’re the ones that are getting better. You can’t keep throwing guys in and expect them to get caught up to the group,’ ” Berenson said. “He settled on a lineup that was the right group and they kept getting better. We put a lot more pressure on (goaltender Vladislav) Tretiak than we did in the first four games.”

It took Canada some time to learn and adjust. Who were their best players? What kind of systems did they play?

“This regrouping and defensemen jumping in from the points and all kinds of back-door plays and one-timers that we didn’t do much in the NHL, it was like a whole different game,” Berenson said.

Continued