Simmons’ profile of Mike Babcock includes takes from Jimmy Devellano, Ken Holland

The Toronto Sun’s Steve Simmons spoke to coaches (both assistants and head coaches) who worked with Mike Babcock and executives who know Babcock well to determine “What makes Mike Babcock tick?” and part of the article involves his tenure with the Red Wings:

“Scotty Bowman was different than Mike and Al (Arbour) was different than Scotty,” said Devellano. “I worked with all three. They’re all different, very effective, very affected, very driven. Mike can be like a race car driver, he only knows one speed and he keeps his foot on the gas all the time. He’s like that so he expects everyone else to be like that. I don’t think he cares whether the players like him or not. He cares about results. Scotty was a lot like that. He didn’t care what you thought of him. Mike has some of that in him.”

In Detroit, where Babcock made his National Hockey League reputation, he became known as a demanding almost obsessive coach, not only to his players but to the Red Wings front office. At times it was thought he tried to coach, play and manage the team all at the same time. He was forever asking the front office for players, demanding change or trades.

“He can be very disrespectful of coaches, players, general managers,” said an NHL executive, who didn’t want to be identified.  “He’s not asking for things sometimes, he’s demanding them. He tries to run the team. He’s not easy to work with.”

Red Wings general manager Ken Holland disagrees. Sort of. He hired Babcock to coach the Wings and the two worked together and became close friends in their 10 years in Detroit . He knows what Babcock is, how good he is at his job, how much of a pain in the butt he can be.

“He’s a great coach,” said Holland. “In life, experience is a good thing. We all get excited about youth. But in the coaching fraternity, experience is very, very valuable. He went from Lethbridge to Moose Jaw to Spokane to the Memorial Cup to World Junior to the American Hockey League. He didn’t get here by accident.

“And he’s consistent. No matter what time you get up on a road trip, you’re going to meet with him at 7 in the morning and we’ll go over the tape from the night before and talk about what our plan is for the next day. It’s relentless, it’s day after day after day and he does it because he believes in it. He does it because he believes in routine and that’s how he lives his life.”

Simmons continues

Talkin’ about Todd Nelson’s NHL prospects

The Hockey News’s Jared Clinton lists Grand Rapids Griffins coach Todd Nelson as a possible candidate to succeed Carolina Hurricanes coach Bill Peters, but Clinton does a good job of explaining why Nelson might not get the chance to audition for the job:

Todd Nelson
Current: Coach, Grand Rapids Griffins (AHL)
Past NHL Experience: Interim coach, Edmonton Oilers; assistant coach, Atlanta Thrashers

Nelson gives the Hurricanes another potential option out of the AHL, but the difference here is that he has experience behind an NHL bench. It’s not much, mind you, but it’s something. For two seasons, from 2008 to 2010, Nelson was an assistant with the Thrashers, and after some excellent work with the Oilers’ farm team, he earned a chance to coach Edmonton on an interim basis. It was only 46 games, but that’s 46 games more than Keefe or Brind’Amour. Nelson has really turned some heads in recent years, too, coaching the Griffins to the 2016-17 Calder Cup. Here’s the catch, though: will Detroit let Nelson interview for the gig? The past two seasons have been dreadful under coach Jeff Blashill, and if the coming campaign isn’t much better, Nelson might be next in line for the Detroit job.

I’m assuming that Rod Brind’Amour will get the Canes’ gig, and I’m sure that Nelson will be in the running for other coaching positions, but his lack of NHL experience–and the Wings’ possible desire to keep him in the fold for one more year–yield a probable return behind the Griffins’ bench.

Russian Five film earns award at Free Press Film Festival (plus some distribution news)

According to the Free Press’s staff, Joshua Riehl’s film chronicling the story of the Red Wings’ Russian Five earned an award at the Free Press Film Festival–and the Free Press also reveals some distribution news regarding the Russian Five film:

Spirit of Michigan Award

This award honors the movie that best exemplifies the state of Michigan’s spirit of ingenuity and creativity — both in filmmaking quality and topic. It was chosen by a Freep Film Festival jury.

The recipient was “The Russian Five,” the festival’s opening night film that went on to sell out three screenings during the weekend. “Port Huron native and director Joshua Riehl worked for years to gain access to high-profile NHL players, acquire all the necessary archival footage and craft this truly inspirational hometown story, making it an obvious choice for this award,” said Kieliszewski.

“It is an absolute honor to be awarded the Spirit of Michigan Award by the Freep Film Festival for ‘The Russian Five’! When people think of the spirit of Michigan (and Detroit) they think of hard-working, industrious people who persevere through life’s adversities and I can’t think of a better way to describe the story of the Russian Five and our incredible team’s efforts in bringing this documentary to the big screen,” said director Riehl. “We had an absolute blast premiering the documentary at Freep Film Festival, and the fans’ outpouring of love and support is something that I will cherish for the rest of my career.”

According to the film’s producers, “The Russian Five” will continue its festival run through the summer and is exploring options for distribution, while looking into creative ways to bring the film to fans.

Continued

Howard at the bat, I mean pitcher’s mound

This is a bit of a fluff entry, but sometimes you’ve got to change it up. Red Wings goaltender Jimmy Howard threw out the first pitch at today’s Tigers game (Tweets via the Red Wings), and he did…okay…

Prior to throwing out the first pitch, he sat down for a short interview with Fox Sports Detroit’s Trevor Thompson:

 

Griffins’ Game Day Preview video sets up Game 2 of Griffins-Moose series

Here’s the Grand Rapids Griffins’ Game Day Preview video ahead of today’s game against the Manitoba Moose (3 PM EDT on the AHL Live and ESPN 96.1 FM):

Update: Here are some game notes from the AHL’s “Morning Skate” story:

After its first third-period rally of the season, Manitoba brings a 1-0 series lead into Game 2 against Grand Rapids today… Michael Spacek‘s goal with 1:09 remaining capped a three-goal final frame and lifted the Moose to a 3-2 win of the Griffins yesterday… Manitoba was 0-18-2-2 in the regular season — one of two AHL teams without a win — when trailing after 40 minutes… Eric Comrie, one of 12 Moose players making his Calder Cup Playoff debut in Game 1, finished with 34 saves… Jan Kostalek and Cameron Schilling also scored for Manitoba, and Chase De Leo recorded two assists… Kostalek’s goal at 6:22 of the third period ended a Moose drought of 225:29 without a goal against Grand Rapids at Bell MTS Place… Ben Street and Turner Elson had the goals for the Griffins… Tom McCollum got the start for Grand Rapids and stopped 28 shots… The Griffins outshot Manitoba 36-31 for the game, including 20-8 in the first period.

Alumni news: Wings’ Alumni to raise funds for Ted Lindsay Foundation on April 29th; Alumni-Toledo Police video; McCarty the comedian

Of Red Wings Alumni-related note today:

1. WDIV’s Von Lozon reports that the Wings’ Alumni team will be playing a charity game in Fraser to benefit the Ted Lindsay Foundation:

Members of UAW-Ford and former members of the Detroit Red Wings will take the ice in hopes of raising money to benefit a great cause.

The charity hockey game takes place at 2 p.m. Sunday, April 29 at Fraser Hockey Land — 34400 Utica Road in Fraser. One-hundred percent of proceeds go towards the Ted Lindsay Foundation for Autism, an organization created in 2001 by former Red Wing Ted Lindsay, and John Czarnecki, who is the father of a son with autism. The foundation has raised more than $3 million since being founded, according to its website.

Former Red Wings expected to play include Kris Draper, Kirk Maltby, Joe Kocur, Darren McCarty and more.

A 30-minute autograph session will take place before the game begins. The “Spike” Monster Truck will also be on display and concessions will be open.

Continued (with an embedded video of John Ogrodnick and UAW representative Angelo Sacino discussing the event)…

2. The Red Wings’ alums took on the Toledo Police on Saturday, per WTOL 11:

News, Weather, Sports, Toledo, OH
3. And this note from the County Times is real:

Red Wings legend Darren McCarty and his favorite Michigan comedians will keep the crowd laughing on Friday, April 27 in The Mezz located at Louie’s Sports Tavern and Polar Palace.

Audience members must prepare themselves as McCarty takes off the gloves and shares a night of stories and laughs. The show also features a Q& A and wraps with a Meet and Greet with McCarty in Louie’s Sports Tavern.

Also appearing on stage is local comedian Dustin Cole.

Tickets are $20 in advance and $25 at the door. The show beings at 8 p.m.

For tickets or details, call 810-358-7024.

The Mezz is at 3301 Davison Rd., Lapeer.

Prospect playoff roundup: Sambrook’s Greyhounds take 2-0 lead over Kitchener; Rasmussen’s empty-netter helps Tri-City tie WHL WCF

Of prospect-related playoff note:

In the OHL, Jordan Sambrook had an assist and finished at +1 on 1 shot as the Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds won 4-2 over the Kitchener Rangers on Saturday night.

Givani Smith finished at -2 with 3 shots for Kitchener, which trails the OHL’s Western Conference Final series 2 games to 0;

And in the WHL, empty-netters count toward scoring streaks. Michael Rasmussen scored the empty-net insurance goal, finishing even with 3 shots as his Tri-City Americans won 5-3 over the Everett Silvertips.

Tri-City tied the WHL’s Western Conference Final at 1 game apiece.

Grand Rapids Griffins lose 3-2 to Moose in opener of best-of-5 1st-round series

Updated 5x with both teams’ recaps at 9:57 PM: The Grand Rapids Griffins dropped the first game of their best-of-five series against the Manitoba Moose, losing 3-2 in Winnipeg on Saturday afternoon.

The teams will battle again on Sunday at 3 PM EDT (on The AHL Live and ESPN 96.1 FM).

Here’s a quick summary of Saturday’s game’s events, with much more to come as the Griffins and Moose (and their respective press corps) file their recaps:

Continue reading Grand Rapids Griffins lose 3-2 to Moose in opener of best-of-5 1st-round series

Frans Nielsen in the Danish spotlight ahead of Denmark-hosted World Championship

Frans Nielsen is headlining the Danish ice hockey team as the Danes host the World Championship next month, and the Danish media’s spotlighting their first export to the NHL.

Politiken.dk posted a subscriber-only interview with Nielsen today, and, via Faceoff.dk’s Michael Sovso, Denmark’s TV2 aired what looks like a very good interview with/profile of Nielsen:

 

Duff: The Daniels family shares son’s story of opioid addiction before congress

According to Hockeybuzz’s Bob Duff, Red Wings play-by-play announcer Ken Daniels’ ex-wife testified before a congressional committee recently to discuss her son Jamie’s passing due to opioid addiction:

“December 7, 2016 will forever be the most difficult day for all of us,” Lisa Daniels told Congress. “That is the day we found out our beautiful son Jamie had died. Rumors surrounding his death circulated throughout our community, but Jamie’s story is not what anyone expected.”

Ken Daniels has willingly shared his son’s tragic tale with the public in the hopes that it will perhaps save the life of someone else who is struggling with addiction. Ken opened up about the tragedy via an E:60 documentary on ESPN and he and Lisa have formed the Jamie Daniels Foundation. Ken makes speaking appearances to tell their story and also utilizes the book we wrote together, If These Walls Could Talk: Detroit Red Wings as a fundraiser and a way to increase awareness of the evils not only of opioid addiction, but also to reveal the cottage industry that has developed to prey on the vulnerability of those battling to beat addiction.

Lisa Daniels spoke of how many times they watched Jamie relapse in his addiction to opioids, and how there seemed to be little in place in the way of aftercare for addicts seeking to kick the habit.

“We finally found help from a psychologist in Michigan, who at Jamie’s lowest point recommended he move to an inpatient treatment center in Florida,” Lisa explained. “After spending 10 days in the hospital in Michigan going through detox, where they weaned him off all the medication he was taking, less than 24 hours later he was on a plane to Florida.”

Duff continues, and again, this is a hard subject to discuss, but it’s very important as so many regular people suffer from opioid addiction.