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Tampa Bay’s Jon Cooper takes shot at Detroit’s Derek Lalonde

The Tampa Bay Lightning are on the ropes in their Round 1 Stanley Cup Playoffs series against the Toronto Maple Leafs, having lost two straight games on home ice in overtime, in which both of them they held the lead. Former Conn Smythe Trophy winning goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy has been extremely human in the postseason, sporting a completely uncharacteristic 4.33 goals against average and .856 save percentage.

One particular figure who is no longer with the organization but knows Vasilevskiy well is current Detroit Red Wings bench boss Derek Lalonde, who served as an assistant with the Lightning for four years and helped them to consecutive Stanley Cup titles. Lalonde is currently serving as an analyst on Sportsnet for the 2023 postseason, and had this to say about the Russian goaltender’s struggles: 

“We had done a study back in the day,” Lalonde explained, that revealed he is “one of the lower percentage goalies in finding pucks from the point. So we actually changed our entire D-zone and improved our pass rush.”

The Leafs have taken advantage of beating Vasilevskiy from the point in this series, including Morgan Rielly’s overtime winner in Game 3 that was fired from barely inside the blue line. But Cooper apparently wasn’t pleased with his former assistant’s assertion, and pushed back on it with the implication that it’s just something he made up.

“I heard about it. Listen, Sportsnet is paying him well to go give an opinion, so he has to make something up about that kind of stuff,” Cooper said. 

“We are playing, so we can’t watch what is going on. He is there because he was an assistant coach on this team. He is trying to offer insight and give the fans something. He should be doing that. It’s just making sure it’s accurate in what he is saying.”

It sounds like Cooper wasn’t very receptive to Lalonde’s view! We’ll see if Cooper, Vasilevskiy and the rest of the Lightning can stave off elimination when they take on the Leafs tomorrow night from Scotiabank Arena. 

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Report: Red Wings defenseman looking to return to Europe

While the version of the Detroit Red Wings that hits the ice this fall for the 2023-24 NHL season has yet to be officially decided in terms of names on the roster, it appears as though one name from this most recent season that may not be back with the team will come from the blue line.

According to Swedish news reports, defenseman Gustav Lindstrom is allegedly looking to play next season overseas. 

The 24-year-old Lindstrom was selected by the Red Wings with the 38th overall pick in the 2017 NHL Entry Draft, and appeared in 36 games during the 2022-23 season, scoring once while adding seven assists along with a -16 rating. He’s a veteran of 128 career NHL games, all with Detroit, and has a total of two goals and 23 assists along with a -33 rating. 

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Four teams chosen to play in Europe for Global Series

The NHL is once again taking things international next season, and earlier today unveiled the teams who will be taking on one another in Sweden. 

The NHL announced that the Detroit Red Wings, Toronto Maple Leafs, Ottawa Senators, and Minnesota Wild all will be doing battle in Stockholm from November16-19. The Red Wings and Senators will kick things off on November 16, followed by the Red Wings and Maple Leafs on November 17. Subsequently, the Wild and Senators will play on November 18, and capped off by the Maple Leafs facing the Wild on November 19.

For the Red Wings, this will be their first international games since they began the 2009-10 season with two straight matchups against the St. Louis Blues in Sweden. 

Swedish natives include Minnesota’s Jonas Brodin, Joel Eriksson Ek and Filip Gustavsson, Ottawa’s Erik Brannstrom and Anton Forsberg, Detroit’s Lucas Raymond and Jonatan Berggren, and Toronto’s William Nylander. 

“A lot of the people that may go to this for the first time in Australia are going because it’s an event — a North American professional sport is playing in Australia — and what we need to do is convince them that this is a sport worth following, that it’s fun, it’s interesting, it’s the kind of sport they can get involved in,” explained the NHL’s senior executive VP of media and international strategy David Proper said. “In a place like Sweden, you’re really dealing at a different level. You’re not trying to explain the sport. You’re trying to polish the sport and the brand to the fanbase there and get casual fans to become avid fans.”

Sweden isn’t the only international destination the NHL is headed for next season, as Los Angeles Kings and Arizona Coyotes are going to be playing a pair of exhibition games in Melbourne, Australia, in September.

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Red Wings fans will like Lucas Raymond’s outlook for next season

Detroit Red Wings forward Lucas Raymond is looking to recapture some of the swagger that earned him considerable attention in the 2022 Calder Trophy race that ultimately went to teammate Moritz Seider. 

His stats would dip in his second NHL season to 45, 12 less than the 57 he scored as a rookie. While he did miss eight games with injury, the Red Wings would like to see him continue his development and turn into a more reliable offensive producer.

And according to Raymond, he plans on continuing to put in work in the gym to get better on the ice. 

“Coming up in the Frolunda program, that’s always been a big focus, to get stronger and bigger and get to that level,” Raymond said. “I’m young, my body is still developing. The gym is going to be a big part for me this summer to get bigger and stronger but don’t lose my agility on the ice. I think that combination is huge.”

Head coach Derek Lalonde didn’t outright say that Raymond experienced the “sophomore slump”, but instead focused on the fact that there is still ample room for growth as he gets ready for his third NHL campaign. 

“The fact that he’s never seen the American Hockey League — he jumped right into the National Hockey League — I don’t think people respect how hard that is,” Lalonde said. “You can’t think it’s just going to keep growing steadily. He probably went through some bumps and bruises. He went through some sicknesses this year. That’s just part of being a young kid in this league.

“He’s still so fresh and raw in his development. There’s still a ton of growth for his ceiling and this summer will be another step toward it.”

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Dylan Larkin says Red Wings must toughen up

Detroit Red Wings fans were riding high and dreaming of a postseason spot after an incredible late February 4-1 road swing that included victories over the Edmonton Oiler and Calgary Flames, followed by a complete victory at home over the contending New York Rangers.

But then, Detroit ran into a brick wall in the form of goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy. The Russian superstar made 45 saves in a Herculean shutout effort in late February, stealing the game for the Tampa Bay Lightning. But it was two straight brutal losses against the Atlantic Division rival Ottawa Senators that essentially sealed Detroit’s fate of once again being a seller at the Trade Deadline. 

Not only did Detroit lose the back to back series against Ottawa by a combined score of 12-3, but they were completely outmatched physically and offered little pushback, even when yapping Senators captain Brady Tkachuk challenged the Red Wings bench. 

General manager Steve Yzerman talked about the need to be a more physical team to play against next year in his end-of-season media remarks, and it wasn’t long before captain Dylan Larkin echoed his sentiments. 

“There were plenty of times this year I felt guys took liberties,” Larkin said earlier today. “Whoever it was, whatever their role on the other team — their tough guys — they kind of had free nights. I think that’s something that needs to be addressed, to have an answer to that.”

To Larkin’s credit, he’s shown absolutely no hesitation to mix it up with the opposition. Understandably, Detroit wouldn’t be fond of their captain and top player risking injury by fighting. And while the team did add much-needed grit last offseason in the form of Ben Chiarot, more pushback is needed. 

“You can’t have Mo Seider step up and look over his shoulder all night,” Larkin said. “But in terms of playing competitive games, where it’s just battling and competing, I think we’re there. The Ottawa games were more so where those tough guys were running around and we didn’t have an answer for it.”

“But when we stuck together, when we played hard, guys blocked shots — we had countless injuries with broken bones and guys doing it the whole season. So I thought we really competed together and you saw scrums and guys were in there together, sticking up for each other.”

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Red Wings’ Robby Fabbri delivers crucial health update

The Detroit Red Wings lost forward Robby Fabbri last month during a game against the Chicago Blackhawks to what was clearly a lower body injury; that was especially concerning given the fact that Fabbri has suffered a torn ACL at multiple points during his career. In fact, he missed the first half of this season while recovering from offseason surgery to correct the torn ACL he suffered nearly a year ago. 

It wouldn’t be long afterward that the team would announce that Fabbri would be finished for the remainder of the regular season. The organization and fan base are certainly hoping that Fabbri will be healthy enough to start next season. 

The good news is that according to Fabbri himself, that shouldn’t be a problem at all. 

“For sure, ready for Day 1 in camp,” Fabbri said. “This is a little quicker rehab for sure.

“I’m back training right now. We’re just slowly ramping everything up. Obviously, there’s no rush in the rehab process right now with having the summer here but we’re slowly ramping it up in the gym, doing everything – upper body, lower body, biking – and the knee’s feeling good, so we’re in a good spot.”

Fabbri also explained that if Detroit were in the playoffs, he’d be playing.

“I can definitely tell you if playoffs were starting this week, I’d be playing one way or another.”

In the 28 games that Fabbri played in this season, he lit the lamp seven times along with adding nine assists and 22 PIM. In 330 career NHL games split between the St. Louis Blues and Red Wings, he’s racked up a total of 80 goals with 88 assists. 

Originally acquired from the St. Louis Blues in November of 2019 in exchange for checking forward Jacob de la Rose, Fabbri just completed the first season of a three year, $12 million extension he inked to stay with the team. 

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Dylan Larkin has good news for Red Wings fans

The Detroit Red Wings have completed the fourth year of what they like to refer to as the “Yzerplan”, named for beloved former team captain and current general manager Steve Yzerman. And while the good news is that the team did make progress in the recently completed 2022-23 NHL season, the bad news is that they once again finished outside of the postseason, making it seven straight years of being unable to compete for the Stanley Cup. 

For captain Dylan Larkin, who was re-signed to a lengthy eight year contract extension by the team earlier this year, he believes that they’ve set the wheels in motion for a return to postseason play next year. 

“There was a lot of new this year, a lot of new players coming in, a lot of us trying to build chemistry, everyone trying to figure each other out, figure out where they are on the team and in the lineup,” Larkin said. “We had injuries to start camp and hopefully next year we won’t be in that position, and we can really push each other and have a great camp and start the year great.”

“We heard a lot now about Steve’s plan and the direction this is going, where this wasn’t really the year and he wanted to make moves for the future,” Larkin said. “It was very difficult after the trade deadline. We took 4-5 guys out of the lineup, had key injuries.

“But there were plenty of times I felt with the younger players and guys we brought in in the summer, this thing is headed in the right direction. As much as you think about next year you think with the young players coming into our lineup, it’s a much better environment for them to succeed. That’s what I’m really excited about.” 

Because Detroit will have had a full season of getting used to playing in head coach Derek Lalonde’s system, Larkin believes that they’ll be able to have an even quicker start to the year next season.

“Newsy’s been saying it to us the last couple weeks, we’re going to start on the 50-yard line and we’re going to be familiar with each other, familiar with the system, and I think that’s huge.”

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Michael Rasmussen provides critical health update

The Detroit Red Wings were riding high in late February, officially occupying a Wild Card postseason spot while threatening to even move up further in the standings thanks to winning four of five on a western road trip while also returning home and taking down the powerful New York Rangers. It almost seemed like the postseason drought was about to be over. 

However, things immediately began to fall off the rails after they were unable to beat Tampa Bay Lightning goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy on February 25, firing 45 shots on goal but being unable to sneak one past the former Conn Smythe Trophy winner. But that wasn’t the biggest loss of the evening.

Forward Michael Rasmussen was injured when he blocked a shot from Lightning defenseman Zach Bogosian, breaking his kneecap and putting him on the shelf for the remainder of the regular season. His absence in the lineup was immediately felt, especially in Detroit’s next two games against the division rival Ottawa Senators in which they were outscored and outclassed physically. 

“It was obviously frustrating, tough with where things were at with the team, how well everyone was playing,” Rasmussen said today. “It was upsetting to watch and not be out there with the guys.

“Just got to focus on getting myself back to 100 percent and pick up where I left off.”

The good news for Rasmussen is that he’s on track to be 100% healthy for training camp in September, and is only a short time away from being able to resume his normal summer workouts.

He explained that GM Steve Yzerman’s message to him was to “be hungry, get after it this summer and take another step.”

“There’s more improvement that needs to be had and can be had,” he said. “I just got to have a great summer and keep working on my body, keep working on different things on the ice as far as what’ll make my game go to even another level.”

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Grand Rapids Griffins announce major changes

Both the Detroit Red Wings and their American Hockey League affiliate Grand Rapids Griffins have concluded their seasons, and the latter has made the choice to undergo some big time changes in team personnel. 

This afternoon, the Griffins announced on Twitter that they are parting ways with several members of the coaching staff, including head coach Ben Simon, assistant coaches Matt Macdonald, Todd Krygier and goaltending development coach Brian Mahoney-Wilson.

“Grand Rapids Griffins general manager and Detroit Red Wings assistant general manager Shawn Horcoff announced today that the Red Wings will not renew the contracts of Griffins head coach Ben Simon, assistant coaches Matt MacDonald and Todd Krygier, and goaltending development coach Brian Mahoney-Wilson.” 

Simon took over as the 11th head coach in Griffins history in 2018 after having already served three years as an assistant coach under Todd Nelson. 

Grand Rapids finished with a record of 28-36-4-4 this season. 

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Steve Yzerman: “I’m okay with where we’re at”

The Detroit Red Wings have completed the fourth year of what they like to refer to as the “Yzerplan”, named for beloved former team captain and current general manager Steve Yzerman. And while the good news is that the team did make progress in the recently completed 2022-23 NHL season, the bad news is that they once again finished outside of the postseason, making it seven straight years of being unable to compete for the Stanley Cup. 

It was Yzerman who cautioned fans upon his return to Hockeytown in April of 2019 that it wasn’t going to be a quick transition from rebuilders to Cup contenders, and we’re seeing that first hand. Yzerman said as much that it was obvious that they weren’t ready to compete in the postseason after back to back embarrassing losses to the Atlantic Division rival Ottawa Senators by a combined 12-3 score in late February, and made the decision to sell off assets at the Trade Deadline in the form of Tyler Bertuzzi, Filip Hronek, Oskar Sundqvist, Filip Hronek and Jakub Vrana.

Yzerman met with media members this afternoon at Little Caesars Arena, and stated that while he does wish that things could be farther along in the rebuilding process, that he’s “okay” with his team’s current standing in the NHL. 

“It’s gone okay,” he said when asked to review his first four years on the job. “I would love to be further ahead in the process, but again, I started out four years ago saying that it would take time and that we need to be patient. We’re trying to draft well and accumulate more draft picks, and time will tell if we’ve drafted well, that’s the reality. It’s a slow process, and I would love to sit here and say I”m thrilled with where we’re at and how things have gone the last four seasons. I’ve been pleased with some of the development of our draft prospects, and others are taking longer or haven’t quite turned out to this point what we hoped, but that’s okay. I fully believe in where we sit here today from four years ago.” 

Detroit was dealt two serious blows almost immediately right off the bat this season, with Tyler Bertuzzi breaking his hand in the second game of the year and then subsequently breaking his other hand after missing six weeks with the initial injury. And of course, fans won’t soon forget the saga involving Vrana in which he entered the NHLPA Player Assistance Program for an undisclosed personal matter and then playing sparingly with the Red Wings upon his reinstatement. 

But for now, it sounds as though Yzerman is going to continue to stay the course, regardless of how long it takes while also noting the progress of the young players on the team. 

“I’m not disappointed at where we’re at, I guess I’m okay with it. But I intend to stick with the process and the plan. Nothing is going to dramatically change, we’re going to continue looking for opportunities to expedite the process. That’s difficult to do, but we’ll continue to do it. I guess four years in, I’m okay with where we’re at. I’m hoping to see more improvement and we started to see some of it. Last year we had Lucas and Moritz come in, and this year we got games from Berggren and Michael Rasmussen who was drafted prior to me getting here. Joe Veleno is slowly increasing his role and having a bigger impact. We’re gradually moving some of the younger players in.” 

“I’m okay where we’re at. Like all of you, I wish we were further ahead as well.” 

When asked how he intends to replace the lost offense of Bertuzzi and Vrana heading into next season, Yzerman acknowledged that while he’ll be taking a look at the free agent market, he’s also looking for additional contributions from the players already on the roster.” 

“Again, we’ll look at the free-agent market to potentially replace some of the offense. I hope within our own team, we get more production out of some of our younger players that will be taking on a bigger role. 

“Going back to the players we moved at the deadline, I obviously knew at that time there were going to be holes in our roster, and are prepared to deal with that. Truthfully, I may not be able to address all of those in the offseason, it may not be possible. Some of our young guys may not be ready and players in free agency might not be available. But it was still something that had to be done, whether it was at the deadline or this offseason.”