Friday, December 28, 2012

In Case You Were Forgetting... Part 2

This is the second week that I have decided to remember just what I, and presumably all of you out there, love about hockey. I know that what I love is the pace, the beautiful goals, the passing and the game. What I don't love is when the players and the owners are so dumb that they lost half of the season already and are on the verge of losing the entirety of the season for the second time in eight years. Another post for another time, I assure you...

Now, to the videos. :)

1. Patrick Roy Statue of Liberty play:
This should not be a surprise on the list. Roy was, and is, an integral part of my hatred for Colorado. There's more to it but, I hate Roy and you should too... This makes me happier. It never gets old, by the way.

2. Fight Night at The Joe:
I think this one is self explanatory. No more words, just video...



3. Darren McCarty... He Fights, He Scores:
OT Goal from March 26, 1997. Again, no explanation necessary.


{Side Note} I wasn't planning on this pattern of Wings/Avs moments but since we're already there...

4. Pasha Tried Something and Failed:
Pavel Datsyuk tried to flip the puck into the net from behind it. He failed because of some stick work from an Avalanche player but the fact that he tried is awesome in and of itself.


5.  Datsyuk Undresses Peter Budaj:
Once again, watching Red Wings highlights on youtube make me miss Pavel Datsyuk. This one is awesome.




Well, those are my five this week. Boo Colorado, Go Wings!

Until this stupid lockout is over, Go Griffins!


Tuesday, December 18, 2012

In Case You All Were Forgetting Why We Love Hockey...

Here's Some Videos To Remind You Why Hockey Is Awesome.

Every week, until this dumb lockout ends, I will give you guys some of my favorite hockey highlights, hockey porn as Michelle and Joseph like to call it. I will admit, I am very heavily biased towards Red Wings highlights but, here we go...

Video One:
Football (soccer) announcers are dubbed over hockey highlights. It makes me laugh every time, I think it's the Bernini sculpture reference. You should laugh too :) 


Video Two:
This one's for Michelle. She loves Loui Eriksson, I have to agree. He's one player I would give up a lot for. Debate me if you want, I'm open to all hockey discussion.


Video Three:
This one is in Swedish but it's a great Kronwall-ing. I really miss this. If you can, look at the guy on the bench, his face is priceless. If you can't see it, I'll give you a picture. I wish we could see this on Detroit ice soon...


Ouch! Look at the guy on the left...


























Video Four:
This is probably my favorite "Jimmeh!" moment from the last few seasons... Kopitar penalty shot is denied by Howie and Howie just throws the puck away, like nothing happened. Jimmy Howard is a beast and I love Jimmy Howard, that's all I got to say about that.


Video Five:
Stick tap to Winging It In Motown for letting me know this exists... Datsyuk had a hat trick in the Russia vs. Czech game in the Channel One Cup. His first goal is great (2:30ish), his second goal is great (5:20ish), his third (8:00) made me laugh because someone thought it was a good idea to pass cross ice with Datsyuk on the ice. News flash: It's not -- He'll score 9.9 times out of 10.

Well, until next week... Those are my five. 

One piece of advice: if you truly miss hockey as much as I do, there are other places to find it than the NHL. Go to a few AHL games, it's the same game and it's just as much fun or more :)

Go Red W... Oops, Go Griffins!

Saturday, December 8, 2012

December 7th... Griffins Win 3-0 and I Get Two Hockey Sticks

Going to a game at the Allstate Arena in Chicago means that you will most likely be one of a handful of Griffins fans, surrounded by Chicago fans. Let me tell you, it's always a great time at games in Chicago, especially if you aren't a fan of the home team.

Here's the rundown, along with some things that are fun:

The Wolves had a kinda cool pyrotechnics show for their players to skate out to. Of course, lots of cheering and lots of booing when the Griffins skated out.

First Period: McCollum made some great saves and I was pretty impressed with his goaltending, maybe Mrazek is keeping him motivated to improve. I must admit though, when I found out it wasn't Mrazek, I was a little disappointed. It was much the same disappointment as when I found out Conklin would be in goal on my birthday last year, we won that one too. The Wolves' one and only power play of the game came when Mini Chicken Parm, Ferraro, got booted for interference. The PK went to work and shut it down. Grand Rapids really carried the play the first period and I was sitting by their bench, so not much was down by me. I took that as a great thing because down by me was Tom McCollum and the place where I wanted no hockey puck to end up, the back of the Griffins net. There was an ALMOST goal late in the first, would have made it 1-0 good guys, Joakim Andersson appeared to have scored but, turned out he kick it in and you can't do that if you want the goal to count. GR also had a PP in the first, nothing came of it and at that point it really seemed that goalie Matt Climie was keeping Chicago in the game. By the end of the first, GR had outshot the Wolves 15-5.
End 1st period: Nothing but a couple of goose eggs :)

Second Period: 50 seconds into the second frame, Chicago took a penalty and ten seconds later they paid for it. Nathan Paetsch fed Adam Almquist and Almquist took it from there, one timed it past the goalie and in after deflecting off a Chicago defender. Same story here, Griffins carried the play this period and Chicago didn't get a shot on goal for 10 minutes.
End Period: Good Guys 1 - Chicago 0

Third Period: The Griffins had a shot advantage of 26-9 going into the final frame and they were not going to let that stop them from adding to their lead. Four minutes and some change into the period, Andersson found Ferraro who shot the puck right into the goalie, Andersson went in for the rebound though and it paid off for him. 2-0 Griffins. Brendan Smith got checked in the corner, broke his stick and was disgusted with the fact that it happened. He got a new one and all went on from there. A mere two minutes after the Griffins drew blood the second time, they got a third on a beautiful play by Nyquist and Tatar (The Souse - Thanks Kevin). Sousequist made it 3-0 Good Guys, and I got to gloat to the not so nice women beside us.
End Game: Griffins 3 - Chicago 0

Lets talk about my favorite players:
Nyquist: Great all night, looked like a true NHL player. Darn lockout!
Tatar: Man, am I impressed with him. That guy is a serious difference maker out there! All night I was looking at my dad every time there was a great play and then I realized that most times Tatar was right in the middle of it!
Mrazek: He was charting face-offs all night... :(
Smith: He played very well. Made good defensive choices and didn't try to stretch himself too far. He was really disgusted with his broken stick.

  • Near the end of the second period, the GR equipment manager said after the game he'd give me a stick and started pointing out sticks. I must have nodded extra vigorously when he pointed to Smith because he decided on that one. The thing is though, it broke in the third period. He looked at me all sad and mouthed "it's broken, still want it?" and of course I said yes. He taped the two pieces together and tossed them over the glass. Broken B. Smith stick now in my possession? YEAH!!! 
  • The woman sitting next to us said she wouldn't want the Brendan Smith stick as her kids were so jealous. My dad goes, that's a Brendan Smith stick, without the lockout, he'd be an NHLer. She goes "pfft, I still don't want it." My thought: Your loss, and you're dumb!
  • B.Smith and Nyquist both smiled at me... No pictures of either one but, it happened I swear :)
  • The equipment manager obviously felt bad about the fact that the stick he promised me was broken because the next thing I knew, Souse's stick is coming over the glass to me. I could not stop smiling and the kids next to us were jealous again. Ferraro had thrown them a puck but, a puck is not the same as two, TWO(!), game used sticks! My mom looked at them and, being her adorable self, said "You don't want that, your mom said so..."
  • After the game, Chicago fan told me to go back to Grand Rapids... The thing is though is that I'm not from Grand Rapids, I live here. Whoops! I guess I just know who the better team is.

Friday, November 16, 2012

In Which I Agonize Over Which Games and Moments Are My Favorites

... and least favorites but, we'll get to that later.

Inspired by the "Dollar Hot Dog Power Hour" podcast with MikeKevin, and Michelle (special guest Peter - Octopus Thrower), I have decided  my favorite Wings memories must be shared. Although they shared the ones that they were in attendance for, I think I'll just share my favorite, and least favorite, moments over the life of my Wings fandom.

Here they are (I'll go in chronological order):


  1. Since I was 4 when the Wings won the Cup in 1997, I was not really supposed to be up watching hockey with my dad but... I was. I remember leaning up against my dad during the second period and dozing a little (I was four, gimme a break). My dad woke me up just in time for DMac's second period goal. I was so pumped that I stayed awake for the rest of the game. I remember being so tired by the end that I started to daze and then they brought out The Cup. For the next while, I was so excited that all my parents' friends and my brother's friends were mad at me because I live in Chicago. No one here was at all happy with that, which leads me to....
  2. The Cup win in 1998. I was five then and my dad wanted me to stay up with him, so I did. I remember my dad looking at me in disbelief, with sheer joy, saying "They're gonna win it all again. I knew we could do it for Vladdy." I watched them win and I, again, annoyed the Chicagoans with my happiness. To this day, it still gets dusty when I see the Cup presentation and Vladdy.
  3. In 2002, my family had a skybox for a couple games a year (at the United Center, I live in Chicago). It was so much fun and for a while, it was the only way I got to see my Wings live. I got to see some great players that way. A few times, I saw Steve Yzerman score at the United Center... everyone was so upset and I was on cloud nine for a long time each time. For that reason, that is one of my favorite memories.
  4. Then, we won the Cup (again) in 2002. That was fun :)
  5. (LEAST) Then the lockout happened... I hated the league.
  6. (LEAST) In 2006, Oh Captain, My Captain Steve Yzerman retired. :(
  7. Then, we won the Cup (again) in 2008... That was fun too :) Nicklas Lidstrom 1st European-born/trained Captain to win!
  8. (LEAST) Then, there may, or may not, have been playoffs in 2009... Come to think of it, I really don't think there were.
  9. (LEAST) In 2011, I saw a few Wings v Hawks games, both losses, one in Detroit and one in Chicago. I enjoyed them but.... WE LOST.... 
  10. Then, in 2012, I saw a few Wings games. One on my birthday, it was definitely a great day. I woke up and opened a Jimmy Howard jersey present. That is when I knew something was up. For a while, my dad had been saying that we were doing something special on my birthday. I knew there was a Wings/Hawks game and I really wanted tickets. We went out to dinner, my dad and I, and started driving down to the United Center. I was so excited. Then, we got to the game and Conklin started. I wasn't sure how well this would go. We were down 2-0 at the end of one. By the 3rd, it was knotted at 2 and it was through most of OT. Then, Pavel Datsyuk happened. Then, Franzen happened. Then, on the way home EddieO and Steve Foley were complaining on the radio it was so great and entertaining. Definitely a favorite.
  11. (LEAST) Lidstrom retired and then there was a lockout. 
Okay, there they are... I think I'm gonna go find some hockey.

Monday, November 5, 2012

A Transition from Anger to Apathy

  My dad once told me that I heard the Wings goal horn from inside the womb. That is how long I have been a Wings fan. My fandom's intensity has ebbed and flowed throughout the years but it has never gone away. I have always known that I could come back to hockey and it would be there for me to enjoy. I have always been the weird kid all throughout my schooling who is from Chicago but, has a love unlike any other for the Detroit Red Wings and all other sports from the D. Then, in 2004, the NHL locked the players out and I lost the only live hockey experience I'd ever known. I was lucky enough to be sharing a skybox at the United Center with a few other families, or something like that, and when the last lockout happened, we got rid of it. We never have liked the Blackhawks, and never will, but it was the our way to see our Wings in Chicago a few times a year. (I am very lucky to have had that experience and I'm not expecting sympathy for losing it.) 

  We, as hockey fans, lost an entire season 8 years ago and going into this summer I thought, "They would never do that again, not after the record gains they've been championing..." It turns out, I was wrong.  I sincerely hope that we get hockey back this year but if we don't, I'm really not sure how much I care. I will find other ways to get my hockey fix. I've always considered myself a hockey fan first and then a Wings fan. Will this lockout change that? Probably not. 
   
  Congratulations NHL, you've made this diehard fan, apathetic. Come back, or don't. At this point, I'm really not sure I care. I will most likely be back but, I don't know that I will ever have that obsessed, crazed fan persona anymore. I may catch a game when I can but, it will most likely not be appointment television. 

Call me when you, both players and owners, are done being idiots... You might want to call with a very large apology, you have a very large amount to explain. 

Friday, November 2, 2012

Since There's No Real Hockey to Talk About: Here's How Long I've Been an NHL fan

Yes... That's me and my brother...
Yes, that is a Florida Panthers windbreaker and my brother is wearing a Sharks one... We were a bit misguided and my dad's view was always, if we were following hockey, he was happy. We've always been Wings fans and at the time this was taken, I don't think we grasped what that means. I watched the Wings win Lord Stanley's Cup at the age of 3 but, I thought the Panthers' logo was awesome, so I wanted it. My sister and brother liked the colors of the Sharks, so they wanted apparel.
Needless to say, we came to our senses and none of us have been seen wearing anything but the Winged Wheel ever since. 

Let's Go Red W -- Oh Wait... Go Griffins!

Thursday, September 20, 2012

Thursday Night Thoughts

Source

I needed to rant a little about the lockout and since the only other person that I really talk hockey with face to face is so far opposed to my views it makes me more upset, here goes:


  1. When the last lockout ended, Gary Bettman and the NHL were championing a new system and a new CBA. One that they had broken the players for and written themselves. Suddenly, after record revenues and parity, this system is not working and therefore they have to lock the players out in hopes of breaking them so that they will take another 24% reduction in salary, this time though it will be in the form of escrow and not a straight rollback. (Let's face it they're the same thing though.) 
  2. The players have a shelf-life and if this lockout goes the entire season and not only deprives me of NHL hockey but also takes another away another 82 games that I won't get to see Datsyuk, Zetterberg, and my favorite players play, I am going to be even more upset than coming back from the last lockout. I live and breathe hockey and at some point, I am going to come to the realization that there are other leagues that deserve my money more than the NHL, namely ones that do not have labor strife every time there is a new Collective Bargaining Agreement to be negotiated. 
  3. I get that the owners are the ones who put up the financial capital to keep the arenas open and the paychecks coming for the players, and employees. I understand that but, if your team is in trouble and you may not have the cash flow to keep the team running, don't spend so much money on one or two "franchise players." (*coughMINNESOTAcough*) This seems like common sense to me but, if the owners can't keep themselves in check, then I guess I get that the league needs to. 
  4. I'm not by any means insinuating that the Players Assoc. proposal was the best proposal there ever will be, there were flaws, like wanting salary to go up the next couple seasons? How is that even going to inspire coming to the bargaining table? What I am saying is that while the PA's proposal has flaws, it puts forth a solution to the problem that the league has said it wants to fix. That being the one where some teams are struggling financially. What that means to me is that the owners that have the money, are the ones that want more and think they can break the players again. (Note: It is not a problem to want more money, after all that is the point in being an American. Fair is not equal and therefore, if you have the ability to be more successful you should be.) 
  5. GET ME MY DARN HOCKEY
I needed to get that out of my system.
My prediction for the end of the lockout: Early November (The issues are not "salary cap vs. no cap" size this time. It is all about the money and how long can it take to divide that up?)
Games will start around November 15-20 because the league is going to make a whole lot of money from HBO 24/7. They need time to film it.  

Saturday, September 15, 2012

Ideas to Cope with the Lockout:

In the National Hockey League's almost 100 year history, every single "work stoppage" has occurred during my lifetime. Hockey fans lost the entire season to a lockout in 2004-2005. That is not okay, and I am sick of the owners, and players, feeling like I am a walking dollar sign. Since I am not naïve enough to think that I won't be back in the event of a lockout, I have come up with ways to cope with the lockout we, as the ones who pay the salaries, will face this year.
Follow me after the jump for ideas...
  • Eat a whole lot of ice cream -- you will become incredibly happy drowning your sadness and anger in sweetness
  • Pick a team and find places to watch old games from the playoffs and/or regular season -- There may not be current games to watch but, you can feel like you're cheering on your team.
  • Go to protests and let the NHL, and PA, know that you care and you are not going to stand for another lockout -- it won't work but, at least you feel like you're doing something
  • Watch hockey clips on youtube -- At least you'll get to see the only things you want to see (ie. Pavel Datsyuk being Pav, etc) 
  • Feel free to come up with other ideas... we all need to stick together

Saturday, July 28, 2012

Free Agency Frenzy -- Or Lack Thereof














July is almost over and the biggest name the Red Wings have signed this free agency is Mikael Samuelsson.

Ken Holland said that Detroit would be "aggressive" in free agency and as of yet, there have been four players signed. I would love to say that the Wings went out and signed big name free agents (ie. Ryan Suter and Zach Parise) but, sadly they have not.

This lack of huge free agent signings are:

  1. Not for lack of trying -- Ken Holland supposedly made a 13yr -- $90 Million offer to Ryan Suter and a similar one to Zach Parise. The Wings were also one, of two, teams who made the trip to Wisconsin to visit with Ryan Suter. If Suter's wife and Parise's fiance are strong enough to make their men move back to Minnesota, well then so be it. At least we tried. Mind you, I am not at all happy that we have struck out at least four times already. We need help on the blue line and the only prospect who is NHL ready is Brendan Smith. He is followed by Lashoff, who is still a year -- maybe two -- away from being a full time NHL defenseman. 
  2. Never going to make me doubt my Wings fan status -- I know I haven't lived through the "Dead Wings" era and therefore, some will refuse to classify me as a true fan. Just because I am too young does not make me a "faux" fan, I have been cheering whole heartedly for my Winged Wheelers for my entire life and one tough season will not make me change that.  I have a whole lot of faith in the fact that Ken Holland has a plan that we, as fans, are not privy to, nor should we be. I will be the first to admit I am not even close to being "expert" enough to make the decisions that Kenny is making, and has been for the last 15 years. I sometimes wonder what is going through his head and why he makes the decisions he does but, in the end, I come to the same realization... that Kenny knows what he is doing and that Kenny has a plan. 
My thoughts going into next season are that, if the Wings stay exactly as they are, they will be a playoff team. I am not saying that they will be the number one, hands down, favorite to win the Cup but, I am saying that they have a chance... No one thought that the Kings could win it this year. We may not be the favorite now but, I am having a hard time believing that going into next year there are eight teams better than the Detroit Red Wings, even without Nick Lidstrom.

Through thick and thin, hard times and great times, I will be a Winged Wheel fan. The 2012-2013 season may not be the easiest but, I can assure you... I will be there celebrating every goal and cursing ever loss. I will be there until the end.

I choose to end with this... In Kenny We Trust. Go Wings.

"I'm not saying it's going to be easy, I'm telling you it's going to be worth it." - Unknown

Friday, July 13, 2012

Because Someone Challenged Me to Think Of The Best Hockey Moment...

The greatest hockey moment is very hard to pin point and subjective, each person will have their own view of it. 
Here’s mine…
The 1980 US Men’s Olympic Hockey Miracle On Ice
The Soviet hockey team at the time was unstoppable, winning the Gold Medal in the 1964-1976 Olympic Games. It was pretty much a foregone conclusion that they would win again as they had the greatest goalie in the world, Vladislav Tretiak. 
In the 1980 Olympics, the Soviets entered as heavy favorites having won the last 4 gold medals. They were considered to be the natural rivals of the United States with the Cold War raging on. 
In the first period the Soviets scored twice, the United States scored once, the Soviets thought that they would end the period up by one goal then, with one second left the US scored. They took a 2-2 tie into the locker room after the first. The Soviets took the lead again. Next came the miracle. The United States scored twice over the next two periods and came away with a win, their captain scoring the game winner. Jim Craig played amazingly well in goal and the miracle was completed when a few days later the United States won the Gold Medal coming from behind in the score, just like always.
It was exactly what the country needed at the time. If I wrote for 10 years I could not express how great this story is. 
The movie Miracle is based on the story of 20 amateur players who become a team, a team who stuns the world and wins the gold at the 1980 Olympic Games on home ice, in the process beating a seemingly unbeatable Soviet team. 
Here are some interviews about the movie.
Here are the Highlights

Monday, July 2, 2012

Welcome to Detroit: Jordin Tootoo

God I hate that I have to write this one... I am giving Ken Holland the benefit of the doubt with this one. Mostly because of this:


and this: Video I mean seriously? Who pushes Datsyuk??

Moving on...

Ken Holland went out and signed Tootoo for 3 years, $1.9Mil per.

Cautiously optimistic about this one... Mike Babcock called Wings management out at the end of the playoffs, after the Nashville series, for not having enough "grit." Babcock said we had no one to keep the flies off. That is what Tootoo brings. Tootoo is an agitator and he's darn good at it. Tootoo, if he plays the way he can, would be a return to Kirk Maltby-ish play. If it happens, I like it! I loved Maltby and if Tootoo can be that... I'm all for it.

Here's what the Red Wings Blogosphere says:

JJ from Winging It In Motown:
"Jordin Tootoo is a Red Wing for three years. He will get paid an average of $1.9M for each of those three years.
I will spend every single one of those games listening for a person blowing one of those stupid whistles in the crowd and praying that they get tuberculosis of the colon.
Ok, here goes on the trying to be nice: Jordin Tootoo's 30 points last year was actually pretty damn good. You know what? It's more than Justin Abdelkader put up. He's also apparently really bought into the whole playing hockey for your team and not trying to be a selfish idiot. Of course, this is coming not too long after he played all of three games in the playoffs, and only one against Detroit because it took him no time at all to take a stupid penalty.
I guess if you want a guy who really likes to fight, Tootoo's your man. I might eventually get used to this signing."
The Chief from Abel To Yzerman
"Absolutely despise the Tootoo signing. I honestly dislike this player and I’m not sure I’ll be able to set that aside."
and
"And just to repeat: the Tootoo signing disgusts me."
 Okay, I'm done. I've calmed down from yesterday's unhappiness... I am slowly coming to terms with this.

Welcome to Detroit: Jonas Gustavsson

Source
Detroit landed a "Monster."

Jonas Gustavsson, formerly of Toronto, signed with the Red Wings yesterday (July 1, 2012). 

Last year: 
"Gustavsson went 17-17-4, with a 2.92 goals-against average and .902 save percentage this past season. For his career, he is 39-45-15, with a 2.93 GAA and .900 save percentage, along with five shutouts." (Source)
 Nicknamed "Monster," Gustavsson is 6'3" and is heralded for his athleticism.

I hope that Gustavsson can push Howard to be better and Howard can push Gustavsson.

Saturday, June 23, 2012

2012 Draft: Red Wings





First Round: 
We traded our pick for Kyle Quincey. With our pick Tampa chose goalie Andrei Vasilevski.

Second Round: 

We chose forward Martin Frk. Yes, we chose someone with no vowels in their last name... What is that? Apparently, it's pronounced FERK, and he wears #91 because of his childhood idol Sergei Fedorov. (Source)

Anyways, the Red Wings chose a guy who NHL Network said slipped through the cracks, like Nyquist/Tatar.

The NHL.com article about Frk in February says that although he missed the first 29 games of Halifax's season with a concussion, he has been symptom free ever since his return. He had 27 points in 24 games with Halifax this year.

Elite Prospects: Martin Frk
Reaction on Twitter --
Jeff Marek (TSN):
"DET nabs Martin Frk in the 2nd rd.  Hardest shot in the draft. Concussion probs hurt his year. Raw, raw talent.  Could be outstanding"
RedWingsCentral:
"Frk is basically a bigger, harder shooting version of Teemu Pulkkinen. Literally terrorizes goaltenders with his shot, but accuracy varies."
Red Wings Twitter:
"Frk when asked to describe his game: 'I think I'm powerful. I can score goals and have a good shot.'"

Here's a Highlight Reel 


Third Round:

Goalie Jake Paterson. Says his favorite team is the Wings and his favorite goalie is Ryan Miller.
"Jake Paterson – Saginaw Spirit – 6’1.25’’ 183 – G – 3rd Ranked Goalie by NHL Central Scouting
Paterson played in 42 regular season games this season for the Spirit before backstopping the club in all 12 playoff contests posting a 6-3-3-0 record with a goals-against-average of 3.05 and save percentage of .903 which included a 42-save performance in a 5-2 win over the London Knights in Game 3 of the Western Conference Semi-Finals. 
Spirit Head Coach Greg Gilbert says:  “Jake is a very talented young goaltender.  Very strong athleticism, compete level and work ethic.  Jake is showing very good signs of becoming a much more mature and efficient goalie.  Jake has shown the mental toughness to rebound and play a solid game after a tough outing the previous game.  All good signs." (Source)
Twitter Reaction:
Bob Duff:
"#redwings Paterson won a gold medal with Team Ontario at the 2011 World Under-17 Hockey Challenge."
Red Wings Twitter:
"Paterson said he was a #Wings fan growing up, remembers the 2002 Stanley Cup winning team well and looks up to Chris Osgood."
Brian Hedger:
"Also, Paterson said: "My first time playing goalie, I hated it and couldn’t wait for the next game to be back at forward ..." #RedWings"

Fourth Round

Left Wing Andreas Athanasiou.

The Hockey Writers say:
"Andreas Athanasiou (ath-an-ah-see-ew) was a name to watch coming into the 2011-12 season, blessed with tremendous skill, many scouts put him on their watch lists and high in their preliminary rankings.   TSN analyst Craig Button had him listed 8th in his pre-season draft rankings.
By mid-season he was ranked 24th by NHL Central Scouting.
Whether it was his inability to capitalize or otherprospects simply progressing past him, he fell further than he would have liked as the season went on.  Currently he is ranked as the 40th North American skater by NHL Central Scouting and #36 overall by ISS.
However, it wasn’t exactly that he had a terrible year, playing on a loaded Knights team this season he finished third on the team in the regular season with 22 goals, and helped lead them to the Memorial Cup final where they lost to eventual champ Shawinigan.  He played primarily on the second line with OHL veterans Austin Watson and Greg McKegg.
When talking about Athanasiou’s game, it begins and ends with speed.  One of the faster players in the draft, he has the type of top end speed that kills.  He’s also very dynamic offensively with slick hands and is a tremendous stickhandler, which has drawn comparisons to another CHL player who was in a similar situation to him a year ago and the Sea Dogs Tomas Jurco.  In fact Athanasiou did a similar stickhandling and trick shot video to that of the Red Wings 2010 draftee" (Source)
He is not without fault though, he needs to work on shooting. Production is not where it is wanted but, the Wings are not afraid of it.

Twitter Reaction:
Sarah Lindenau (Wings Camp:
"wooo like how TSN is describing him #redwings"
Corey Pronman (ESPN Draft Guru)
"DET takes Athanasiou. At one point considered a high first rounder but struggled this year. Tremendous skater, lot of offensive skill."
Here's A Highlight Reel:


Fifth Round:

Defenseman Mike McKee.
McKee is committed to Western Michigan. Michael McKee is huge at 6'4" -- still not the biggest guy we got this year. McKee put up 237PIM in 59 games last season, to go along with that he potted 2G and 17 assists. McKee is not at all close to NHL ready, about as NHL ready as most guys are in the fifth round -- he's big though and you can't teach size. He's got that going for him which is nice. (Caddy Shack reference)

Bruins DraftWatch calls him a sleeper pick, in 2010.
"McKee at 17 is already 6-4 and 230 pounds and apparently skates extremely well for such a big boy. He's an August 1993 birthdate, which means he's on the young end of the spectrum. He had three goals and 11 points last season for the Lions, and watch for him to breakout in a big way (pun intended) this season if he returns.

He and USHL defender Scott Mayfield looked quite good as a defensive pairing on the ice this week, and it will be interesting to see how his hockey skills and intellect grade out, as clearly, the fact that he's such a physical specimen already but one who can actually skate, makes him one kid that NHL teams are zeroing in on this season no matter where he ends up playing."
No twitter for the rest of them -- my twitter stopped updating... must figure out why.

Sixth Round: 

All the way to the sixth round and no Europeans for the Wings... not the traditional draft. 
Anyways, our Wings selected another Ontario born player in James De Haas. This is the second D-man that the Wings picked this year. 

RedWingsCentral has this to say:
"Good-sized defenceman was ranked 176th by Central Scouting. Will play in the NCAA at Clarkson next season, the same program that housed former Red Wings prospects Julien Cayer and the late Bryan Rufenach. He led his team in defense scoring and was fifth in the Ontario junior A ranks." 

Seventh Round:

Here's where the Wings continue to shine over the years. Henrik Zetterberg, Pavel Datsyuk and a whole host of other great Wings were chosen here.

At the 200th overall pick, once again the world was exposed to Hakan Andersson's greatness. The Wings chose Rasmus Bodin. He is six-foot-six and over 230 pounds.

RedWingsCentral has this to say about him:

"The Red Wings finally went to Europe with their last pick and took yet another Swedish sleeper, a six-foot-six forward who averaged close to a point per game and  piled up 94 penalty minutes at the country’s second J-18 level last season. He’s joining the HV-71 organization next season and will get much more exposure."

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Because I Live In Chicago...

I read the Chicago Tribune and lots of other Chicago news outlets. What that translates to is: I read a lot about what the Blackhawks should improve upon -- I like to laugh.

What I found this morning though, surprised me. This is an article entitled "Hawks GM Has Work To Do." The article details how the top 6 in Chicago is pretty much a top 3 at most top 4 -- and Toews/Hossa are concussion issues. I found it interesting considering the amount of people who think that the Blackhawks organization can do no wrong. The level of bandwagon-ing that goes on in Chicago is almost indescribable. (It really hurts to live here...)

Anyways, you may be looking/ reading thinking about what all of this has to do with the Red Wings and why I care. Well, I care because I like to laugh about how Chicago "fans" are starting to realize that when you win the Cup and then, get rid of your team in a fire sale, chances are you will bow out of the playoffs early each year following.

To answer the other part, how does this relate to the Wings, I say this. Ken Holland and Mike Babcock were all about the fact that what the team needed after the first round playoff loss was "just a few tweaks." I have full faith in Kenny, he's never given me a reason to doubt him, and he needs to pump up our team. In some ways, I believe that every few years, personnel need to change in order to keep a team a contender (Note: this can be changing a coach/players/asst. coaches/etc).


What I'm saying is that the "tweaks" we need are completely different than the "tweaks" that Steve Rosenblum is saying the Blackhawks need -- he argues that they need more than tweaks and saying "tweaks" makes him nervous. What we need is at least one more sniper (top -six forward) and two high end defensemen. That may sound like a lot, and it is but, it is much better than the three top six forwards and a few defensemen that Rosenblum argues the Hawks are in need of.

I think that most Wings fans are in the same boat as me, with the thought process "In Kenny We Trust" but, for those who aren't... the Wings aren't in as dire a situation as the world thinks. We need to add some pieces and we need to get better but, we are pretty good as we are.

Keep the faith Winged Wheelers!

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Darren Helm Signs New 4 Year Deal


Darren Helm, 25, signed a new 4 year, $8.5M which works out to $2.125M a year.

Many people were overjoyed at this signing, there were a few that appeared to have lost their minds and said that they didn't agree, I however was ecstatic.

Here's Why:

  1. The length of this new deal is 4 years. At the moment, Helm is 25, and entering what many believe is a hockey player's prime. I somewhat disagree with that, mostly because of the fact that Zetterberg and Datsyuk are both in their thirties (Hint: they are doing quite alright for themselves). Anyways, back to Helm. In four years, Helm will be 29 and maybe worth more than $2.125M a year. In 2016, when this contract is up, the Wings can pay him what he is worth. I have a feeling that in a few weeks this deal will seem like a bargain. 
  2. What he brings to the team. Helm brings speed, and an ability to kill penalties very well. Case in point this penalty kill in the 2009 playoffs. Helm pretty much single handedly killed off the penalty. When Darren Helm came back from a knee injury in the playoffs this year, Mike Babcock was quoted saying "Helmer just puts everyone in the right spot."That is what Darren Helm does, he is a great third line center and when he is in the lineup, the Wings' depth is in the right spots to be successful. 
Here's My Concern:
Darren Helm was injured twice this year. Both of his injuries are ones that have haunted athletes before. The first was a knee injury, a sprained MCL. Those types of injuries can come back and turn a great grit guy (Danny Cleary, baker's cysts behind both knees) into a guy who everyone is wondering if they should be on the team next year.
The other is a lacerated forearm. That happened in his first game back from the knee injury in the playoffs. What took Mike Modano out for most of the 2010-2011 season, was a lacerated forearm. Modano had nerve damage, Helm did not. Modano was also way closer to the end of his career than Helm is.
I'd like to think that Helm will be just fine and the injuries will magically disappear but, that never happens. So far, with Helm, those are my only concerns.

What Matters:
Helm's contract leaves the Wings with around $25M to sign key players for next year. Helm is a great player and I think in a few weeks, and in a few years, fans will be in awe of Kenny Holland for this one -- this will end up being a bargain.
Helmer Forever! :)

Saturday, June 16, 2012

On Kyle Quincey...

Source



Stats: (2011-2012)

  • $3.125Mil. Cap hit
  • 72 Games Played (54 in CO, 18 in Det.)
  • 7 Goals (5 CO, 2, Det)
  • 19 Assists (18 CO, 1 Det)
  • 26 Points



What the Organization has Said:
  • Don't remember where I heard this, Ken Holland has said he did not want to get rid of Quincey in 2008 (Waived and claimed by LA) but, it was between waiving him and keeping Derek Meech 
    • Holland thought Meech had a larger upside than Quincey.
  • Holland on Quincey: “We know him very well as we drafted him in 2003, helped him mature into an NHL player and watched his career develop.” (Source)
  • He became the player we hoped we would be. If we could do it all over again, we’d make a different decision.’‘ (Source)
So? What about next year?

If, most likely when, the Wings re-sign Quincey, they will be putting a whole lot of faith in Quincey. I expect that Quincey will make around 3.5M-3.75M. 
I will be reserving judgement as to how I really feel about Quincey until he has gone through training camp and learned/gotten back into the Wings system. 
I will say though, he did not impress me when he was traded and started playing for us. I think I'm going to chalk that up to the fact that when he returned to us, there were a whole host of injuries and he was inserted into a role he won't be filling next year. I think that he was trying too hard to fill in for Nick Lidstrom (out 11 games) and Jonathan Ericsson (out a month). When he came to Detroit this year, he was simply not adjusting well enough, fast enough for him to be effective. 

  • If Quincey can stop taking so many penalties, he can be a GREAT second pairing guy. 
  • He is a good penalty killer and power play guy
  • Holland trusts him -- therefore I do as well
    • In Kenny We Trust
Okay, so I will wait until he has played a few games after going through Training Camp to actually judge -- don't be surprised if I change my mind about him.

Thursday, June 14, 2012

15 Years Later: Konstantinov and What Could Have Been


Fifteen years ago today, Vladimir Konstantinov, Slava Fetisov, and Sergei Mnatsakanov got into a limo after celebrating their Stanley Cup victory, a victory that was only six days old. They were being responsible and hired a driver… What they didn’t know was that the driver, whose license was suspended at the time for drunk driving, Richard Gnida was not the most reliable driver. Needless to say, he “blacked out” and crossed three lanes and ends up crashing into a tree.
Konstantinov spent several weeks in a coma before pulling through. After initially being confined to a wheelchair he was able to get around with a walker. His movement and speech are limited, but he is said to be aware.
Mnatsakanov, who also spent some time in a coma, had a more difficult recovery. He was permanently paralyzed from the waist down.
Fetisov escaped with broken ribs and a punctured lung and continued his career the following season.  (Source)










VK Was Promising…
Konstantinov was drafted in 1989, the same year that the Wings drafted Lidstrom and Sergei Fedorov, in the 11th round, which is not even a round anymore.
Lidstrom and Konstantinov in their Rookie Year
The first time he got on NHL ice he shattered the notion that Europeans were “soft.” He was referred to by fans and players alike as “The Vladinator” and “Vlad the Impaler,”  Kris Draper recalled that not even teammates were exempt: “‘In practice he would hit you, He only knew one way. If your head was down he would hit you and tell you to keep your head up.’”
Draper also explains that “he was one of the fiercest competitors I ever seen. He didn’t care how big you were, or if you were a superstar, if you weren’t on his team you were fair game.” (Note: That is the mentality that made me name him my favorite d-man of all time — only slightly above Lidstrom)
The original tragedy is enough to make fans cry but, considering what could have been with Vlady is another tragedy in itself. At the time of the accident, Konstantinov was 30 and entering his prime. The 1996-1997 year he finished second to Brian Leetch for the Norris Trophy. Almost certainly every former Red Wing you talk to reminisces and believes that Vlady was robbed of a career and wonders about how life would have been different if it never happened, if Vlady could have played a full career. 
The Back To Back Cup For Vlady
As the 1998 season began, the Red Wings wore a patch for Vlady and Mnatsakanov. It was simple. It read “Believe” in both English and Russian.
The Patch worn in the 1997-1998 season
Then the playoffs rolled around and the team certainly had the accident in the back of their minds. They won the Stanley Cup for the second straight season, in decisive fashion sweeping the Washington Capitals. As Gary Bettman gave the Cup to Steve Yzerman, Red Wings captain, he did not raise it above his head. Instead, he put it in Vladimir Konstantinov’s lap and the entire team wheeled him around the ice. The first skate the Cup took that year was for Vlady.
As the years went on, Konstantinov would frequent the games, sit on the bench for practice, and sit in the locker room with the team. He would stay around the team, and his locker in the dressing room at the Joe Louis Arena would sit vacant. 
Now, he still attends games, from Mike Illitch’s Owner Suite. Larry Murphy, former Red Wings defenseman and now Red Wings Color Analyst, says that he is happy to see that Vlady still comes to games and it’s good to see him but, his presence is “a reminder that in one instant, life can change forever. It makes you cry.”
Konstantinov, still resides in the Detroit area. His focus is now on his growing career in art. In November, he had several pieces on display, and some for sale, at Gallery U and Boutique in Royal Oak. 
All proceeds from the exhibition were donated to the Brain Injury Association of Michigan, a non-profit organization that provides education, advocacy, research opportunities, support and support groups to brain injury victims, their families and the people who serve them.  (Source)
What Could Have Been
“Sometimes, we sit around and reflect internally,” Ken Holland told the Free Press in 2007. “Where would we be if we’d had a healthy Konstantinov?”
Kenny, I’ll tell you where you could be. 
Along with Nick Lidstrom’s retirement, this year we could have witnessed the retirement of Vladimir Konstantinov. There could have been employees all dressed in the number 16, just as all were in number 5 for Nick. There could have been Mike Illitch saying that there would be two new numbers in the rafters next year, 16 and 5. 
What Really Matters
What really matters is that the Red Wings didn’t wallow in their sorrows after the accident. They went out the nest year and won a second straight Stanley Cup Championship. The Cup win itself in 1998 is not what really matters, what does is that the determination and spirit of the Red Wings could not be broken. What Sergei Mnatsakanov and Vladimir Konstantinov did for the Wings was give them motivation. Something to rally around. 
Konstantinov and Mnatsakanov have inspired more people than they probably know. They showed the world that when you are down, you are certainly not out. They still attend games at the Joe Louis Arena, Vlady with his walker and Mnatsakanov with his wheelchair. What really matters is that they demonstrated the spirit of the Red Wings. Not only that, they demonstrated courage to the world. For that I will forever be thankful. 

RIP Bryan Rufenach



Bryan Rufenach, Red Wings draft pick in 2007, has died while traveling in Switzerland. He was 23. This past season he bounced back and forth between the Toledo Walleye and Grand Rapids Griffins. 
Walleye head coach Nick Vitucci said, “The entire team’s thoughts and prayers are with Bryan’s family as they get through this difficult time. Bryan was a great teammate and would play any role asked of him.” 
Thoughts and prayers go out to his family.