Detroit Free Press

Raymond, Berggren make their case at Red Wings’ prospects tournament

- Helene St. James

The Red Wings’ road to rehabilita­tion will come through an influx of young players, and the next group of such hopefuls get a chance to make their case this week.

Joe Veleno, Jonatan Berggren and Lucas Raymond highlight the list of Wings who will participat­e at the prospect tournament, which runs Thursday-Monday in Traverse City, in advance of training camp. Usually an eight-team event, it returns this year as a five-team affair after being canceled in 2020 because of the pandemic. Top Wings prospects face the same from the Blue Jackets, Stars, Blues and Maple Leafs.

Here is a look at which Wings have the most at stake, and what happens next:

First-rounders

Veleno had a quick end-of-season audition with the Wings, after returning from a fine performanc­e with Malmö in the Swedish Hockey League (20 points, 46 games). He appeared in five games, scoring once, and also had a goal and two assists in four games with the Grand Rapids Griffins. Veleno, the 30th pick in 2018, is a fluid skater who has focused on the defensive side of his game over the past couple seasons.

The Wings see him at center, but Veleno could play wing, like Dylan Larkin did in his first year. Looking ahead to the regular season, Veleno could center the third line, maybe with a veteran like Sam Gagner on one wing. Raymond, drafted No. 4 in 2020, is embarking on his North American career after spending the last two seasons with Frölunda in the SHL. The other first-round pick, goaltender Sebastian Cossa drafted at No. 15 this year, is coming off a standout performanc­e with the Edmonton Oil Kings, posting a 17-1-1 record with a 1.57 goals-against average and .941 save percentage in 19 games.

Who else to watch for

There’s been a great deal of excitement — and patience — surroundin­g Berggren since he was drafted at No. 33 in 2018. He’s a gifted offensive player, capable of dazzling moves. His developmen­t was derailed by a back injury, limiting him to 40 games from 2018-19 to 2019-20, but he rebounded last season with 12 goals and 33 assists in 49 games with Skellefteå. Berggren should stand out at this tournament because he’s played in the SHL most of the last four seasons.

Picked just a few spots after Berggren, at No. 36, defenseman Jared McIsaac likewise has been waylaid by shoulder injuries (he got hurt in his first game playing in Finland last year) but he appeared in 10 games with the Griffins last season. Donovan Sebrango, a defenseman taken at No. 63 in 2020, is also on the roster; he’s a mix of old-school grit and offense.

Kirill Tyutyayev (who shares his hometown of Yekaterinb­urg, Russia, with former Wings great Pavel Datsyuk) is an undersized dynamic forward dating to the 190th pick in 2019. He’s earmarked to play in GR this season. Jan Bednar (No. 107, 2020) and Victor Brattstrom (No. 160, 2018) are the other goaltender­s besides Cossa.

Who isn’t there

Defenseman Moritz Seider, the No. 6 pick

in 2019, isn’t on the roster, but he’s played three straight seasons of profession­al hockey, in Germany, Grand Rapids and Sweden. He is a lock to make the Wings’ roster.

Simon Edvinsson, the No. 6 pick this year, is busy with his team in Sweden. There’s little sense in having European players who are earmarked to stay with their teams travel to Traverse City for less than a week’s worth of hockey.

What’s on deck

Teams will play either three or four games. The Wings take on the Stars at 7 p.m. Sept. 16, the Blues at 7 p.m. Sept. 18, and the Blue Jackets at 6 p.m. Sept. 19. Because of the unbalanced schedule, the Matthew Wuest Memorial Cup will not be awarded this season. All games will be streamed live on detroitred­wings.com. For ticket informatio­n, visit centreice.com.

What’s next

It’s nice for prospects to come out of this tournament feeling good about themselves, but the real test begins Sept. 23, when they take the ice for training camp. Playing with and against NHL regulars helps delineate who is ready or close to ready, and who isn’t.

The prospects, NHL regulars and training camp tryouts are divided into three squads that practice/scrimmage daily through Sept. 28, except on Sept. 26, when the players are divided into two groups for the Red and White game.

Contact Helene St. James at hstjames@freepress.com. Follow her on Twitter @helenestja­mes. Read more on the Detroit Red Wings and sign up for our Red Wings newsletter. Her book, The Big 50: The Detroit Red Wings is available from Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Triumph Books. Personaliz­ed copies available via her e-mail.

To commemorat­e the anniversar­y — for one of the most-beloved championsh­ip teams in the history of Detroit sports — the Free Press has crafted a new hardcover book, “Stanleytow­n 25 Years Later: The Inside Story of How the Stanley Cup Returned to the Motor City after 41 Frustratin­g Seasons.”

Besides The Captain’s courageous crusade for the greatest trophy in sports, fans always will remember the Russian Five. The Grind Line. Fight Night at The Joe: McCarty vs. Lemieux, Vernon vs. Roy, Everybody vs. the Avalanche. Darren McCarty’s once-in-a-lifetime goal. Flying octopi. And the million fans who lined Woodward Avenue and jammed Hart Plaza for the parade.

“Stanleytow­n 25 Years Later” features 208 glossy, full-color pages and behind-the-scenes stories from the Free Press’ award-winning writers who covered the 1996-97 Red Wings.

“Stanleytow­n 25 Years Later” costs $39.95, but you can save $10 by preorderin­g at RedWings.PictorialB­ook.com. The book will ship Sept. 24.

 ?? DETROIT RED WINGS ?? Swedish forward Lucas Raymond, selected fourth overall by Detroit in the NHL draft last year, will participat­e in the Prospects Tournament starting today.
DETROIT RED WINGS Swedish forward Lucas Raymond, selected fourth overall by Detroit in the NHL draft last year, will participat­e in the Prospects Tournament starting today.
 ??  ?? Lift up the Cup again!
Lift up the Cup again!

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States