Showing posts with label Darren Helm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Darren Helm. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

3/18-3/19 Off Day Updates

     Gustav Nyquist was re-assigned to the Grand Rapids Griffins Monday, and the Griffins have a game tonight. It's frustrating not to have Nyquist, who is sill leading the AHL in scoring, playing and getting crucial NHL experience; I think we were all disappointed that he was a healthy scratch Saturday. If Babcock isn't going to play him Wednesday though, better to send him back to Grand Rapids so he can play for the Griffins instead of twiddling his thumbs in Detroit. As frustrating as it must be for Nyquist not to get the opportunity to play in Detroit, though most fans agree that he should, and to be called up yet only play 16:42 on Friday (1:22 of that on the power play) and then be a healthy scratch Saturday; he's still being professional in how he responds. In response to being sent back down to the AHL,
"It’s still a league that you can improve and learn the systems a little bit better." 
I give him full marks for maintaining a positive attitude and continuing to learn and improve. Holland said they will reasses things on Thursday and may bring Nyquist back up for the California trip starting Friday.



     Justin Abdelkader could barely walk Saturday morning. Sometime during the second period Friday night against the Edmonton Oilers, Abdelkader's foot got stepped on and sliced almost to the bone. The skate blade cut through the laces, skate tongue, sock and his foot. When he took off his skate during the second intermission he said he could see almost all the way down to the bone. The medical staff numbed his foot, gave him 8-10 stitches, and Abby came out in the third and finished the game. Team masseur Sergei Tchekmarev rigged up a piece of plastic with a hole in it and fit it on to Abby's skate to help keep some of the pressure off his foot. Saturday Abdelkader was a game time decision in Vancouver, but ultimately decided he could play, and ended up with two goals for his effort. Datsyuk banked two goals in off Abby, the first off his injured foot, and the other off his chest.

“I’m just a firing range for Pav,'' Abdelkader said. “I’ll take it."


“I’m just trying to get to the net for him (Pavel) and Mule. Mule’s shooting a lot and I’m just trying to be physical for those guys and hang on to pucks and get pucks to them.”
"Sometimes they're not the prettiest, but I'll take them," Abdelkader said. "I haven't been getting the best of breaks all year, so any time you can get a couple of breaks like that, it was nice. Playing with Pav, you just have to get to net, and he's going to find you or your stick. I'm fortunate to play with him."
“I think that was the first time in my career that I scored two goals and they didn’t touch my stick.”

"He's playing better and better,'' Babcock said of Abdelkader. "He's a big man, and the lockout didn't help him. He's really gotten skating and is playing with two real good players and goes to the net every time. He gets them the puck and goes to the net. Pretty simple plan for him, but it's working and he's playing well and he's physical for us. He's a huge factor out there."

All indications are that Abby will be good to go tomorrow against the Wild. Today Abdelkader visited Wick Elementary school in Romulus to read The Little Engine That Could to the second graders. I don't think they could have picked a better story for him to read right now. :)

What does Datsyuk say about Abdelkader?
“It’s my partners who work hard to make everything that happened,'' Datsyuk said. “Abby, he just go and fight through injury. Looks like he don’t need a stick now anymore to score.”
Datsyuk said he likes playing with Abdelkader because he does the dirty work, likening him to somebody who “pulls the piano'' as opposed to playing it.
“Some people can see how tough (his) work is that he does,'' Datsyuk said. “He gets the puck to me or goes back in front of the net and fights for every puck. Some people only measure him if he scores. But, if you see him total, he does a lot of hard jobs.''

If you didn't see the post-game interview with Pavel Datsyuk from Saturday, you really want to watch it.

With quotes like this, why wouldn't you?

Reporter “Pavel, you hadn’t scored in a while, do you think about that at this age?”
Pavel  with a mischievous grin “Age?” “Say I hear age?”
Reporter “experience”
Pavel “Oh, ok, I think age” “Of course, like, we no play great last few games” “I try to don’t think and play for team” “ask me and it’s going to remind me”
 On the play with Franzen:
“They make the play, they see I’m coming behind a little bit late but I pick up my speed and they waiting and uh just deliver it. Like mailbox”


     Kyle Quincey will be out 4-6 weeks after suffering multiple fractures to his cheek bone after taking a puck to the face in Edmonton Friday night. We still don't know for sure if he's going to require surgery, since the full damage can't be determined yet because his face is still swollen so badly.

     With the injury to Quincey, it looks like Ian White, who replaced Quincey in the lineup Saturday in Vancouver, will return to making regular appearances in the lineup after being a healthy scratch in eight of the last eleven games. It appears Kent Huskins will remain the odd man out and is the only healthy scratch on defense.

  We still don't know whether Todd Bertuzzi (back) or Carlo Colaiacovo (shoulder) will play at all this season, but the news isn't good for either one. Colaiacovo was close to returning a couple weeks ago, but then has a setback and at this point they don't know if he'll be back this season. Bertuzzi is not doing well either. He has issues with a couple of the discs in his back and he's hoping to avoid surgery, but should know in about a week if he'll need it or not. A bulging disk between his L3 and L4 vertebrae pinched a nerve and sent Bert to the hospital for four days back in February and he's been in so much pain since then that he's been "nearly immobile at times for more than a month". Not only is Bertuzzi dealing with excruciating pain, but because he's unable to play, practice or workout, he's also experiencing muscle atrophy and Bill Roose reported that Bert has already lost three centimeters around his right thigh; which has severely reduced his ability to push of while skating, among other things.

“I've been doing the elliptical for a couple of days now and gradually try to get better every day and see if I can get to the point where I can get back on the ice and start skating,'' Bertuzzi said.
 At this point I don't expect to get Bert back this season at all, and I'm quickly losing hope that Bert will be able to finish out his career on his own terms.

     We got more disappointing new about Helm yesterday.  He was on the ice for practice and was expected to play tomorrow when the Red Wings host the Minnesota Wild, but he left the ice after about 10 minutes and it was announced that he had another setback. He had a slightly torn disk in his back and he's only played 7:23 this season the game January 25th against the Wild. Babcock heaped more praise on the injured Helm...

“We're in crunch time; guys who are playing and playing well aren't losing their jobs to people that are coming back unless the guy coming back has earned the right to play over time,'' Babcock said. “Helmer, we'd welcome back at any time. Let's not kid ourselves. He's a good player. Now, does it get to a point where he can't help us? Not the Helmer I know. The Helmer I know can help us at any time.'



"He flat-out can just dominate in the bottom six,"

We're waiting on more news about Helm, and good news would certainly be welcome.

     Patrick Eaves left practice early today after he took a puck to the jaw... again. Fortunately his jaw wasn't fractured and is just sore. He is day to day and if he can't play tomorrow we'll have to call someone up from Grand Rapids because we don't have any extra healthy forwards. That's depressing.

     Zetterberg also left the ice early during practice today, creating panic, mass hysteria and a sudden urge to smash things- or maybe that was just my reaction. Fifteen minutes later however, it was reported that Zetterberg was "springing down the concourse" so he seemed to be just fine. I think this was a new technique to try to make us fans forget all the depressing injury news by creating relief and elation that Zetterberg was not in fact injured; momentarily taking focus away from all the disappointing injury news. However, Ansar Khan said that Datsyuk left the ice early as well because of the flu, but both Datsyuk and Zetterberg are expected to play tomorrow.

     Samuelsson, who is recovering from a broken finger, tried stick handling for the first time in practice Tuesday. He had been skating on his own after practices, but this was the first time he's tried anything with his stick.

“It was strictly skating, no stick handling, today was the first time stick handling... If I set a date (to return) it’ll be missed probably anyway. I’m taking one day at a time, but it feels better though, but I’m not quite there yet. Maybe a week...It’s a bad finger, top hand and the index finger...To have a splint or something, I’ve tried that, but it’s the stick on your one hand as well so you want to have it (OK). It’s not the best finger.”

Practice lines today were:

Justin Abdelkader-Pavel Datsyuk-Johan Franzen

Valtteri Filppula-Henrik Zetterberg-Damien Brunner

Danny Cleary-Joakim Andersson-Patrick Eaves

Drew Miller-Cory Emmerton-Jordin Tootoo



Niklas Kronwall-Jonathan Ericsson

Brian Lashoff-Brendan Smith

Jakub Kindl-Ian White

Kent Huskins

Jimmy Howard (starting Wednesday)

Jonas Gustavsson


Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Nyquist up, Tatar down, Flip back, and injury updates.

 It started with a tweet.

  The reaction in Wings nation seemed to range from "Yeah Goose! Poor Tatar!" to "This is bull shit I want them Both now, what the hell is Babcock/Holland doing?!" It's true, you can never please everyone, and I'm darn glad the Wings organization doesn't try. What a heap of doodoo we'd be in if they listened to us fans. 

Filppula is coming off IR (either playing tomorrow or Saturday) so we do need to send someone down in order to bring Goose up.

In regards to sending Tatar down to Grand Rapids, Babcock said:
I think Filppula’s back in so suddenly there’s no power-play time for Tatar. We’ll give Gus an opportunity. I thought (Tatar) played good. I thought he played good and he did good things. If suddenly you’re not on the power play, where’s (Tatar) getting his touches? We don’t perceive him as ahead of Fil.
In practice today, Babcock had the following lines:

24-40-51
93-13-14
8-63-11
17/20-25-22

With Flip coming back it appears that Babcock is going back to looking for offense from the 2nd line (instead of using it as a shut down/defensive line).

     There was a Holland quote today where he said that he hadn’t wanted to bring Nyquist up unless he was going to get play in the top 6, and with so many of our top 6 injured, and Babcock using the 2nd line as a defensive/shutdown line, Nyquist wasn’t going to be playing in the top 6, so he stayed in Grand Rapids. Tatar can play the bottom 6, more grinder/physical style if he needs to, Nyquist isn’t as effective at that roll.
These lineup changes make both the 2nd line and Andersson’s lines better when you look at the whole picture. It sucks that Tatar was sent back down, but in return we get Flip back, Nyquist up and on Datsyuk’s wing and Abby and cleary back where they belong. It’s just logistics and what can be done to serve the greatest good for the team as a whole. Dare I say I like the looks of those lines?

     I think Goose will probably stay in the top 6 while he’s up here (I hope). Abby and Cleary were on the 2nd line because we only had 4 top 6 players healthy. Knowing that we couldn’t put together 2 true top 2 lines with only 4 top 6 players, Babcock chose to use the 2nd line not as a true “2nd line” in it’s function, that’s why Abby and Cleary were put with Datsyuk. He knew our “2nd” line wasn’t going to be able to be successfully offensive against the other team’s 2nd lines, so he use it as a defensive shut down line. With Flip coming back, and Nyquist coming up, we now have an actual 2nd line again, that can be a scoring line. Since that is now its purpose again, I doubt Babcock would compromise it by putting Abby or Cleary back up, even if Goose starts off slowly.

     Also, Holland not wanting to call Goose up unless he was going to be on the top lines tells me that he’s discussed this with Babcock, and if the plan wasn’t to keep Goose in the top 6, then Holland probably wouldn’t have called him up in the first place.


Also on the players returning from IR front Khan said
Filppula looks like he’ll be back Wed. Helm at least a week away. Bertuzzi and Colaiacovo not coming back anytime soon.
I asked Khan about new on Samuelsson and he said

The only news of Todd Bertuzzi I could find was a quote from Holland that said
“We were optimistic a few weeks ago, but then [Bertuzzi]s back wasn’t feeling so good,” Holland said. “On Friday there was optimism again. We’re going to give it another week to 10 days and then decide where he’s at.”
And word from Chuck Pleiness that Bertuzzi is able to do workouts right now, which is progress.

Colaiacovo is a bit mysterious because last I heard it was a shoulder injury, and a I think it was last week we heard he was "almost ready to go" and then suddenly no news at all. I have no idea what's going on with him. 

Helm is closer to a couple weeks away, but he’s making progress and that’s encouraging.
Dana Wakiji tweeted that Helm said he’s aiming at returning around March 20 and tweeted some quotes from Helm.
Helm said:
There are still a few things I want to overcome, strengthening it, I really don’t want to feel any pain after skates. I did take a big step after last week. I started skating Monday, little twirls around the rink, nothing really too hard. Thursday, Friday I pushed a little harder. Today was the first day I’ve been on with the team in five or six weeks. I felt that I could push myself pretty hard out there. I was getting a little tired there since I’ve been out so long. A couple weeks ago we kind of said (March) 20 against Minny, not positive how close we were going to be to that. I want to be as healthy as I can before I get back out there and not a thought in my mind about it. We’ve come so far to have a little setback here. We’re definitely taking it slow and smart and making sure we do this right. Conditioning still I’m pretty far away, strengthening I’m still pretty far away, probably a good wk or a wk and a bit away. I don’t think my legs will take as long, but timing will. It’ll take a while for me to get back to where I want to be at.

We're finally starting to get some good news on the injury front, we have 2 top 2 lines again, I'm going to remain realistically optimistic.

Deep breathe, 
Let's Go Red Wings!