Nill is in a better position than just about
anybody, except ex-Red Wings great Steve
Yzerman, now the general manager of the Tampa
Bay Lightning, to make it happen. He learned from Holland and Red
Wings Senior Vice President Jim Devellano for 19 seasons, including
15 as assistant GM, and now is getting to put his on-the-job
experience to use in his first role as the leading man.
Earlier this month, Nill took his first steps toward recreating some of Detroit's success in Dallas by hiring longtime Red Wings chief amateur scout Joe McDonnell, who was a scout for the Red Wings since 1995 and their director of amateur scouting for the past 10 years. Nill also hired Mark Leach, an amateur scout who worked in Detroit for more than a decade. Familiarity and friendship were two major points of emphasis in the hirings. Nill and McDonnell are close friends and have worked together for years, with McDonnell reporting to Nill and Holland admittedly leaving the two of them alone. "They know what my expectations are and I know how they operate," Nill said. "I don't have to spend a year evaluating what they're doing. When Joe says, 'This guy is a good skater, but he does this and that's a little weak,' I have a picture and I know what Joe is thinking because I have been around him long enough. If he likes a guy, there's something I like also and I'm going to pursue it."
Nill said he treaded carefully before hiring
McDonnell and Leach out of respect for Holland, who offered to
re-sign the scouts. Holland understands why McDonnell and Leach
followed Nill to Dallas. "On one hand you'd like to see
people stay, but I understand relationships and friendships,"
Holland told NHL.com. "Joe
McDonnell has a relationship and a friendship with Jimmy Nill
that Joe and I don't have because we have different job descriptions.
They did a lot of great work that's been left behind for us."
In addition to the scouts, Nill worked with Stars
coach Lindy
Ruff to hire Curt
Fraser as an assistant coach. Fraser was the coach of the Grand
Rapids Griffins, Detroit's American Hockey League affiliate, from
2008-12. "I don't think it's any secret that I would love to
replicate what the Red Wings have done," Nill said. "I
don't know if it can be done."
Detroit -
Holland didn't have to look far to find McDonnell's
replacement. Tyler
Wright, formerly of the Columbus
Blue Jackets, has a summer home on the same lake in Vernon,
British Columbia, as Holland. "I've talked to him a lot
through the years about hockey," Holland said of Wright. "I
know he's got a tremendous work ethic."
That work ethic coupled with his experience and
the fact that he was drafted in the first round of the 1991 NHL Draft
by the Edmonton
Oilers was enough to convince Holland to hire Wright, who spent
the past six years with the Columbus
Blue Jackets; the first four as the team's development coach and
the past two as the co-director of amateur scouting. Holland was not
deterred that Wright came from an organization that has struggled to
gain consistency through the years. "I like to think I'm a
better manager today then I was in 1997 [the year he started as GM]
or in 2005, when I was eight years into the job," Holland
said. "There is nothing like experience. That's how Joe
McDonnell became Joe
McDonnell. That's how Ken
Holland became Ken
Holland. That's how Jim
Nill became Jim
Nill. Somebody gave us an opportunity and we went with it. Tyler
Wright is bringing qualities and experience to us that are going
to be very valuable. I hope that being around us, we've got some
things to provide that he can build on. We're in the
people-development business. The more experience you get, the better
you're going to be."
While Wright will be the new McDonnell, former NHL
defenseman Jeff
Finley will be the new Leach. Finley has been with the Red Wings
for three years and now will assume a larger role in the scouting
department as Wright's right-hand man. They will report directly to
Holland, who in the past had Nill as the guy in between the scouting
department and him. "Their job starting in 2014 is to draft
some players that will one day put on a Red Wings jersey,"
Holland said. "I believe the model for success is the people
that do all the work should be making the selections. That's what
they're hired to do."
Toronto -
Although the optics would suggest otherwise, Toronto
Maple Leafs right wing David
Clarkson insists he didn't choose No. 71 just because it was the
reverse of 17, the number his idol and former Leafs power forward
Wendel Clark
wore. "I wore 71 when I was younger," Clarkson told
NHL.com. "I've always loved the No. 7. It's just a number I
have always loved. I obviously wasn't going to pick the No. 7
[honored number of King
Clancy and Tim
Horton]. I wanted to have a seven in my number, and 71 is
something I wore in ball hockey and other hockey when I was young.
I've always enjoyed that number."
He's always enjoyed No. 17, too, mainly because it
was Clark's number. Clark was Clarkson's favorite player when he was
growing up in the Toronto suburbs, so much so that Clarkson wore No.
17 with the Kitchener Rangers in the Ontario Hockey League and would
have liked to wear it with the New
Jersey Devils. Instead, he was given No. 27 when he came up
to the NHL in 2006-07 because Mike
Rupp had No. 17 and the Devils don't give out high numbers.
Clarkson was switched to No. 23 starting with the 2007-08 season, and
it stuck with him until he signed with Toronto on July 5."You
really don't get to pick your number in New Jersey,"
Clarkson said with a laugh.
He did in Toronto and it created a stir as most
people just assumed he picked 71 because of the Clark connection,
adding fuel to the already gassed-up comparisons between the former
Toronto power forward and the city's newest power forward. Clarkson
wanted to set the record straight. "I've always enjoyed No. 7
and when you're going to pick a new number for a team you're going to
be with for seven years, you've got to like the number. It's not
because of Wendel
Clark. You can make sure people understand that."
Clarkson grew up in Mimico, Ontario, and settled
in the Toronto area with his wife long before he was signed by the
Maple Leafs on July 5. That hasn't stopped the neighborhood kids from
welcoming him back home since signing his seven year, $37 million
contract. "There are kids who have come to the house and
given my wife and I cards and gifts to say welcome to Toronto.
They're really cute. As an athlete, to be lucky enough to do what I
do, I always think I was that kid one day so you always have to give
them time. You set the right precedent so when they're older you hope
that they're answering the door and doing the same thing."
Arbitration
hearing - The NHLPA last week released the list of 21
players who elected salary arbitration, but that number already has
dwindled to 14, as seven of the players have re-signed with their
teams. Josh
Bailey agreed to terms with the New
York Islanders on a five-year deal. Jake
Muzzin (Los
Angeles Kings), Alec
Martinez (Kings), Erik
Condra (Ottawa
Senators) and Brendan
Smith (Red Wings) signed two-year deals. Ryan
White signed a one-year deal to stay with the Montreal
Canadiens, and Eric
Tangradi agreed to a new deal with the Winnipeg
Jets.
Salary arbitration hearings will be held in
Toronto between July 22 and Aug. 6 for players who do not sign in
advance. Here is rest of the list: Sam
Gagner (Edmonton
Oilers), Trevor
Lewis (Kings), Jordan
Nolan (Kings), Nick
Spaling (Nashville
Predators), Mats
Zuccarello (New
York Rangers), Robert
Bortuzzo (Pittsburgh
Penguins), Chris
Stewart (St.
Louis Blues), Mark
Fraser (Toronto
Maple Leafs), Carl
Gunnarsson (Maple Leafs), Dale
Weise (Vancouver
Canucks), Zach
Bogosian (Jets), Bryan
Little (Jets), Paul
Postma (Jets), Blake
Wheeler (Jets).
Others
* Holland said the Red Wings are "capped
out," meaning their roster is pretty much set. He still has to
re-sign restricted free agents Joakim
Andersson and Gustav
Nyquist, which will give Detroit 16 forwards under contract. He
said he made contract offers to Daniel
Cleary and Damien
Brunner prior to July 5, but they were turned down, and the Red
Wings instead signed Daniel
Alfredsson and Stephen
Weiss.
* Boston
Bruins general manager Peter Chiarelli is looking for a new
director of amateur scouting after firing Wayne
Smith, The Hockey News reported earlier this week. Chiarelli told
The Hockey News that the organization was looking to "freshen up
our amateur scouting and shift things a little bit." The Boston
Globe reported that Keith
Gretzky, Wayne
Gretzky's brother, is a candidate to replace Smith. Keith
Gretzky is an Ontario-based scout for the Bruins.
* Tim Leiweke, President and CEO of Maple Leaf
Sports and Entertainment, told Bloomberg News in a story published
Tuesday that the contract for Maple Leafs general manager Dave Nonis
is being renegotiated and there likely will be news on that soon.
"I'm a big Dave Nonis fan, and I want a culture here that is
different than the one I stepped into," Leiweke said.
In the same Bloomberg article, Leiweke said he has
the championship parade route planned should the Maple Leafs end
their Stanley Cup drought, which currently is at 46 years.
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