01/07/23: The Red Wings have now reassigned Aston-Reese back to Grand Rapids after six days on the NHL roster. He did not play at all during that time, his last actual game action coming December 31st with Grand Rapids. That’s now where he’ll return, still with just one NHL game played on his record so far this year. He’s scored 11 points in 26 games at the AHL level.
01/01/23: The Red Wings recalled forward Zach Aston-Reese from AHL Grand Rapids on Monday, per a team announcement. After assigning Jonatan Berggren and Austin Czarnik to Grand Rapids on Saturday, Detroit had two open spots on the active roster, so no corresponding transaction is needed.
Aston-Reese, 29, will serve as injury insurance as the Red Wings embark on a three-game road swing against the league’s California-based teams this week. There are currently no injuries to Detroit’s forward group that would necessitate him entering the lineup, and he will likely serve as a healthy scratch on Tuesday against the Sharks.
This season was Aston-Reese’s second straight year participating in training camp on a professional tryout. After earning a contract based on his performance with the Maple Leafs last season, his brief time in camp with the Carolina Hurricanes wasn’t as successful. The Hurricanes released him on October 6, four days before the start of the regular season.
It didn’t take Aston-Reese long to land on his feet, however. He signed a one-year, two-way deal with a $350K salary guarantee in Detroit two days later and promptly cleared waivers, allowing him to begin the season in Grand Rapids with potential for NHL recalls.
The shutdown winger has historically thrived in the defensive end, never receiving more than 40% of his zone starts in the offensive zone at even strength in a single season throughout his career. That’s remarkable for a forward and a testament to where his game shines the most. However, his once-spectacular advanced metrics have become slightly more average over the past two seasons, limiting his value at the NHL level without much to show for his 308-game career on the scoresheet.
That’s not to say Aston-Reese can’t put the puck in the net. He posted 1.66 points per game in his senior season at Northeastern and was a rather highly-touted undrafted free-agent signing out of school by the Penguins. However, he’s never cracked the 20-point mark at the NHL level and, as such, remains a decidedly fourth-line threat who can log time on the penalty kill.
The Red Wings have a deep forward core, though. Christian Fischer is the only one of their top 12 forwards producing less than 0.4 points per game. It’s made it more difficult for Aston-Reese to carve out a role in the NHL lineup, resulting in him playing 26 games for Grand Rapids this year – his most minor-league usage since suiting up in 41 contests for AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton in 2017-18.
His minor-league play hasn’t been convincing enough to award him another full-time NHL role, either. His five goals and 11 points are seventh and 12th on the team, respectively, verifying concerns that he’s now too much of an offensive liability to fit in with the skill players in the Red Wings’ bottom six. He’s also one of nine players on Grand Rapids with a minus rating, and although that’s likely more a testament to his assumed excessive defensive zone usage, not being able to dominate those minutes in goals-against suppression at a lower level doesn’t indicate that he’ll suddenly rebound to his former defensive prowess in the NHL.
This is his third recall of the season. He’s been on the NHL roster for five days and played in one game since clearing waivers back in October, meaning he can remain on Detroit’s roster for another 25 days and play nine games before needing waivers to head back to Grand Rapids again.
Aston-Reese has one appearance with the Red Wings, coming on December 11 in a 6-3 loss to the Stars. He logged just 6:21, recording two hits and no shots on goal. He will be an unrestricted free agent at the end of the season.
Olddefense
Nothing said about the continuing coverage gaps in the D zone? So many chances by uncovered opponents both low and high are translating into goals against. SJ has the worst record in the NHL and its tied late in the 3rd? Win is a win but I would be deeply concerned about the D zone regardless of Lyon’s shot stopping skills.
Free sticks down low and the late, uncovered man in the slot or FO circles. Whose guys are these uncovered players?
Who knows, maybe the NHL now wants the D or back checkers to not interfere with quality scoring chances. Feeling a lot like the NBA in recent seasons.
Olddefense
Dunno, a puck in he D zone constituted an “emergency” with all hands on deck. Find your man, and take away his stick. GAs except one which Lyon should have had, resulted from a combination of 3 or 4 “men on deck” in the D zone, and opponents with control of their sticks. They can be controlled even in today’s NBA like NHL. Glad they got a couple out of LA.
User 318310488
Filip Hronek. 39 games. 28 points. +24.
User 318310488
Red Wings record with Patrick Kane in the lineup. 6 Wins. 10 loses.