Connect with us

Detroit, MI

Wings, Lightning cap off a big Detroit-Tampa Bay day

Published

on

Wings, Lightning cap off a big Detroit-Tampa Bay day


The Detroit Lions have captivated the state of Michigan, and the state’s collective focus seems to be on the team’s NFC divisional round playoff game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Sunday.

Still, there’s another game between teams from Detroit and the Tampa area being played Sunday night in downtown Detroit.

The Red Wings are focused on ending their seven-year playoff drought, and they’ll play a key Eastern Conference game against Tampa Bay on Sunday night, set to start shortly after the Lions’ game ends. The NHL game time was moved to 7 p.m., in part to accommodate fans who want to watch both games.

The Red Wings lost their first regulation game in 2024 on Friday, falling to Carolina 4-2 to end a three-game road trip. They had gone 6-0-1 in January to climb back into the postseason picture.

Advertisement

The Hurricanes tossed a defensive net over the Red Wings, limiting them to 12 shots on goal.

“It’s been a real good road trip, a disappointing result (Friday), but that’s a real good hockey team in this building,” said forward J.T. Compher, who scored one of Detroit’s goals. “They play super tight, they play the right way, and we probably didn’t do enough to break through offensively. You have to keep chipping the puck in and get it back, but they played real good, and it’s not the result we wanted.”

Detroit had won its previous three games, including road victories over Toronto and Florida.

“They bring it every single night,” Red Wings goaltender Alex Lyon said of the Hurricanes. “I know a lot of guys on that team, and they’re ultra-competitive and they always show up. It’s a good measuring stick for us in this difficult stretch. But if we keep trending in the right direction, keep playing like that, we’ll be successful more times than not.”

Detroit’s Patrick Kane missed the game due to a lower-body injury and isn’t expected to play on Sunday. Linemate Alex DeBrincat is trying to break out of a slump.

Advertisement

DeBrincat, who is tied for the team lead with 40 points, hasn’t scored a goal in the past nine games. He scored two goals against the Lightning in Detroit’s home opener in October, a 6-4 Red Wings victory.

Sunday’s matchup will begin a stretch of six consecutive home games for the Red Wings, all but one before the All-Star break.

Tampa Bay will play the second game of a back-to-back set; the Lightning defeated Buffalo 3-1 on Saturday afternoon.

Nicholas Paul had a goal and an assist as the Lightning stretched their winning streak to five games. Tyler Motte contributed a short-handed goal, and Calvin de Haan clinched the victory with an empty-netter.

“The urgency in our game has really been there of late,” Lightning coach Jon Cooper said.

Advertisement

Backup goaltender Jonas Johannson made 26 saves in his first outing since Dec. 31.

“I thought we defended great today. Didn’t really give them too much for the first two periods,” Cooper said. “Third period, they had the puck more than we did, but I never completely felt in duress. In the end, you’ve got to keep the puck out of your net. When you give up one goal, you’ve got a good chance of winning the game, and that’s what we did.”

Andrei Vasilevskiy will get the call on Sunday. He’s 14-2 in 16 career starts against the Red Wings with a 2.08 goals-against average and a .929 saves percentage.

–Field Level Media

Copyright 2024 STATS LLC and Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and Associated Press is strictly prohibited.

Advertisement





Source link

Detroit, MI

Detroit archdiocese releases last proposed parish Mass stoppages. List hits 90

Published

on

Detroit archdiocese releases last proposed parish Mass stoppages. List hits 90


play

The list of Catholic parishes targeted for the possible stoppage of weekend Masses has grown to about 90 parishes across southeast Michigan, according to the latest proposed models the Archdiocese of Detroit has released as part of its major restructuring process.

The archdiocese released on Thursday the models for potential parish groupings for the six remaining planning areas in the archdiocese, and 32 parishes wouldn’t have weekend Mass under at least one of the models. Previously released models showed that 58 other parishes could stop holding weekend Mass.

Advertisement

The Archdiocese of Detroit recently completed listening sessions meant to garner feedback on the models, but parishioners can still share input through a survey that is open until July 31.

The archdiocese has been divided into 15 planning areas, or geographic areas, and three or four models are being proposed for each planning area, said the Rev. Mario Amore, executive director of parish renewal for the Archdiocese of Detroit.

The models have different proposed groupings of parishes ― called pastorates ― in which a grouping would share a pastor and potentially other priests. In some cases, selected churches in the grouping would no longer hold Saturday Vigil or Sunday Mass.

Advertisement

The models released on Thursday are for planning areas 6, 7, 8, 11, 14 and 15, which include parts of Wayne, Oakland and Macomb counties and parishes in St. Clair and Lapeer counties.

Sixteen of the parishes wouldn’t have weekend Mass under any of the models, including St. Alphonsus-Clement Parish in Dearborn, Our Lady of Loretto Parish in Redford Township and Our Lady of Hope Parish in St. Clair Shores.

The models are part of the archdiocese’s biggest restructuring plan in years. Announced last fall, Archbishop Edward Weisenburger said the archdiocese can’t maintain the roughly 200 existing parish buildings and is working to “right-size” the archdiocese, along with its personnel and financial resources. 

Holly Fournier, a spokesperson for the Archdiocese of Detroit, emphasized that the models are just draft proposals “intended to solicit feedback from parishioners.” She said no decisions have been made regarding pastorate groupings, weekend Mass schedules or any other aspect of the restructuring process.

The Rev. Mario Amore, executive director of parish renewal for the Archdiocese of Detroit, said in May that parishioners understand that the archdiocese “needs to do something” about its challenges. But when it becomes personal for people, it’s “very difficult,” he said.

Advertisement

“And there’s a lot of human emotions, and … we need to honor that,” Amore said. “We need to be attentive to that, and no one’s saying that it’s an easy process, and it’s not a process that … we’re happy that we need to undertake, but it is one that we do need to undertake.”

What the latest Wayne County models show

Planning Area 6, which is in the southern section of Wayne County, excluding the Downriver area, includes 16 parishes. Eight of them would stop holding Saturday Vigil or Sunday Mass under at least one of the models for the planning area.

They include St. Mary, Cause of Our Joy in Westland, St. Richard in Westland, St. Aloysius in Romulus, St. Sabina in Dearborn Heights, St. Linus in Dearborn Heights, Divine Child in Dearborn, St. Alphonsus -St. Clement in Dearborn and St. Kateri Tekakwitha in Dearborn.

Planning Area 7, which includes the northwest portion of Wayne County, has 15 parishes, four of which wouldn’t hold weekend Mass under at least one model. They include Our Lady of Loretto in Redford Township, St. John XXIII in Redford Township, St. Priscilla in Livonia and Resurrection in Canton Township.

Advertisement

What the latest Oakland and Macomb Co. models show

Planning Area 8, which is in southern Oakland County, has 13 parishes, six of which wouldn’t have weekend Mass under at least one of the models. They include St. William in Walled Lake, St. Gerald in Farmington, Prince of Peace in West Bloomfield, St. Joseph in South Lyon, Church of the Transfiguration in Southfield and Our Lady of Albanians in Southfield.

Planning Area 11, which includes the southeastern section of Macomb County, the Grosse Pointe communities and one parish in Detroit, has 14 parishes. Seven of them wouldn’t have weekend Mass under at least one model. They include Our Lady of Hope in St. Clair Shores, St. Lucy in St. Clair Shores, St. Basil the Great in Eastpointe, St. Margaret of Scotland in St. Clair Shores, Holy Innocents-St. Barnabas in Roseville, St. Matthew in Detroit and St. Clare of Montefalco in Grosse Pointe Park.

What the models in St. Clair, Lapeer counties show

Planning Area 14, which is in St. Clair County, has 12 parishes, five of which wouldn’t have Saturday Vigil or Sunday Mass in at least one model. They include Sacred Heart in Yale, St. Edward on the Lake in Lakeport, Holy Trinity in Port Huron, St. Christopher in Marysville and Immaculate Conception in Ira Township.

Planning Area 15, which is in Lapeer County and part of northern Macomb County, includes ten parishes. Two wouldn’t hold weekend Mass under at least one model. They include St. Mary Burnside in North Branch and St. Cornelius in Dryden.

Advertisement

asnabes@detroitnews.com



Source link

Continue Reading

Detroit, MI

This Detroit steakhouse used to serve thousands a night in its heyday

Published

on

This Detroit steakhouse used to serve thousands a night in its heyday


Carl’s Chop House, 3020 Grand River in Detroit, 1923-2008

It was one of the most prominent restaurants in Detroit throughout the 20th century. Carl’s Chop House served Detroit for decades, from the Great Depression through the new Millennium.

Founder Carl Rosenfield first opened as the Grand River Chophouse in the early 1920s and he moved the business across the street and renamed it Carl’s in the 1930s. The often-repeated story goes that he won the full ownership of a bar from his partner in a poker game and turned it into Carl’s Chop House.

Prior to his restaurant success, Rosenfield was a well-known tire merchant. At one point, Rosenfield also owned a lighthouse near Port Sanilac.

Advertisement

As a restaurateur, Rosenfield persevered through many trials, including the Great Depression and a beef shortage during World War II, which left the steakhouse to serve chicken, lobster, sturgeon and “a lot of fish I never heard of,” he was quoted as saying.

A sirloin steak dinner was $1 when Carl’s Chop House opened.

By the 1960s, business was booming, and the restaurant was serving thousands of customers daily and had plans to expand the 850-seat dining room to 1,200. By then, steak dinners were up to $6.

They bounced up to $10 in the 1970s when longtime Detroit News restaurant reporter and critic Molly Abraham included Carl’s in a column, pointing out that even though the restaurant was a bit out of fashion — it had been open for more than 50 years by then — she describes the place as having “an infectiously festive, informal atmosphere.”

Advertisement

Along with the steaks, convivial atmosphere and firm handshakes, Carl’s Chop House was known for always being open, even on Sundays. The only day of the year it was closed was Christmas Day, Dec. 25, which was also Rosenfield’s birthday.

Rosenfield, who would support local farmers by purchasing cattle and other livestock from the Michigan State Fair, was still working at the restaurant in the 1980s when he was in his 90s. He died in 1991 at age 95.

The new owners of Carl’s Chop House ushered it into the next century for another generation to enjoy.

It wasn’t the same without its namesake proprietor, who was known for an absolutely crushing handshake, however. In 2008, owner Frank Passalacqua filed an application with the state for a topless permit, hoping to turn the property, which was now a neighbor of MotorCity Casino, from a steakhouse to a strip club.

Passalacqua, who was more successful at Mario’s Italian restaurant in the Cass Corridor, said he was losing $1 million a year on Carl’s. The gentleman’s club idea never materialized. Carl’s closed in 2008 and the building was demolished in 2010.

Advertisement

mbaetens@detroitnews.com



Source link

Continue Reading

Detroit, MI

Detroit hosts 7th annual Juneteenth Celebration of Freedom

Published

on

Detroit hosts 7th annual Juneteenth Celebration of Freedom




Detroit hosts 7th annual Juneteenth Celebration of Freedom – CBS Detroit

Advertisement













Advertisement




























Advertisement

Advertisement

Watch CBS News


Detroit Mayor Mary Sheffield joined leaders on Wednesday for the seventh annual Juneteenth Celebration of Freedom.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement



Source link

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending