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Detroit Red Wings’ Moritz Seider: ‘No one is happy in the locker room. Why should we?’

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Detroit Red Wings’ Moritz Seider: ‘No one is happy in the locker room. Why should we?’


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Detroit Red Wings coach Derek Lalonde had a suggestion for the reporters who cover his team daily.

“You can all save yourself some time and just copy and paste the same writeup you’ve had the last five games,” he said after the Wings lost Saturday at Little Caesars Arena, 2-1, to the Colorado Avalanche. “Some positives. We’ll probably take our five-on-five game tonight against a team like that. Hold them to two goals. Probably outchanced them fairly good. Just got to do more to flip some of these games.”

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The Wings (10–13–4) have lost five straight games by one goal, and their past seven losses have been by that margin. They sit second from the bottom in the Eastern Conference, and the frustration is evident.

“I mean, no one is happy in the locker room. Why should we?” defenseman Moritz Seider said. “We’re losing games that are winnable and we just can’t find ways to get it done. That’s really frustrating. We shouldn’t be lying to ourselves. We need to be better. It shouldn’t drag us down, though. We come to the rink with a big smile tomorrow, get ready to work, play two opponents that are really close and hopefully get four points and get back with a little bit of swagger.”

One game at a time: First, the Wings head back on the road Monday to take on the Sabres in Buffalo, New York. They do so with just two points banked in their past five outings. They had a chance to win in Ottawa but lost, 2-1; they had a chance to win in Boston, but lost, 3-2 in overtime. They had a chance to win Saturday, getting a boost with Lucas Raymond’s goal late in the second period that made it 2-1, only to come out in the third and register only one shot on net the first 15 or so minutes, while the Avs racked up 10.

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“The last 10 minutes in the second, we found another gear,” Seider said. “We kept the Iines rolling and scored a great goal. But then we just couldn’t really capitalize in the third. Got away from the game a little bit. Not good enough on the breakouts, a lot of bad decisions.

“Very frustrating once again. You do a lot of good things but not over a span of 60 minutes, and that will cost you against a really good team. We came out in the third with not nearly enough jump as we had before. Couldn’t really sustain any kind of O-zone time, get not dangerous chances, didn’t really force them into uncomfortable situations.”

Pullling goalie Ville Husso with 2:30 to play helped the Wings enough to get eight shots on net the final few minutes, but it was too little, too late.

“We had some wall turnovers and we had some breakouts where we couldn’t get our game going,” Lalonde said. “That’s the point where, if we could have rolled our second into our third, I think we find that goal. But we had some wall battles lost, they’re heavy on some sticks, we had some turnovers. It hurt us in zone time and getting push.

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“Our margin of effort is extremely thin right now. We can’t lose moments in the game and there were some moments in the third we just lost some shifts and we couldn’t get things rolling.”

J.T. Compher, a second-line player who has three goals on the season and none since Oct. 27, said the Wings “have to stick together. A lot of frustrated guys in the room and it’s got to be our group of guys to find our way out of it.”

Seider said the Wings maybe need to “cheer each other on. Work a little bit harder in practice. Find a little bit of confidence and just find a good reason why we want to beat teams and be on the winning side. That has to come from us. Nobody else can do that for us.”

Lalonde pointed to the stretch last season when the Wings lost seven straight games in regulation from Feb. 29-March 14, during which they were outscored, 36-12. This stretch hasn’t been like that: Going back 10 games, they’ve been outscored, 28-25.

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“We had that stretch last year, and we were bad,” Lalonde said. “We earned that losing streak. This feels a little different, but the bottom line is, we have to do more to flip these games. I think they’re playing some pretty responsible hockey. But we have to do a little more offensively. Just a little frustration that it’s not going on our way.”



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Detroit Pistons’ loss to Cavs shows weaknesses before playoffs

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Detroit Pistons’ loss to Cavs shows weaknesses before playoffs


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CLEVELAND – In just five days, the Detroit Pistons faced the Cleveland Cavaliers twice.

They split the games to finish their season series against the Central Division rivals, but with a potential reunion looming in the second round of the NBA playoffs, the Pistons came away from both games unsatisfied.

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On Friday, it was the Pistons needing overtime to overcome a Cavaliers team missing James Harden and Donovan Mitchell at Little Caesars Arena. On Tuesday, March 3, in Cleveland, however – with Harden back in the lineup – the Pistons struggled in the areas they usually thrive, for a 113-109 loss.

The Pistons’ first loss on the road since Jan. 29 didn’t feature their usual fire for much of the night.

“I’m frustrated with the effort level, the attention to detail that we played on that end of the floor,” coach J.B. Bickerstaff said. “The times and opportunities where we did do the right thing, did get stops, we let people outwork us to come up with offensive rebounds. We can’t afford to not play at maximum effort. That’s been our superpower all year long and, tonight, I felt like there were times where we were outworked. If we’re outworked, this isn’t going to be the results that we want.”

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The Pistons work at being the league’s most disruptive team via turnovers has given them a top-three defensive rating. They force turnovers on 17.2% of possessions – best in the NBA –and only trail the Houston Rockets in offensive rebounding percentage. They also lead the league in steals and blocks per game. Getting out in transition and capitalizing on second-chance opportunities has created an above-average offense despite struggles on 3-point shooting.

For three quarters against the Cavaliers, little of that materialized – as least until the Pistons grabbed seven steals in the final period (after just two in the first three). Overall, the Pistons were beat on the offensive glass (11-10), mustered just 10 fastbreak points (their lowest total since Jan. 27) and picked up 11 second-chance points (their least since Feb. 6).

It was, in all, a lackadaisical defensive performance, with the Pistons repeatedly losing shooters behind the arc as the Cavs knocked down 17 3-pointers – eight more than the Pistons.

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“Obviously they’re a good team, but we haven’t been playing to our standard on that side of the ball,” Pistons wing Javonte Green said. “Coach talked about the effort we need to bring every game. We just need to play harder. We can’t get outworked on offensive rebounds and 50-50 balls, that’s our identity. I feel like we needed to pick up that slack.”

The Pistons also were hurt by a poor shooting performance by Cade Cunningham; he finished with 10 points and 14 assists but shot 4-for-16. Cleveland threw multiple defenders at him all night, and he obliged by passing the ball and setting up his teammates. It led to a big second half for Tobias Harris, who scored all 19 of his points in the last two quarters.

But it wasn’t enough.

“On the defensive end we just couldn’t put up a wall, couldn’t get a stand going,” Cunningham said. “Personally, I had a lot of bad closeouts; just off the ball, I didn’t feel sharp. Just gotta clean all that stuff up.”

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With 22 games remaining, the Pistons are focused on cleaning up the margins so they’ll be ready for postseason play. These two games against the Cavaliers have given them a list of areas to clean up.

Friday, they needed an extra period to win after rallying from a late nine-point deficit despite losing Cunningham late after he fouled out with just under two minutes left in the fourth quarter. Jalen Duren and Daniss Jenkins stepped up in overtime after Duncan Robinson also fouled out.

Mostly, the Cavaliers have proven they can pounce during soft stretches on defense. Thursday brings another rematch with a contender, as the Pistons wrap up a three-game road trip against the San Antonio Spurs (another opponent from last week).

“We didn’t play our best basketball the other night,” Bickerstaff said of the Cavaliers’ game on Feb. 27. “Give our guys credit because we played 53 minutes and were able to pull it out in some adverse conditions. Cade fouls out, Duncan fouls out, our guys still figure out a way to get it done.

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“We need to be better. We need to be better defensively, we need to impose ourselves on the game a little bit more than we did last game. I thought the last two quarters of the Orlando game [on Sunday] were the best quarters we’ve played defensively since New York [on Feb. 19]. I hope, and told our guys, that we can continue to build off that, because that’s where it always starts for us. You can tell the tone by how we are defensively and how we’re getting after it.”

Contact Omari Sankofa II at osankofa@freepress.com. Follow him on Bluesky and/or X @omarisankofa.

[ MUST WATCH: Make “The Pistons Pulse” your go-to Pistons podcast, listen available anywhere you listen to podcasts (Apple, Spotify) or watch live on YouTube. ]

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Detroit, MI

Police search for suspect, accomplice after teen injured in shooting outside Detroit school gym

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Police search for suspect, accomplice after teen injured in shooting outside Detroit school gym



The Detroit Police Department is searching for a suspect and an accomplice in connection with a shooting last week that injured a teen outside a school gym.

The shooting happened in the 3400 block of St. Aubin, the same area where the Detroit Edison Public School Academy’s Early College of Excellence is located. Police say that at about 8:27 p.m. on Feb. 27, there was an altercation inside the gym that continued outside. 

Detroit police are searching for a suspect and their accomplice in connection with a shooting outside a school.

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Detroit Police Department


Police say the suspect allegedly fired multiple shots at the victim, striking him. The teen was taken to a hospital for treatment. His current condition is unknown.

Police say the accomplice who was with the suspect was also armed.

Anyone with information is asked to call DPD’s seventh precinct at 313-596-5740, Crime Stoppers at 800-Speak Up or DetroitRewards.tv.

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Bruce Campbell announces cancer diagnosis; ‘Fear not,’ he tells fans

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Bruce Campbell announces cancer diagnosis; ‘Fear not,’ he tells fans



Treatment will delay the Royal Oak-born actor’s plans to tour his new film ‘Ernie & Emma’ this summer.

Royal Oak-born movie star and cult hero Bruce Campbell announced on social media on Monday that he has been diagnosed cancer — a type that is “treatable” but not “curable,” he said.

“I apologize if that’s a shock — it was to me too,” the “Evil Dead” star, 67, wrote in a message posted to Instagram.

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He went on to say “I’m not gonna go into any more detail,” and he didn’t. He said the public announcement had to do with scaling back appearances on his schedule, including tour dates behind his latest film, “Ernie & Emma.”

Campbell planned to show the movie June 5 at the Redford Theatre; as of Monday night, that date is still on the Redford schedule, but Campbell wrote in his note he plans to get “as well as I possibly can over the summer so that I can tour with my new movie ‘Ernie & Emma’ this fall.”

The movie is written, directed by and stars Campbell as a man who goes on a journey following the death of his wife. Campbell produced the movie alongside his wife, Ida Gearon, and filmed it in Oregon, where he now lives.

Campbell told The News in January he dedicated “Ernie & Emma” to his childhood moviemaking pals, including Scott Spiegel, who died of a heart attack in September 2025.

“It’s a callback to the carefree days of Super 8, where we could do whatever the f–k we wanted to do,” Campbell said of “Ernie & Emma.” “So I thought, ‘All the boys are responsible for this,’ so they’re all in there.”

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Campbell got his start making movies around Metro Detroit with his childhood pal, Sam Raimi. Campbell starred in Raimi’s “Evil Dead” trilogy and has since appeared in most of Raimi’s films; Campbell makes a brief appearance in a photograph in the background of an early scene in Raimi’s latest, “Send Help.”

He’s also an author; Campbell’s autobiography “If Chins Could Kill: Confessions of a B Movie Actor” was published in 2001.

In his post on social media, Campbell thanked fans and said he was not out to elicit sympathy.

“Fear not, I am a tough old son-of-a-bitch and I have great support, so I expect to be around for a while,” he wrote.

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agraham@detroitnews.com





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