That’s where I’m at. To have the full “camp roster” and AHL bodies it’s pretty jammed up at the beginning
- Jeremy Laura
Indeed. Last year the Red Wings' training camp roster had almost 70 players.
If you add up all the players under contract with the Red Wings, all the players under contract with the Griffins, and all the unsigned draft picks on Detroit's reserve list, it's roughly 80 guys.
But not all of those players will be in camp. NCAA players can't attend without giving up their college eligibility. Prospects already committed to playing the season in Europe typically don't attend because their seasons are already in progress. (Berggren, for example, was drafted in 2018 but his first NHL training camp was 2021.) A few of those guys are even KHL veterans who are only on Detroit's reserve list because there's no NHL-KHL transfer agreement.
So the extra spots in camp get filled up by amateur tryouts (typically undrafted major junior kids who go right back to juniors afterward) and professional tryouts. Those professional tryouts tend to fall into one of two categories:
- Proven NHL vet without a contract for the year, auditioning for an NHL job
- Minor league journeyman auditioning for an AHL-only contract
Hillis is pretty clearly the latter.