When Veleno returned to the Drummondville Voltigeurs last fall, Blashill told him to work on becoming a great two-way center.
"It's hard to be a pure point guy," Blashill said. "You look at his points in juniors, they were good, they weren't astronomical, so to think you come here and all the sudden go astronomical in points would be misleading, so I think become a great two-way center. I told him the quickest way to the NHL is to earn trust. That's true of every organization. So if you earn trust from the coach you get out there way quicker.
"So be great defensively, transport the puck up the ice like he does and produce offense, like he does. You got to do both for sure if you want to be in a top-two line center role but you better make sure you're good defensively."
Shawn Horcoff, the Wings' director of player development and assistant director of player personnel, and Dan Cleary, the assistant director of player development, kept in close touch with Veleno last year and helped him work on his defensive game.
Veleno spent most of the summer in Detroit working out with the other prospects. He also spent time working on his shot.
"I think that was one thing I wasn't doing as much in junior a couple of years ago," Veleno said. "And then once I was drafted here, they kept telling me to shoot the puck. I worked on my shot in the summer and got stronger. I just kind of shot and hope it goes in."
The puck certainly went in during the NHL Prospect Tournament as Veleno led the tournament with seven goals.
"It was a good time over there. I think a lot of guys had a lot of fun, especially winning that tournament," Veleno said. "It was pretty special for the whole organization and for us players, we really wanted to win. I think we showed it in all our games we played, always coming back from a deficit.
"The confidence is obviously high. I had a pretty good tournament but I got to reset myself here. I know it's a different level. This is like the real stuff, I guess. It all starts tonight."
BERNIER'S SUMMER: Goaltender Jonathan Bernier was a big banged up at the end of last season and did not play after leaving the March 29 game against New Jersey after two periods with an upper-body injury.
But Bernier recovered in plenty of time to do a lot of work over the summer.
"I probably skated, I was on the ice around June and working on little details, post work," Bernier said. "I thought we were getting a lot of shots from low to high so I kind of worked on that. You just train hard and you make sure that physically you're ready to go."