Posts Tagged ‘Chicago Blackhawks’

Michael Frolik acquired from Panthers

About an hour before last night’s game with the Edmonton Oilers the Jack Skille era with the Blackhawks came to an end. He was traded to the Florida Panthers with forwards Hugh Jessiman (AHL) and David Pacan (OHL) for forward Michael Frolik and goaltender Alexander Salak (SEL).

And the peasants rejoiced.

As the Blackhawks played themselves out the top eight in the West and the trade deadline neared, it became apparent Stan Bowman would shake-up the roster one way or another. Frolik has scored 20-plus goals in his first two seasons in the league, is top-six talent and will be a restricted free agent at the end of the season.

With the addition of the 22-year-old Czech – and subtraction of Skille – the Blackhawks are an improved squad. One step closer to being a true contender to repeat. Now Bowman will need to address the blue line – a third-pairing, penalty-killing defender at a nice price.

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Warm up to Nick Leddy

Nick Leddy was assigned to the Rockford IceHogs on Monday. Per usual, the move was made in order to circumvent the cap free up cap space. According to capgeek.com, the Blackhawks will save $6,007 each day the 19-year-old defenseman isn’t on the roster. It’s a given he’ll back with the NHL club before Saturday’s game against the Red Wings.

In eleven games with the Hawks, Leddy has tallied only one goal – a fluky one at that. His defensive positioning is suspect, his back-checking leaves a lot to be desired and he needs to be strong in front of the net. Leddy’s development would benefit from playing games at the AHL level, but the Blackhawks need him rounding out their third defensive pairing. With him in the lineup – since he was re-called earlier this month – the Blackhawks are 4-0-1.

The recent success is less about the addition of Leddy to the blue line, but more so the subtraction of Nick Boynton from it. The Blackhawks are willing to sit through the growing pains with the former. Leddy and Jordan Hendry give them the best chance to win, which is why the organization was willing to burn a year on his entry-level contract to keep him in Chicago.

This won’t be the last time Leddy will be demoted to Rockford, as the Blackhawks are right up against the cap ceiling. Despite how you feel about him or his readiness, he’s going to be part of the defensive corps indefinitely, or as long as Boynton has the ‘flu’.

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Chicago’s net belongs to Corey Crawford

Along with the announcement that Marian Hossa, Patrick Kane and Viktor Stalberg won’t lace up for Sunday night’s match against the Los Angeles Kings, Coach Quenneville stated that he will turn to Corey Crawford once again. It will be his third consecutive start, and his tenth start in the last 13 games for the Blackhawks. After Marty Turco was pulled 20 minutes and four goal into Monday’s game in Colorado, any residual goaltending controversy ended.

Going into the season there was always the chance Crawford would un-seat Turco, but I for one never gave thought it would ever happen. In my experience covering the Blackhawks and their prospects for three seasons, Crawford didn’t have the skill-set to be a starter at this level. He didn’t move well within the crease, and his rebound control left a lot to be desired. I had my apprehensions whether he’d be an adequate backup.

What we saw Friday night from the 25-year-old rookie in the 4-1 victory over the Red Wings was one of this better performances in his short career. He was quick, moved well from side-to-side, he didn’t give up any juicy rebounds and stopped 29 of the 30 shots faced. Detroit’s only tally happened after the puck took a generous bounce off the backboards, and Crawford couldn’t recover in time.

The starting gig is his to be lost.

Come season end, the Blackhawks’ brass will be faced with a similar problem last summer with Antti Niemi. Granted they won’t be faced with the payroll problems, as the salary cap ceiling is expected to rise again on top of the $4M is performance bonus penalties will be alleviated, but they will have a goaltender in their mid-20s with an expiring contract (RFA).

Don’t expect the same outcome, however. The Blackhawks have nothing in the pipeline that is anywhere close to being NHL-ready and I doubt Bowman will turn to the free agent pool keeping the goaltending carousel spinning. Crawford is the Blackhawks’ goaltender for the immediate future.

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Jeremy Morin replaces Marian Hossa, tallies assist

In case you’ve been living under a rock or missed tonight’s 7-5 victory over the much loved St. Louis Blues, the news regarding Marian Hossa‘s health is of the breaking variety. Hossa was helped from the ice after colliding with defenseman and perennial whipping-boy Nick Boynton at Monday’s practice. It was announced today that he will miss up to three weeks with a lower-body injury.

This is the second time this season Hossa will miss a handful of games due to injury. A clean hit by Jarret Stoll in the October 27 match against the Kings forced him to miss five games. In his stead, the Blackhawks re-called forward Jeremy Morin from Rockford (AHL) this morning.

In his third game with the Blackhawks this season, Morin tallied his first NHL point against the Blues. He assisted on Troy Brouwer’s power-play goal in the second period. Morin dumped the puck into the offensive zone, which took a favorable bounce off the boards, leaving the net wide-open for Brouwer to tap it in. The 19-year-old had a plus-two rating, a five-minute fighting major and had 11:38 of ice-time (a career high).

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Where do the Blackhawks go from here?

It was a big night for Captain Jonathan Toews ended the Hawks’ two game skid Saturday as Andrew Ladd, Dustin Byfuglien, Brent Sopel and Ben Eager hosted their old team in Atlanta. Toews contributed to every goal in his team’s 5-4 (OT) win over the Thrashers. He has two goals, two assists and netted the first shoot-out goal. With all of the issues the Blackhawks had coming into this game, it was nice to see the face of the franchise finally step up. Patrick Kane scored two goals of his own, and added an assist.

Saturday’s game in Atlanta was more than just the Toews and Kane show. The whole team played with an edge they lost when Marian Hossa went down with an upper-body injury at home to Los Angeles five games earlier. In his stead, role players such as Viktor Stalberg, Jack Skille and Jake Dowell stepped up, but due to the lack of effort from star players, the Blackhawks went 1-3 before Saturday’s win over the Thrashers.

Over that span we learned a few things about how this organization will be run with Stan Bowman as general manager. We already knew from last year that he’ll shuffle players back-and-forth from Rockford to save a dime, but to force Coach Quenneville to field a fourth line consisted of two defenseman centered by a winger in New Jersey was a little excessive. He saved a few thousand dollars by demoting forwards Ben Smith and Ryan Potulny before the game, which they lost in impressive fashion.

Anyways, the edge that the Hawks played with on Saturday was gone by Sunday. They gave up a one goal lead in the third period when the Oilers were able to score two goals fourteen seconds apart. The Blackhawks were unable to return the favor, and handed Edmonton a 2-1 victory at the United Center. Any sort of optimism following the narrow defeat over the Thrashers vanished, and not even Marian Hossa‘s return to the lineup yesterday inspires hope. The issues that surfaced in his absence are still in the forefront.

Management appears to be detached, constantly spewing the tired rhetoric that they are pleased with the state of their team. The players have become complacent, losing yet another game they took the lead into the third period. And for some reason Quenneville continues to pencil John Scott into the lineup over more talented players. First it was Jordan Hendry on defense, and now it’s Bryan Bickell on the fourth line.

Quenneville’s reactionary move is to always meddle with line combinations, but it’s going to take more moving Tomas Kopecky from the second line to the third or abruptly ending a practice session to incite change. Getting this team to play better hockey in their own zone is like teaching a man how to fish. They will win more games as a result, and the other issues become trivial.

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Jeremy Morin to make NHL debut in Atlanta

The Blackhawks have re-called forward Jeremy Morin from Rockford (AHL) this morning, and will suit up against the Atlanta Thrashers on Saturday. Ironically, Morin will make his NHL debut against the team that selected him 45th overall in the second round of the 2009 entry draft. The Hawks acquired him in the deal that sent Dustin Byfuglien to Atlanta this summer.

In eight games with the IceHogs, Morin has three goals and an assist with a plus-one rating. He missed two games due to a lower-body injury he sustained in October, but he returned to the lineup last weekend.

Morin will be a welcome addition to the roster for a myriad of reasons. The most substantial being that Coach Quenneville won’t have to put two defenseman on the fourth line as wingers. One was already too many. Morin should also inject some life into an offense that has looked flat, and fill-in for Marian Hossa on the power-play unit. With Rockford, three of his points came on the power play.

Projected forward lines –

Stalberg – Toews – Kane
Brouwer – Sharp – Morin
Kopecky – Dowell – Bickell
Scott – Pisani – Skille

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Blackhawks good in losing effort to Rangers

It’s been a while since I’ve had time to write a game recap, and Henrik Lundqvist got in the way of making this a pleasant affair, despite the optimistic tone of this post. He was amazing, and is easily my favorite goaltender in the league. Lundqvist is the Rangers, and he proved that tonight fending off a determined Hawks offense, stopping 33 of the 35 shots faced. Without him they’d be at the bottom of the barrel that is the eastern conference.

The Blackhawks were able to set up shop in the offensive zone, but had a difficult time getting shots through traffic. When they did, there was Lundqvist. The Hawks were only able to net a couple goals due to a couple bounces that when their way. The First goal was deflected by Tomas Kopecky on the power play, and the second came from Patrick Kane at a tough angle where the puck trickled through the five hole.

There is never such a thing as a good loss when you’re the defending Stanley Cup Champions, but there were a few positives to come out of this game. Brain Campbell looked good in his season debut, and the defense was better as a whole with him in the lineup. He was a culprit in the Hawks ability to spend as much time in the offensive zone as they did on Monday.

Even before Campbell returned in New York, the Blackhawks’ transition game has shown signs of progression. Defenseman are making better passes, and the forwards that are new to the team are learning their importance to the break-out effort at this level. Players are beginning to find their role, and this version of the Blackhawks is close to discovering the identity or chemistry we often hear about.

Due to all the roster turnover this off-season, growing pains were expected. Anyone who thought the Hawks were going to hit the ground running, were just fooling themselves. Coach Quenneville will right the ship, and is slowly getting everyone on buy in. He has his team controlling the flow of the game, and working hard on the back check. The Hawks limited the Rangers to just 23 shots against, which was the third consecutive sub-30 shot game by an opponent.

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Brian Campbell returns to blue line in NY

Defenseman Brian Campbell will make his season debut Monday night in New York. The red-headed defender missed the first four weeks of the year with a sprained knee he injured in a pre-season game against Pittsburgh. Campbell will wear a knee brace for the rest of the season.

His return couldn’t come at a better time. The Blackhawks lost star forward Marian Hossa last week to an upper-body injury, and the Hawks’ blue line has left a lot to be desired in Campbell’s absence. He will add some depth to the position, resulting in less playing time for fellow defenseman Jassen Cullimore, Nick Boynton and John Scott down the road. Yay.

In hindsight, it was too early for me to deem Boynton as this year’s Brent Sopel. I made the comparison based on Boynton’s willingness to sacrifice his body in order to block a shot – currently leads the league with 37 – but his play has been atrocious in the defensive zone otherwise. Coach Quenneville hasn’t been pleased with his efforts either, as Boynton is a scratch against the Rangers. Scott will line up as a fourth-line forward, and Cullimore will fill out the third defensive paring alongside Jordan Hendry.

Campbell isn’t known for his defensive prowess, but his speed is an asset other defenders on the roster lack on the back-check. Niklas Hjalmarsson has to be the happiest Hawk after hearing the news of Campbell’s return. He can go back to playing the defensive role he excelled in last year, as there is some level of comfort/familiarity he’ll get being paired with Campbell once again.

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Ben Smith to replace the injured Marian Hossa

Ben Smith at rookie tournament in London, Ont. (Claus Andersen/Getty Images)

The Blackhawks recalled 22-year-old forward Ben Smith from Rockford to replace Marian Hossa in the lineup. In case you missed it, Hossa was injured in Wednesday night’s game against the Kings, and will be sidelined for a couple of weeks with an upper-body injury. Smith will make his NHL debut against the Oilers tonight in front of the home crowd. Stan Bowman and company likely bypassed some of the bigger names currently stationed in Rockford because promoting Smith comes cheap.

Smith is a gritty, two-way forward who will have no objection to mucking-it-up down low. The Hawks signed him to a two-year contract following the Golden Eagles’ National Championship run, where he was named the Most Outstanding Player of the Frozen Four tournament. In eight games with the IceHogs this season, Smith has one goal and three assists with a minus-3 rating. We have him ranked as the #18 prospect in the Blackhawks’ system.

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Marian Hossa out a couple weeks with upper-body injury

Marian Hossa left part-way through the second period in Wednesday night’s 3-1 victory over the Kings, after he was hit by forward Jarret Stoll. Initial reports have Hossa missing two weeks with an upper-body injury. Got to love the vague description. Anyways, it sounds like the injury is to either his shoulder or arm. Aggravating his surgically repaired shoulder would be the last thing the Blackhawks need right now.

Loosing a two-way winger of Hossa’s caliber will obviously hurt on both ends of the ice. Coach Quenneville said a player be called-up from Rockford (AHL) to replace right winger before Friday’s game against the Oilers at home. Jeremy Morin would be the ideal choice, but he was hurt over the weekend.

Campbell eying his return

Brian Campbell could return to action as soon as this weekend from a sprained right knee. He started skating over the weekend, and has been practicing with the team. Campbell will play with a knee brace for the remainder of the season, which they say won’t hinder his skating and speed.

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