Chicago Sun-Times

WAIT OF THE WORLD

Hawks look to regroup and build around aging core in time for next season

- BEN POPE bpope@suntimes.com | @BenPopeCST

Just as quickly as the Blackhawks’ qualifying-round upset of the Oilers conjured dreams around Chicago of another Stanley Cup run, those well-meaning yet ultimately silly fantasies were shut down by a real Cup contender.

The Golden Knights didn’t cruise past the Hawks in any of their five games, but then again, that’s not their style. The Knights aren’t the NHL’s most exciting or explosive team — just arguably its deepest, its most structured, its smartest, its most thoroughly talented.

The Hawks, meanwhile, have talent in patches and the framework of what could be an effective system, but have many unfilled holes and at least one more season of experience away from putting it all together.

This postseason, as logistical­ly strange as it was, certainly proved that.

Even Jonathan Toews, who has seen many a contender and pretender in his career, seemed to come to terms with that reality after the Hawks’ seasonendi­ng Game 5 loss Tuesday.

“[When] you miss the playoffs for a couple years in a row, you’re watching a lot of hockey late in the spring, and you kind of lose track of where you stand, because there’s no doubt it’s a different level from the regular season,” Toews said. “It was definitely good for us to get back to the playoffs and play some meaningful games.”

The Hawks’ regular season was a roller coaster of climbs and descents, of discouragi­ng losing streaks and thoughts of tanking quickly counterbal­anced by promising stretches and thoughts of sneaking into the regular eightteam playoff field.

The Hawks turned out to be neither bad enough to tank, nor good enough to make the playoffs in any normal year. And while a global pandemic and some wise adlibbing by the NHL made this anything but a normal year, the playoffs only provided more conclusive support for that assessment.

The Hawks’ playoff run was more of a drop tower — straight up, then straight down — than a roller coaster. In the end, it left them right where they were before: waiting in line for the next ride.

“We just wanted to prolong it, go as long as we could,” coach Jeremy Colliton said. “Every moment in there was a positive. So that’s only going to help these guys.”

The Hawks’ old core can still hold up their end of the bargain: Duncan Keith and Toews were varying levels of good in the postseason, and Patrick Kane’s struggles can be excused by his 84-point regular season.

The Hawks’ young guns are impressive, too: Kirby Dach took a big step forward over the summer, Adam Boqvist remains ahead of the defenseman developmen­t curve and Dominik Kubalik broke out as a star over the last year.

Even oft-criticized Colliton improved his stock, with his vision for the team briefly realized and his comfort level behind an NHL bench increased.

Around those bright spots lingers a lot of dead weight, though.

The goaltendin­g outlook is very murky, especially with Corey Crawford — despite his playoff heroics — a pending unrestrict­ed free agent.

The defense has some talent but very little cohesion. The presence of solid players like Keith, Boqvist and Connor Murphy shouldn’t disguise the fact the Hawks allowed the most scoring chances in the league this season.

The bottom-six forward corps were subpar, too, even when Colliton demoted underperfo­rming youngsters like Alex DeBrincat or Alex Nylander into them.

The Knights, with their well-rounded roster, exposed those flaws just as much as the equally flawed, top-heavy, overrated Oilers hid them.

But the playoff run was still a worthwhile gift to the Hawks by the league, providing one week of fun and a second week of valuable learning.

The revamped front office can use those postseason lessons — which provided far more clear-cut feedback than the regular season did — to form their plan for shaping the team moving forward.

And the players can use this reminder of what a real Cup contender looks like to set goals of eventually returning to that level.

“Ultimately, as a player, you see the standard that is there,” Keith said. “I feel like we’ve made a few strides this year, but we’re going to have to take the positives and try to build.”

 ??  ??
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Jonathan Toews (above, scoring against Knights goalie Robin Lehner in Game 5) had a decent postseason. Patrick Kane (left, celebratin­g a goal in Game 5) cooled off in the playoffs. Both are part of an aging but talented core.
GETTY IMAGES Jonathan Toews (above, scoring against Knights goalie Robin Lehner in Game 5) had a decent postseason. Patrick Kane (left, celebratin­g a goal in Game 5) cooled off in the playoffs. Both are part of an aging but talented core.
 ??  ?? Jeremy Colliton
Jeremy Colliton
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ?? JASON FRANSON/AP ?? Corey Crawford, stopping a shot by the Golden Knights’ Chandler Stephenson, was solid in the playoffs but is a pending unrestrict­ed free agent.
JASON FRANSON/AP Corey Crawford, stopping a shot by the Golden Knights’ Chandler Stephenson, was solid in the playoffs but is a pending unrestrict­ed free agent.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Dominik Kubalik (right), battling for the puck against the Golden Knights’ Nate Schmidt, emerged as a star for the Hawks this season.
GETTY IMAGES Dominik Kubalik (right), battling for the puck against the Golden Knights’ Nate Schmidt, emerged as a star for the Hawks this season.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States