Chicago Sun-Times

CROW FLIES, HAWKS’ REBUILD BEGINS

Hawks’ decision to move on from longtime goalie signals more changes to come

- BEN POPE bpope@ suntimes. com | @ BenPopeCST

The Blackhawks’ rebuild has a green light at last.

Longtime goalie Corey Crawford won’t return to the Hawks next season, general manager Stan Bowman said Thursday, and his departure soon might be followed by the departures of other veterans.

After three consecutiv­e seasons of losing records with their aging Stanley Cup core, the Hawks have committed to building through youth moving forward.

‘‘ Next year’s different,’’ Bowman said. ‘‘ We’re going to have a different emphasis, and we’re going to have new players coming. We’re not really looking back. We’re looking forward to where we want to get to, and we’re going to build something exciting.’’

Crawford, 35, started 473 games and won

two Cups as the Hawks’ primary goalie since 2010- 11. But he’ll become an unrestrict­ed free agent at 11 a. m. Friday, joining a loaded class of UFA goalies.

Bowman said he had an emotional conversati­on with Crawford early Thursday about his departure.

‘‘ He’s up there with the legends of the Blackhawks,’’ Bowman said. ‘‘ The message to Corey and everyone else today is that we’ve decided that we’ve got some goaltender­s here in Chicago that we believe in.’’

The Hawks will turn to Collin Delia, 26, and Kevin Lankinen, 25 — two of the best goalies in the American Hockey League the last few seasons — to take over the goaltendin­g duties at the NHL level.

Delia made 16 appearance­s with the Hawks in 2018- 19 and had a decent .908 save percentage behind a decimated team. He was projected to be the backup this past season before the sudden addition of Robin Lehner. Lankinen has yet to play in the NHL.

Bowman also is hoping to re- sign well- traveled backup Malcolm Subban, 26, despite not tendering him a qualifying offer Wednesday.

‘‘ With any young goalie, there’s always an opportunit­y where you have to give them a chance to see what they can do,’’ Bowman said. ‘‘ We saw that with [ Antti] Niemi. We saw that with Crawford. We saw that with [ Antti] Raanta.’’

With the salary cap staying flat for next season, the space- strapped Hawks and Crawford reportedly had not seen eye- to- eye during contract negotiatio­ns. Crawford made $ 6 million annually during his expiring contract and expected a slight decrease, but the Hawks allegedly were offering barely half that.

Bowman nonetheles­s insisted the decision to move on from Crawford was more about the direction of the organizati­on than about financial disagreeme­nts. That indicates other long- tenured and/ or important players also might be on the move.

‘‘ Now that we’ve made the decision the way that we’re going to move forward [ with youth], there’s going to be a lot more things that we’re going to talk about over the coming days as far as planning next year’s team,’’ Bowman said.

Bowman avoided explicitly labeling the Hawks’ new approach as a full- on rebuild, but he made it clear this represents a ‘‘ philosophi­cal’’ shift in team- building.

‘‘ I don’t think you have to make a statement where it’s all or nothing,’’ he said. ‘‘ It’s not all veterans; it’s not all young players. It’s going to be a mixture, and that’s what we’re looking for.’’

The Hawks have shopped wing Brandon Saad a moderate amount in recent weeks. The Athletic’s Pierre LeBrun reported the Avalanche and Bruins have shown particular interest. Saad, 27, could fetch an impressive package of draft picks and prospects in exchange.

Other useful veterans — such as 29- yearolds Calvin de Haan and Andrew Shaw ( if he’s healthy) or even 27- year- old Connor Murphy, although the Hawks’ probably would prefer to keep him — also might be used as trade chips.

Patrick Kane, Jonathan Toews and Duncan Keith — the other core members on the same level as Crawford — are likely safe, but they might be less untouchabl­e than they have been. Brent Seabrook’s contract remains basically impossible to move.

In place of the veterans moving out, the Hawks will look to find gems among a list of prospects who could compete for NHL jobs: forwards Pius Suter, Philipp Kurashev, Brandon Hagel, Evan Barratt, MacKenzie Entwistle, Cam Morrison and Matej Chalupa and defensemen Ian Mitchell, Lucas Carlsson, Wyatt Kalynuk, Dennis Gilbert, Nicolas Beaudin and Alec Regula.

Some of those prospects ultimately will flesh out the roster around the Hawks’ preexistin­g young core of Kirby Dach, Adam Boqvist, Alex DeBrincat and now Dominik Kubalik. The Hawks also imagine Lukas Reichel, the 17th overall pick in the draft Tuesday, becoming a cornerston­e piece in a few years.

‘‘ When you look at young players, you have to give them the opportunit­y, you have to guide them, give them feedback,’’ Bowman said. ‘‘ There are going to be bumps in the road, but the idea is we’re going to get more out of them as we go along.’’

The roots of this decision likely can be traced to April 27, when the Hawks fired longtime president John McDonough.

Before that day, McDonough’s influence ran through all corners of the organizati­on. Although Bowman had the power to make personnel decisions on a micro basis, he probably wouldn’t have been granted the authority to reimagine the Hawks’ rosterbuil­ding philosophy.

But McDonough’s dismissal and Danny Wirtz’s appointmen­t as interim president opened the door for Bowman to assume more power over the Hawks’ hockey operations.

The NHL’s coronaviru­s shutdown and the Hawks’ longer- than- expected playoff run in August delayed the visible effects of that power shift. But with the draft and free agency finally taking place this week, Bowman’s macro- level plans are surfacing.

‘‘ A lot of teams are focusing on looking for young players who can take that next step and play a bigger role,’’ Bowman said. ‘‘ That’s really more the direction that we’re headed.’’

‘‘ HE’S UP THERE WITH THE LEGENDS OF THE BLACKHAWKS. THE MESSAGE TO COREY AND EVERYONE ELSE TODAY IS THAT WE’VE DECIDED THAT WE’VE GOT SOME GOALTENDER­S HERE IN CHICAGO THAT WE BELIEVE IN.’’

STAN BOWMAN,

Hawks general manager

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 ?? JONATHAN DANIEL/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Corey Crawford took over as the Hawks’ primary goalie in 2010- 11 and started 473 games for them.
JONATHAN DANIEL/ GETTY IMAGES Corey Crawford took over as the Hawks’ primary goalie in 2010- 11 and started 473 games for them.
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 ?? JONATHAN DANIEL/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Crawford backstoppe­d the Hawks to two Stanley Cup titles — in 2013 and 2015 ( pictured).
JONATHAN DANIEL/ GETTY IMAGES Crawford backstoppe­d the Hawks to two Stanley Cup titles — in 2013 and 2015 ( pictured).

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