Chicago Sun-Times

DACH STUCK IN NEUTRAL

Hawks center still struggling a year after wrist surgery

- BEN POPE BLACKHAWKS BEAT bpope@suntimes.com | @BenPopeCST

Kirby Dach has been introspect­ively rubbing his goatee a lot lately.

As the Blackhawks’ holiday break has lengthened into a two-week pause, engulfing the end of the franchise’s chaotic 2021 calendar year, the Hawks’ anointed future cornerston­e has found arguably too much time to reflect on his own frustratin­gly fruitless year.

“I just want to become the player that I know I am,” Dach, who will turn 21 in January, said Tuesday. “It has been 2.5 years. The ups and downs, the lulls [and] the highs, it’s frustratin­g. It sucks.

“As much as an athlete shouldn’t be really paying attention to outside noise, it’s tough to run away from that stuff. I know I’ve got to be better. That’s all it really comes down to.”

Exactly one year ago Tuesday, which seemed to surprise him when recalling, Dach was undergoing surgery on the wrist he flukily broke in last year’s World Junior Championsh­ips.

His wrist feels fine now and has since late summer. But the obstacle that recovery period shoved into his developmen­t path — limiting him to just 18 games at less-than-100% health last season and just 48 total this calendar year — has proven more difficult than expected to move on from.

“It has been a long year,” he said. “Obviously, I don’t think I’m where I should be, but that’s for me to clean up and get better at. There’s a lot left on the table, [and] there’s still a lot of season left to get to that point.”

In those 48 games, Dach tallied 23 points — seven goals, 16 assists — and won only 35.7% of his 485 faceoffs.

There are several indicators he’s playing better than it seems outwardly. He excels with offensive zone entries — 75.0% of his entries are with puck control, dwarfing the league average of 52.4%, per analyst Corey Snzajder’s data. And his passing is deceptivel­y good, too — he averages 4.2 scoring chance assists per 60 minutes, well above the league average of 2.6, per Snazjder. He’s the Hawks’ second-best forward in both categories.

But Dach’s reputation continues to be shaped — in a negative way — by his unwillingn­ess to shoot the puck and lack of overall production, partially as a result.

Expectatio­ns are so high for a third overall pick by his third season that those weaknesses simply aren’t acceptable anymore. The Sun-Times’ Dec. 18 Polling Place survey found only 58.9% of Hawks fans still believe Dach can become a firstline center, much less a Jonathan Toewsesque star.

Dach hears that criticism, too.

“I never really want to be a guy that’s known [for getting] a bunch of grade-A chances and can’t score,” he said.

He insists it’s not the pressure of playing in the NHL that is getting to him, though. Instead, it’s his own — the pressure he puts on himself “to be better for the team, [for] the organizati­on.”

As a team, the Hawks have collective­ly stopped overthinki­ng and started trusting their instincts since Derek King took over. Instigatin­g that mentality shift has been King’s biggest success as interim coach.

Dach, however, remains stuck in his own head, perhaps trying too hard to make something great happen every shift. Unlocking his immense natural talent has proven to be a difficult task. But King remains optimistic he’ll eventually break through.

“He’s his worst critic,” King said. “He’s hard on himself and takes a lot of pride in his game, which sometimes [is] hard to find in a young player. Sometimes I forget, and a lot of people forget, how [young] he is. He’s just a kid.

“It’s not like it’s an overnight thing, but it’s not going to be three or four years down the road until he figures it out. He’s figuring it out now, and he’s just got to hone [his game] now. I like the way he’s going.”

 ?? JONATHAN DANIEL/GETTY IMAGES ?? Kirby Dach wants to ramp up his overall production, which once helped peg him as a future cornerston­e of the Hawks’ organizati­on.
JONATHAN DANIEL/GETTY IMAGES Kirby Dach wants to ramp up his overall production, which once helped peg him as a future cornerston­e of the Hawks’ organizati­on.
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