Chicago Sun-Times

Harnessing his speed

Hawks keep fingers crossed that collegiate draftee Nazar will learn how to better channel explosiven­ess

- BY BEN POPE | BPOPE@SUNTIMES.COM | @BENPOPECST

SAN JOSE, Calif. — When the Blackhawks drafted Frank Nazar in 2022, his speed was one of the biggest reasons why.

As time has gone on, the Hawks have worked with him on using that speed to his advantage in a wider variety of ways.

“A lot of times, you’ll see that explosiven­ess when it’s time to transition from defense to offense — like hitting a hole to get himself open offensivel­y to receive a pass,” Hawks assistant general manager Mark Eaton said this week.

“Now it’s about [getting him] using that explosiven­ess to transition from offense to defense. When the puck is turned over, it’s about having that mindset of wanting to jump into a good defensive position and be sound in that regard.”

Nazar — the Hawks’ No. 1 prospect at the moment — is technicall­y entering the stretch run of his sophomore year at Michigan, but it’s functional­ly more like the stretch run of his freshman year, considerin­g he missed the vast majority of last season recovering from hip surgery and didn’t feel 100% again until last summer.

Eaton can’t spill the beans about whether the Hawks plan to sign Nazar after this season or send him back to Michigan for more seasoning in 2024-25. He can, however, offer an honest assessment of Nazar’s play, which peaked in December and January — during and immediatel­y after the world junior championsh­ips — but has encountere­d some turbulence since.

“It’s just a matter of learning from the down spurts within a season, [like] why they happen and how to rectify it and limit those types of games going forward,” Eaton said.

“Every game Frankie has played hasn’t been perfect, but he’s always very good with his self-awareness and self-assessment. He realizes when he wasn’t at his best and asks questions to learn about how he can improve going forward. There’s always positives you can take, even if production and numbers are down and the elite play isn’t there game-in and game-out.”

Nazar has tallied 37 points in 37 games this season overall but only three points in his last 10 games. He will have a chance to erupt on the biggest stages, though, when Michigan faces Michigan State in the Big Ten championsh­ip Saturday and likely competes in the NCAA Tournament after that.

It would probably be hyperbolic to say

“He’s always very good with his self-awareness and self-assessment. He realizes when he wasn’t at his best and asks questions to learn about how he can improve going forward.”

Mark Eaton on Frank Nazar

Nazar’s performanc­e over the next few weeks will matter more to the Hawks’ longterm future than the actual Hawks’ performanc­e in NHL games. At the least, Nazar’s performanc­e will probably matter more than any individual Hawks player’s performanc­e.

Kantserov surging

Roman Kantserov wasn’t a well-publicized prospect when the Hawks drafted him 44th last summer, but the Russian forward has so far validated the Hawks’ gamble with an impressive season.

“He can really get his shot off,” Eaton said. “He has really good offensive instincts. With quickness combined with skill, he’s a slippery player in the offensive zone and he can create offense. He has a lot of attributes that you look for in top-six players.”

He has graduated into a full-time player in the KHL, a league that teenage prospects often have a difficult time cracking. He tallied 15 points in 53 regular-season games for Metallurg Magnitogor­sk before catching fire in the playoffs, accumulati­ng five points in eight games so far.

“He has earned an expanded role,” Eaton said. “He at times averaged single-digit minutes in games, but lately, he’s been in the midteens. That’s a testament to him earning his coach’s trust.”

He signed a two-year contract extension with Magnitogor­sk that will keep him overseas until at least 2026, but the Hawks believe he’s “excited about the eventual opportunit­y to come over” to North America.

Gajan feeling adversity

Goaltender Adam Gajan, another secondroun­d pick last summer, conversely as a 19-year-old has not enjoyed the kind of season he hoped for with Green Bay in the USHL.

His 20-10-4 record looks fine, but his save percentage has slipped to .893 after a particular­ly poor recent stretch. He didn’t get to start either of Green Bay’s games last weekend as a result.

“It’s one of the first things we talk about in developmen­t camp: nobody’s path to the

NHL is an easy one that’s not going to have setbacks,” Eaton said. “Adam has had what he’d consider some bad games.”

The good news is Gajan has plenty of time to turn things around. He’s headed to Minnesota-Duluth next season and most likely will be there for three years, by which point far more data should indicating whether he has NHL potential. Either way, his rough winter 2024 will be long forgotten.

More updates

Nick Lardis, a 2023 third-round pick, has been sidelined since mid-January with a broken wrist, disrupting an excellent season in which he had tallied 50 points in 37 OHL games for Brantford. But he is expected to return in the playoffs, Eaton said.

Ryan Greene, a 2022 second-round pick, has followed up his impressive freshman season at Boston University with a nearly identical sophomore season (at least statistica­lly), tallying 31 points in 35 games. He’s another guy the Hawks might sign after this season or might send back for his junior year.

Alex Pharand, a 2023 fourth-round pick, has had a disappoint­ing season production­wise, but the Hawks aren’t too concerned because they see him as a fourth-line grinder.

“It’s [about] walking that balance, developing some of the offensive attributes to his game but having the foundation being high-intensity, getting in hard on the forecheck [and] finishing checks,” Eaton said about Pharand. ✶

 ?? COURTESY OF MICHIGAN PHOTOGRAPH­Y ?? The Blackhawks have seen some inconsiste­ncy from touted prospect Frank Nazar during his sophomore season at Michigan.
COURTESY OF MICHIGAN PHOTOGRAPH­Y The Blackhawks have seen some inconsiste­ncy from touted prospect Frank Nazar during his sophomore season at Michigan.
 ?? MICHIGAN PHOTOGRAPH­Y, AP, GETTY IMAGES ?? Michigan with Frank Nazar (above) will play in the Big Ten championsh­ip. Adam Gajan (left) has struggled recently at Green Bay.
MICHIGAN PHOTOGRAPH­Y, AP, GETTY IMAGES Michigan with Frank Nazar (above) will play in the Big Ten championsh­ip. Adam Gajan (left) has struggled recently at Green Bay.
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Roman Kantserov
Roman Kantserov

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