Chicago Sun-Times

OVER, UNEASY

DA closes case, but questions remain about Patrick Kane’s future with Hawks

- MARK LAZERUS Follow me on Twitter @MarkLazeru­s. Email: mlazerus@suntimes.com

NEWARK, N.J. — One by one, the carefully worded statements came in. First from Patrick Kane’s agent. Then from NHL deputy commission­er Bill Daly. Then, finally, from the Blackhawks organizati­on and from Kane himself. They all ended the same way.

“We will have no further comment until we have completed [an internal] review,” Daly said.

“We will have no further comment,” the Hawks said.

“I will have nothing further to say going forward,” Kane said.

So much for the mantra of that now-infamous news conference at Notre Dame at the start of training camp, the one in which Kane and the Hawks’ brass so very much wanted to elaborate but couldn’t out of respect to the legal process. The legal process is now essentiall­y over, with Erie County District Attorney Frank Sedita announcing Thursday that no rape charges will be filed against Kane stemming from an allegation from a 21-yearold woman in Hamburg, N.Y., in August. Sedita pointedly called it a “so-called ‘case’ ” that was “rife with reasonable doubt.”

Kane never was charged with a crime, and now we know he won’t be. But many questions remain — questions that nobody in the league or the organizati­on likely will want to address publicly. Will the league use its broad powers to discipline Kane after its own internal review concludes? Will Kane be chastened by the incident and curtail his office social life, and even his drinking? Will the Hawks play a proactive role in that process? Will the Hawks be able to win back the small-but-vocal portion of the fan base alienated by the allegation and the team’s hamfisted handling of it?

Of course, the biggest question moving forward is, do the Hawks trust Patrick Kane anymore?

And it doesn’t really matter what anybody says. Actions will speak louder than words.

One team source said the Hawks’ brass is still angry with Kane for putting himself and the team in this position and will reassess the situation — and Kane’s standing with the team — after the season. Only Kane and his accuser know what exactly happened that night, but as another team source put it earlier in the week, when it first was reported that Sedita was not going to file charges, “even the best-case [scenario] here is pretty bad.”

The Sun-Times first reported Sept. 2 that at least five teams told the Hawks they’d be interested in trading for Kane should the team feel the need to cut ties with its superstar winger. The Hawks have not actively shopped him, but the option remains on the table — especially now that Kane has been cleared of charges — if they believe the risk of keeping Kane is higher than the reward.

It almost certainly won’t happen during the season, and a league source said it was unlikely to happen at all. But given the fact the Hawks essentiall­y gave Kane a zero-tolerance ultimatum after his very public drunken escapade in Madison, Wisconsin, in May 2012, and given the Hawks’ continuing salary-cap woes, it’s something the team will at least discuss internally after the season.

Kane is just 26. It’s easy to forget that considerin­g how long he has been around, and how much he has accomplish­ed. He’s by no means irredeemab­le, and for three years leading up to the Hamburg incident had been drawing rave reviews from teammates and management alike for growing up and for being smarter with his personal life. And Kane deserves credit for not ducking reporters throughout this ordeal. He has sat at his locker stall and answered questions time and again, with the contentiou­s press scrum Tuesday the excep-

tion, not the rule.

But he’s back to Square 1 now, having to prove he’s a changed man all over again. Kane is fortunate to have dodged a bullet, losing only endorsemen­ts and reputation, not his career. He’s still a superstar, still cheered loudly at the United Center, still supported by his team, still playing at a world-class level and still making $84 million over the next eight years.

The Hawks are fortunate, too. It’s far down the list of important things in something as serious and horrifying as a possible sexual assault, but the image hit the Hawks would have taken had Kane been charged would have been irreparabl­e. Mum’s the word right now from all parties, and it’s hard to blame them given the sensitive nature of the topic.

But what they say doesn’t matter. What they do moving forward will speak volumes.

One team source said the Hawks’ brass is

still quite angry with Kane for putting himself and the team in this position and will reassess the situation — and Kane’s standing with the team — after the season.

 ?? | GETTY IMAGES ?? At least five teams have told the Hawks they would be interested in trading for Patrick Kane if the team decides to cut ties.
| GETTY IMAGES At least five teams have told the Hawks they would be interested in trading for Patrick Kane if the team decides to cut ties.
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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2015
GETTY IMAGES FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2015

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