Former Blackhawks Coach, Executive Bob Pulford Has Passed Away

On Monday afternoon, the NHL Alumni Association announced Bob Pulford has passed away. Pulford was 89 years old.

Pulford spent more than three decades as part of the Chicago Blackhawks organization. For parts of seven seasons, Pulford served as the head coach of the Blackhawks, most recently for 58 games during the 1999-00 season. He also served as the general manager of the Blackhawks in four separate time periods, most recently from Oct. 24, 2003 to June 21, 2005. He was replaced as GM by Dale Tallon in 2005.

Here is the statement released by the NHL Alumni on social media:

image-39-scaled.png

We are deeply saddened by the passing of Bob Pulford, one of the most respected figures in the history of hockey. Bob’s remarkable career spanned decades and left an enduring mark on the game at every level.

As a player, Bob proudly wore the sweaters of the Toronto Maple Leafs and the Los Angeles Kings. With Toronto, he won four Stanley Cups and earned a reputation as one of the toughest, most dependable centres of his era. He later brought that same leadership and competitive spirit to the Los Angeles Kings, continuing to influence the game through his experience and professionalism. Bob won the Lester Patrick trophy in 2011, continuing to demonstrate his talents.

Beyond his accomplishments on the ice, Bob was a trailblazer for players’ rights. In 1967, he became the first President of the NHL Players’ Union, playing a key role in early collective bargaining and helping lay the foundation for the modern NHLPA. After his playing career, Bob continued to shape the sport from behind the bench and in the front office. He served as Head Coach of the Los Angeles Kings and the Chicago Blackhawks, and remained a vital part of the Chicago Blackhawks organization for over 30 years in senior leadership roles, mentoring many players to continue on in Coaching and VP positions with many Teams. His lifelong contributions to the game were formally recognized with his induction into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1991, cementing his place among hockey’s all-time greats.

Bob, along with his teammates of the 1967 Leafs Stanley Cup Team, was awarded the 2024 NHL Alumni Keith Magnuson Man of the Year Award.

Our heartfelt condolences go out to his beloved wife, Roslyn Pulford, and his children, Wanda Lombardi (Dean), Rob Pulford (Elaine), Lindsay Barrett (Daniel)and Jennifer MacRitchie, as well as his grandchildren. Please know that your entire family is in our thoughts and prayers during this very difficult time. May you find comfort in Bob’s extraordinary legacy and in the countless lives he touched both on and off the ice as an integral part of the NHL Alumni Family.

Rest in peace, Bob. Your impact on hockey and on all who had the privilege of knowing you will never be forgotten.

Source: https://www.bleachernation.com/blac...-coach-executive-bob-pulford-has-passed-away/
 
Anton Frondell, Sweden Win Gold at the 2026 World Junior Championship

Coming into Monday night, we already knew history was going to be made at the World Junior Championship. Sweden hadn’t won gold since 2012. Czechia hadn’t won the title since 2001. They faced each other for the 2026 championship.

Both squads had Blackhawks prospects on their top lines in the game.

For Sweden, Anton Frondell, the third overall pick by the Blackhawks in the 2025 NHL Draft, was tied for the tournament lead with five goals coming into the gold medal game. For Czechia, Václav Nestrašil was on the top line and had produced some highlight-reel scoring plays in the tournament as well. Nestrašil was the 25th overall pick in the 2025 NHL Draft.

Czechia did not go away easily or quietly. Nestrašil had an assist on their first goal with 2:24 left in regulation and Czechia cut the lead to one with 24 seconds remaining after a wild flurry of action around Sweden’s net.

On this night, the gold went to Sweden. They were dominant for most of the tournament, and this night was no different.

Frondell was named the top forward in the tournament by the directorate, and was also named to the media all-tournament team.

Anton Frondell interviews moments after securing a gold medal: pic.twitter.com/QvfAbYnYs2

— BHF (@BlackhawksFocus) January 6, 2026

Ivar Stenberg firmly threw his name into consideration to be the top pick in the 2026 NHL Draft with a tremendous performance overall in the tournament, capped with an empty net goal in with eight seconds left to put the game on ice.

Here’s a little razzle dazzle from Stenberg in the gold medal game:

Ivar Stenberg with a dominant sequence to record his second assist of the game. Wow pic.twitter.com/j18x03oJeE

— BHF (@BlackhawksFocus) January 6, 2026

Source: https://www.bleachernation.com/blac...s-gold-at-the-2026-world-junior-championship/
 
Motivated Connor Bedard Close to Return

How about this to get you excited on a Tuesday in early January, Blackhawks fans! Connor Bedard and Frank Nazar were on the ice together before the Blackhawks practice on Tuesday morning at the artist-formerly-known-as Fifth Third Arena.

Connor Bedard and Frank Nazar getting back to work together pic.twitter.com/jBX5ZY8Fxz

— Scott Powers (@ByScottPowers) January 6, 2026

Bedard took part in a good portion of the full team practice. And it appears Bedard’s more than ready, willing and able to let it fly again.

Connor Bedard doesn’t appear to be holding back with his shots, which is a good sign. #Blackhawks pic.twitter.com/1Scs375dRS

— Charlie Roumeliotis (@CRoumeliotis) January 6, 2026

“I feel good. I feel really good,” Bedard said after practice on Tuesday. “Obviously get out with the guys a little bit today. Kind of just keep ramping up. It feels real good, though.” It sounds like he’s getting pretty close to returning. But Blackhawks head coach Jeff Blashill wouldn’t commit to a timeline beyond Bedard not being available on Wednesday night against the Blues.

Chicago head coach Jeff Blashill ruled out Connor Bedard for Wednesday’s game vs. St. Louis, but after that, they’re going to take it day by day. #Blackhawks

— Charlie Roumeliotis (@CRoumeliotis) January 6, 2026

Bedard also said Hockey Canada has him on their standby list of players for the 2026 Winter Olympics. And it sounds like he feels like he needs to do more to get on that roster. And, as the Michael Jordan meme would say, he took that personally. Which should be exciting for Blackhawks fans.

Connor Bedard: “I’m feeling good, and hopefully pretty soon I can get back out there.”

He said he was told by Team Canada he’s an injury replacement standby.

“When you don’t meet one of your goals, the only thing to do is look in the mirror and see where you can get better.”

— Ben Pope (@BenPopeCST) January 6, 2026

Source: https://www.bleachernation.com/blackhawks/2026/01/06/motivated-connor-bedard-close-to-return/
 
Must Read: Blackhawks Prospect Roman Kantserov on Playing Center, Signing NHL Deal, More

Since we’re on a good run with Blackhawks prospect content right now, let’s stay with the future of the Chicago Blackhawks.

Blackhawks prospect Roman Kantserov did an interview with Daria Tuboltseva at R.com about his season, an NHL future and moving to center. It’s a good, deep interview with a lot to take away. A couple comments that stood out to me.

The first quote that got my attention was what he said about the Blackhawks still actively recruiting him to sign:

“To be fair, Chicago has handled this well. They don’t put pressure on me. After the draft, there was more communication, they tried to convince me to sign. But at that time, I decided to stay in Russia. Now they don’t push me, and I’m happy about that. I get ice time here, and there’s no pressure. A decision will have to be made at the end of the season, maybe a bit earlier, but I don’t want to predict anything. It’s a bad omen. Athletes have their own superstitions.”

His current contract expires on June 1, 2026.

And secondly, his comments about the Blackhawks being “surprised” by him moving to center this season in the KHL.

“I told [the Blackhawks] I was being used at center, and they were a bit surprised. Later, when Evgeny Kuznetsov was signed, they assumed I would move back to the wing. But Andrei Vladimirovich didn’t want to change something that was working, so he kept me at center. Chicago was puzzled – genuinely surprised.”

Blackhawks prospect, KHL star​


Kantserov, 21, currently leads the KHL with 27 goals and is tied for second in the league with 47 points (in 40 games) with with Metallurg Magnitogorsk. In the interview, he talks about watching Connor Bedard and other NHL stars, how he’s worked on his shot and the work he’s done to bulk up to be able to play center.

“There are a lot of players to learn from. I watch the NHL with real interest – McDavid, MacKinnon,” Kantserov said in an exclusive interview with R.org. “And the young guys too, like Celebrini and Bedard – they’re already at the top. It’s unfortunate that Connor got injured. But I believe age is not the most important thing. What matters is to keep working and improving. There’s always something to aim for.”

It’s a good read.

Top @khl_eng scorer and @NHLBlackhawks prospect Roman Kantserov on his breakout season, moving to center, and watching Connor Bedard up close.

“I believe age is not the most important thing. What matters is to keep working.” #Blackhawks

Full interview …

— Daria Tuboltseva (@DariaTuboltseva) January 6, 2026

Source: https://www.bleachernation.com/blackhawks/2026/01/06/must-read-blackhawks-roman-kantserov/
 
Blackhawks Have Lots of Young Centers (Could That Be a Problem?)

When the Blackhawks take the ice on Wednesday night against the St. Louis Blues, two of the centers in their lineup will be 22 and 20 years old. Ryan Greene (22) is skating on Chicago’s top line in place of injured star Connor Bedard — who’s 20, by the way — and Oliver Moore (20) is skating on a line with Nick Lardis and Teuvo Teräväinen. Moore is getting some run at center because Frank Nazar — who turns 22 on Jan. 14, by the way — is also out hurt.

So, in review, four skaters who are currently on the Blackhawks roster who are “centers” are (with their ages):

  • Connor Bedard — 20
  • Oliver Moore — 20
  • Frank Nazar — 21
  • Ryan Greene — 22

That’s a nice situation for a team that’s working to emerge from the depths of a scorched-earth rebuild project.

Ryan Greene Chicago Blackhawks

Corinne Votaw-Imagn Images

Greene has spent time both on the wing and at center at the NHL level this season, and he’s been effective in both roles.

Because of that, the question was asked if Blackhawks head coach Jeff Blashill saw him sticking down the middle when Bedard and Nazar return from their respective injuries. The coach wouldn’t make a firm commitment, saying “we’ll see when Connor gets back what the lines look like, so that’s probably still undetermined.”

Here’s what Blashill said about Greene’s skillset at any spot up front:

“[Greene’s] a very capable center, a good center, definitely a good face-off guy,” Blashill said Wednesday morning. “The one thing with him is his versatility. He doesn’t look any better or worse at center than at wing, so that’s a positive thing to be able to then move him to different lines. Some guys play exponentially better when they play center. Ryan kind of plays the same regardless of playing center or wing”

The last two sentences of that answer were interesting. When I asked Blashill the next question, my thoughts on the center depth in the organization were stirred more.

Oliver Moore Chicago Blackhawks

Talia Sprague-Imagn Images

I asked Blashill how he thinks Moore has done moving to center from the wing, where he spent the majority of his time since turning pro. His answer was fascinating. Here’s what he said:

“Ollie, without question, knows how to utilize his speed better in the middle than as a winger,” Blashill said. “He’s more natural as a center that way. And it doesn’t mean he can’t learn how to utilize it as a wing, but he just hits holes better as a center. As a center you have to slow yourself down a little bit and then hit the hole with speed, where, as a winger, he was kind of skating so fast all the time that he wasn’t able to hit those holes. So, I’ve liked him at center.

“I think he’s highly competitive, he’s strong down low. Obviously he’s fast and quick enough to play against any other center. We’ll see again. Hopefully you have too many centers. That’s a good problem. But he definitely looks like someone who, so far for me, has been exponentially better at center than at wing.”

Moore has been very good as a center. The sample size still isn’t huge, but it’s growing. And clearly his head coach likes what he’s been seeing. It’s worth noting that, entering Wednesday’s game, Moore has taken 51 faceoffs (25 of which came in the neutral zone) and he has won 51 percent of his draws.

But compare the definitive statement Blashill made about Moore’s game being “exponentially better” better at center than on the wing; he used the phrase “exponentially better” when speaking about both of his (currently healthy) young centers.

Interesting. Very interesting.

AJ Spellacy USA Hockey 2026 World Junior Championship

IIHF

Blackhawks Future Centers​


Since I already threw out the names and young ages of the four skaters on the Blackhawks’ current NHL roster who are “centers” right now, let’s take this conversation a step forward.

When I shared an interview with top Blackhawks prospect Roman Kantserov earlier this week, he talked about how much his game has exploded since his KHL club moved him to… center. Kantserov doesn’t turn 22 until September.

If you watched the World Junior Championship, you saw the United States using AJ Spellacy primarily as a center. He’s played some wing with Windsor in the OHL this season, but his best hockey has come in the middle. Spellacy will turn 20 at the end of February.

The big news this week in the college ranks is that the top true center prospect in the 2026 NHL Draft, Tynan Lawrence, has joined Boston University for the rest of his pre-draft season. The Terriers’ top line center this season (when he’s been healthy) has been Blackhawks prospect Sacha Boisvert. Boisvert will turn 20 in the middle of March.

By my count, that’s seven capable centers in the Blackhawks organization, the oldest of whom will turn 23 in October (Greene).

But… the Blackhawks’ lines only require four “centers”….

Frank Nazar Chicago Blackhawks

Corinne Votaw-Imagn Images

Who moves to the wing?​


Having multiple players on a line who can take and win faceoffs is advantageous for the Blackhawks. Luke Richardson loved having guys on a line who can come in and win a draw so the guy who starts at the dot can “cheat” a little.

Blashill has also distributed faceoffs to a wide range of skaters this season. Injuries have played a role, but Nick Foligno needs to take one faceoff on Wednesday night to be the sixth Blackhawks skater to take 200 draws this season.

I’ll start this part of our discussion with Anton Frondell, who has also played both center and wing. He was used exclusively as a wing by Sweden at the World Junior Championship. I would imagine the Blackhawks are comfortable with him sticking at the position at which he earned the honor of being named the best forward in a tournament in which he helped his country win gold.

Boisvert has also played the wing some at times in his development thus far. However, it’s easy to like his size down the middle (6-3, 185). The same is true for Spellacy’s size (6-3, 205).

Based on Blashill’s comments on Wednesday morning, Greene may become a Swiss Army knife of sorts for the Blackhawks because of his ability to take draws well and also play effectively on the wing. And, as Blashill has said, Greene can move up and down the lineup with ease as well.

But the Blackhawks probably need another forward to eventually move to the wing, especially assuming Kantserov signs to come to the NHL at the end of his KHL season and the Blackhawks like how he’s played down the middle against older competition in the top league in Russia.

Which brings me to an intriguing possibility for Nazar.

Nazar really made a name for himself on a larger stage when he led the USA in scoring en route to a gold medal at the World Championship following last season. His offense really took off when he was moved to the wing at that tournament.

One of the assistant coaches of that team who watched Nazar’s performance on the wing: Mike Vellucci — who is now on Blashill’s staff in Chicago.

It’s possible that, in a couple years, the Blackhawks’ four centers are Bedard, Kantserov, Moore and Spellacy. If they somehow get a chance to add Lawrence to that mix at the 2026 NHL Draft, that could very, very easily change the calculus with the Hawks’ roster construction as well.

At the end of the day, as Blashill said on Wednesday morning, “Hopefully you have too many centers. That’s a good problem.” And that could be the reality for the Blackhawks soon.

Source: https://www.bleachernation.com/blac...ots-of-young-centers-could-that-be-a-problem/
 
Blackhawks 7, Blues 3 — Three Stars, Key Takeaways

The first period gave us a little of everything. The Blackhawks allowed a goal 27 seconds into the game, but they didn’t on three penalty kills. The Hawks got one power play of their own, and made it count. And the full Levshunov Experience was on display as he took two penalties in the first 15 minutes of action. Not exactly ideal.

The second period was all about Jordan Binnington being an Olympian for Canada. The Blackhawks scored four times and out-shot the Blues 16-8 in the period. And the goals came from two bottom six forwards and a veteran defenseman who hadn’t scored yet this season.

The third period was even more crazy than the first two, and I had a really hard time not naming Jordan Binnington my No. 1 star tonight — for the Blackhawks. Good ****ing luck with that in the Olympics, Canada!

Star 1: Oliver Moore​


Confidence does so much for an athlete, and right now Moore is really feeling it playing center. I shared what head coach Jeff Blashill said about that earlier today; he believes Moore is exponentially better playing down the middle. And tonight, Moore was flying all over the ice again. He found Lardis on the power play to tie the game in the first period.

GOAL: Moore to Lardis on the power play to tie it pic.twitter.com/XpceQKkv6r

— BHF (@BlackhawksFocus) January 8, 2026

Then Moore scored on the Blackhawks’ second power play of the night.

GOAL: Oliver Moore with a rip on the power play for his second power-play point of the game pic.twitter.com/0xwMhuXXJL

— BHF (@BlackhawksFocus) January 8, 2026

Star 2: Special Teams​


The Blackhawks could have very easily dug themselves a deep hole in the first period, allowing a quick goal and then taking three penalties. But the penalty kill was perfect. Meanwhile, the Blackhawks scored goals on their first three power plays of the night. Other than Binnington being terrible, the difference in this game was special teams.

Star 3: Spencer Knight​


Another really good night from Knight. Yeah, he gave up a goal in the first 27 seconds of the game. After that? Nails. When he needed to make a big save, he did. And then the Blackhawks offense went off.

Knight extends to make an unreal save pic.twitter.com/wBfDiqHqGf

— BHF (@BlackhawksFocus) January 8, 2026

Key Takeaways​

  • Here’s Connor Murphy’s goal from the second period — his first of the season. He also had an assist on the Blackhawks’ fourth goal of the night (see below).
GOAL: Connor Murphy’s slapper squeaks through Binnington and Murphy has his 1st of the season pic.twitter.com/LB4zd6wzFy

— BHF (@BlackhawksFocus) January 8, 2026
  • Here’s Landon Slaggert‘s goal from the second period:
GOAL: Colton Dach with a rip from the point that finds its way in! pic.twitter.com/mqutI8gXfA

— BHF (@BlackhawksFocus) January 8, 2026
  • Jason Dickinson led the Blackhawks with three hits and was tied for the team lead with two blocked shots at the end of the first period. By the end of the second period, Dickinson had won 7 of 13 faceoffs, had four hits, three shots on goal and this redirect goal:
GOAL: Jason Dickinson tips in Crevier’s shot from the point for his 5th goal of the season pic.twitter.com/RDntIgjhpk

— BHF (@BlackhawksFocus) January 8, 2026
  • Here’s André Burakovsky‘s power play goal from the third period:
GOAL: Andre Burakovsky with a snipe to beat Binnington. The Blackhawks are 3/3 on the power play tonight pic.twitter.com/qx6ziUDMqr

— BHF (@BlackhawksFocus) January 8, 2026
  • And here’s Louis Crevier‘s goal from the third period:
GOAL: Louis Crevier chips in a loose puck to extend the lead pic.twitter.com/HScO4Uo3Rc

— BHF (@BlackhawksFocus) January 8, 2026
  • Matt Grzelcyk had assists on the first two Blackhawks goals of the night — the first two power play assists of the season for him.
  • The Blackhawks won 61 percent of the faceoffs thru two periods.
  • First off, someone please, please explain to me what the heck Binnington is doing here? Did he take the Blackhawks to cover 3.5 tonight? This is just recklessly stupid. But… the refs bailed him out with a quick whistle. Tyler Bertuzzi was not happy.
Bertuzzi scores but a quick whistle bails out Binnington pic.twitter.com/6m3snIgTTF

— BHF (@BlackhawksFocus) January 8, 2026
  • Burakovsky scored shortly after Bertuzzi’s goal was taken off the board. Bertuzzi asked the officials if they had a pleasant holidays and got a 10-minute misconduct penalty for the effort.
  • Artyom Levshunov‘s two holding penalties were on almost identical plays. If I was a gambling man, I would wager a couple pennies on the words “move” and “your feet” being used by the coaches in his general direction. After that tough first period, he did not lose any confidence and kept skating with the puck and making plays. Here’s one rush that got people to the edge of their seats in the second period.
Arty with a strong drive to the net but he chips it wide pic.twitter.com/Ma6BGKeM9U

— BHF (@BlackhawksFocus) January 8, 2026

The following Blackhawks had a multi-point game tonight:

  • Oliver Moore (1 goals, 1 assist)
  • Jason Dickinson (1, 1)
  • Landon Slaggert (1, 1)
  • Louis Crevier (1, 1)
  • Connor Murphy (1, 1)
  • Matt Grzelcyk (0, 2)

Source: https://www.bleachernation.com/blackhawks/2026/01/07/blackhawks-7-blues-3-three-stars-key-takeaways/
 
Blackhawks Trade Brossoit, Allan to San Jose for Future Cap Help

Remember three days ago when we discussed the potential financial complications a successful first wave of the Blackhawks’ youth movement could potentially have? The Blackhawks made a trade on Thursday afternoon to start working on that issue.

The Blackhawks acquired the contract of Ryan Ellis, defenseman Jake Furlong and a fourth-round pick in the 2028 NHL Draft from the San Jose Sharks in exchange for defenseman Nolan Allan, goaltender Laurent Brossoit and a 2028 seventh-round pick.


Incoming Blackhawks Pieces​


Ellis is effectively retired. His contract carries a $6.25M cap hit thru the 2026-27 season. As we’ve talked about, the Blackhawks needed to find some help to get to the salary floor without wasting a roster spot and they effectively accomplished that (in part) with the acquisition of Ellis’ contract.

Furlong, who turns 22 on March 4, is a left-handed defenseman who has appeared in 78 AHL games over the past two seasons. His contract runs thru the 2026-27 season as well.

Outgoing Pieces​


Brossoit is the biggest name in this deal. He’s been rehabbing on Rockford, and the Blackhawks have been working to find him an opportunity in the NHL for some time. He never appeared in an NHL game for the Blackhawks.

Allan, 22, was the Blackhawks’ first-round pick (No. 32 overall) in the 2021 NHL Draft. He has appeared in 43 NHL games — all last season — with one goal and seven assists on the back of his hockey card.

Allan is a good, stay home defenseman who found himself in the wrong place at the wrong time with the blue line in Chicago becoming good and deep quickly around him. In Rockford, the Blackhawks will have Ethan Del Mastro — who was assigned back to the IceHogs earlier on Thursday — and Kevin Korchinski on the left side of the blue line. At the NHL level, the Blackhawks currently have Alex Vlasic, Wyatt Kaiser and Matt Grzelcyk.

I really enjoyed speaking with Allan during his time in the organization. He won a gold medal with Del Mastro, Korchinski, Colton Dach and Connor Bedard at the 2023 World Junior Championship. He recently represented Canada at the Spengler Cup as well.


Source: https://www.bleachernation.com/blac...ossoit-allan-to-san-jose-for-future-cap-help/
 
WATCH: Patrick Kane Scores Goal No. 500

On Thursday night, Blackhawks legend Patrick Kane reached a historic milestone. With an empty net goal in the third period of a 5-1 Red Wings win, Kane became the fifth American-born player to score 500 regular-season goals in NHL history.

SHOWTIME'S GOT 500 NHL GOALS pic.twitter.com/PQfeu7TTLk

— NHL (@NHL) January 9, 2026

For those scoring at home, Andrew Copp had the only assist on Kane’s 500th goal.

Kane scored 446 goals with the Blackhawks before he was traded to the Rangers. He scored five in 19 games with the Rangers before signing with the Red Wings as a free agent.

Congrats to one of the greatest Blackhawks of all-time!

showtime gets his 500th🥹

congratulations @88PKane https://t.co/fLLaLbfrev

— Chicago Blackhawks (@NHLBlackhawks) January 9, 2026
Showtime nets No. 500!

Patrick Kane is the 5th American-born NHL player to reach the milestone. pic.twitter.com/R45mOibf8I

— USA Hockey (@usahockey) January 9, 2026
SHOWTIMEEEEEEE!!!! pic.twitter.com/IadNK1hSJf

— Detroit Red Wings (@DetroitRedWings) January 9, 2026
Showtime x500

Patrick Kane becomes the 50th player in history to reach 500 NHL career goals – congrats to the @DetroitRedWings forward! pic.twitter.com/ADhC5sCtzO

— NHLPA (@NHLPA) January 9, 2026

Source: https://www.bleachernation.com/blackhawks/2026/01/08/watch-patrick-kane-scores-goal-no-500/
 
Blackhawks Recall Kevin Korchinski, Drew Commesso From Rockford

There’s a flu bug ripping thru the Blackhawks room right now. Nick Foligno, Ilya Mikheyev and Arvid Söderblom were not at the morning skate on Friday before the Hawks host the Washington Capitals.

So, after watching Blackhawks legend Scott Foster take reps at the morning skate, it makes sense that the Blackhawks would need a viable backup if Söderblom can’t go; the Blackhawks have a back-to-back with a trip to Nashville after the game tonight. They then play again on Monday night.

With that in mind, the Blackhawks calling up goalie Drew Commesso from Rockford felt like a logical — and necessary — move. That has happened.

Of course there will be fans that point out the irony that the Blackhawks traded Laurent Brossoit on Thursday only to need a backup on Friday. You don’t plan trades around a flu bug. Rockford will be okay.

However, Commesso wasn’t the only person brought up from Rockford on Friday afternoon.

everyone say hi to Kevin and Drew!

📰 ➡︎ https://t.co/1frK18VDE1 pic.twitter.com/StfrFQipaz

— Chicago Blackhawks (@NHLBlackhawks) January 9, 2026

Commesso will be sharing a cab to Chicago with defenseman Kevin Korchinski.

The Blackhawks activated Connor Bedard off IR, which gives them 12 healthy forwards (14 total) if Foligno and Mikheyev can’t go. The Blackhawks had six defensemen on the NHL roster after sending Ethan Del Mastro to Rockford earlier this week.

We’ll see if Korchinski draws into the lineup at some point this weekend.

Source: https://www.bleachernation.com/blac...kevin-korchinski-drew-commesso-from-rockford/
 
Blackhawks 1, Capitals 5 — Three Stars, Key Takeaways

The first period was not good. With the Blackhawks down a couple important skaters and both of their NHL goalies because of the flu, giving up three goals on six shots was not ideal by any means.

The second period came and went. Both teams scored. The Blackhawks threw the line blender on a few times trying to get something to work. Drew Commesso looked a lot more comfortable in the net; he stopped 9 of 10 in the period.

For the fans who believe this might be the last time Alex Ovechkin plays at the United Center, he did them a solid with a goal 13:33 into the third period to extend Washington’s lead to four.

Star 1: Oliver Moore​


Before Wednesday night’s destruction of the St. Louis Blues, Moore had scored just once since No. 18. He got a goal against the Blues, and followed that up with a gorgeous power play goal to get the Blackhawks on the board in the second period.

GOAL: What a shot by Oliver Moore on the power play. Oh my pic.twitter.com/EX5mhoD9Ql

— BHF (@BlackhawksFocus) January 10, 2026

Star 2: Jason Dickinson​


Sometimes it isn’t necessarily about what one player does as much as it is about what other players don’t do. Thru two periods, Dickinson had spent more than five minutes of 5-on-5 time on the ice against Dylan Strome and Alexander Ovechkin and more than four against Aliaksei Protas. In a game that was 4-1 and with the Caps having a 59.62 percent 5-on-5 expected goals for percentage, the Blackhawks had a 77.53 xGF% in 8:13 at 5-on-5 at the end of 40 minutes.

Star 3: Pedialyte​


Here’s hoping the Blackhawks have enough healthy bodies to put a full lineup on the ice in Nashville tomorrow. And that they play a better game than they did tonight. This was just a flat performance.

Key Takeaways​

  • Connor Bedard skated 6:01 in his first period back. His legs looked good. In the middle of the period, the Blackhawks got two power plays — and they overlapped by 75 seconds. There was one flurry in front of the net that didn’t produce a goal, but Bedard looked a little tentative to shoot the puck. That wasn’t the case in the second period. He looked just fine.
Connor Bedard has shown zero rust in his first game in almost a month. Here's his best chance of the night. #Blackhawks pic.twitter.com/ciPC5os1Q9

— Charlie Roumeliotis (@CRoumeliotis) January 10, 2026
  • The only bright spot in the first period was the line of Dickinson, Teuvo Teräväinen and Ryan Donato. They were on the ice for 4:03 together at 5-on-5, the highest of the four lines, and kept the Caps from attempting a shot on net (3-0 favoring the Blackhawks).
  • Nick Lardis picked up the first assist of his NHL career on Moore’s power play goal. Later in the period, after Justin Sourdif blew up Moore with a big hit, Lardis asked him to dance. Lardis was the only player to take a seat in the sin bin after the holiday party broke out. I like the grit, even if Lardis and Moore were both minus-three at the end of two periods.
Lardis jumps in to defend Moore who took a huge hit from Sourdif pic.twitter.com/lUtXs7ohOg

— BHF (@BlackhawksFocus) January 10, 2026
  • A tough night for the two kids called up from Rockford. A sick team put on an underwhelming performance and their individual numbers weren’t great. Kevin Korchinski was paired with Matt Grzelcyk, who was playing his off-side. That wasn’t great. Korchinski struggled. Commesso settled down more in the second and third period, but he didn’t get much help from the guys in front of him either.
  • With that being said, Grzelcyk had zero points on the power play in his first 42 games this season. He now has three power play assists in his last two games.

Source: https://www.bleachernation.com/blac...hawks-1-capitals-5-three-stars-key-takeaways/
 
Blackhawks at Predators — Lineups, Broadcast Info, Game Thread

The Hawks had to bring Stanislav Berezhnoy on the trip, so the options in net are two guys who started last night… and both of whom should be in the AHL right now. If Blackhawks head coach didn’t know what he was going to do in net after last night’s game doesn’t give you pause going into this one, the fact that half of the roster is sick and they played last night is a recipe for potentially bad times ahead in Nashville.

But you know what? Connor Bedard is back and Oliver Moore is playing great hockey right now. Maybe the young guys who aren’t on the puke and rally train can steal one from a mediocre Preds squad.

Broadcast Info​


Puck Drop: 7:00 PM CT
TV / Streaming: CHSN
Radio: WGN 720 AM

Expected Lineups​

Chicago Blackhawks logo


Chicago Blackhawks

Connor Bedard — Ryan Greene — André Burakovsky
Teuvo Teräväinen — Oliver Moore — Nick Lardis
Tyler Bertuzzi — Jason Dickinson — Ryan Donato
Nick Foligno — Colton Dach — Landon Slaggert
Ilya Mikheyev??

Wyatt Kaiser — Artyom Levshunov
Alex Vlasic — Connor Murphy
Kevin Korchinski — Matt Grzelcyk

In goal for the Blackhawks:

Logo_Nashville-Predators.jpg


Nashville Predators

Filip Forsberg – Ryan O’Reilly – Steven Stamkos
Michael Bunting – Erik Haula – Luke Evangelista
Tyson Jost – Fedor Svechkov – Matthew Wood
Reid Schaefer – Michael McCarron – Cole Smith

Roman Josi – Nick Perbix
Brady Skjei – Adam Wilsby
Nicolas Hague – Nick Blankenburg

Juuse Saros
Justus Annunen

Injury Report​

Chicago Blackhawks

  • Spencer Knight, Arvid Söderblom and Louis Crevier are sick. Frank Nazar is on IR. Shea Weber (retired) and Ryan Ellis (also retired) are out long term.

Nashville Predators

  • Zachary L’Heureux and Jonathan Marchessault are out. Ozzy Wiesblatt is on IR.

What to Watch For​

  • Who’s in goal for the Blackhawks — and for how long? Both options started last night.
  • Is anyone new sick for the Blackhawks?
  • Mikheyev is on the trip. We’ll see if he’s healthy enough to play tonight.

Get Caught Up​

The #Blackhawks have called up the other goalie from Rockford pic.twitter.com/vWmIYtuagN

— Tab Bamford (@The1Tab) January 10, 2026

Source: https://www.bleachernation.com/blac...edators-lineups-broadcast-info-game-thread-6/
 
Blackhawks 3, Predators 0 — Three Stars, Key Takeaways

The Blackhawks came out and played a much better first period than last night. Nashville dominated the shot attempts early (20-12 for the period), but good goaltending and quick clears helped limit the Preds’ opportunities. Neither side scored and Nashville had a 9-7 shot advantage after 20 minutes.

The game got more physical in the second period, and special teams became the story. The Blackhawks were able to score a power play goal to take the lead, while Nashville failed on both of their advantages. Again: goaltending was superb.

With Nashville dominating the shot attempts and shots on goal, it felt really important that the Blackhawks get the next goal in the third period. They did that, and their defensive effort in front of their young goaltender continued to be very good.

Star 1: Drew Commesso​


Commesso had a 1.43 goals saved above expected in the first period. The Preds had six high danger chances in the first period. They did not score. At the end of the second period, Nashville had a 21-16 shots advantage. The Preds had two power plays in the second period and a 2.38 xGF. Once again, they did not score. Nashville finished the night with 4.32 xGF and zero (0) on the scoreboard.

For all of the fans on social media who were calling him out after his rushed start last night, to come back and make a second NHL start in as many days on no rest and perform this well was remarkable. Full marks to Commesso for a tremendous performance.

Commesso's faced a few chaotic sequences tonight but he's remained calm every time. He's working on a potential shutout pic.twitter.com/0kjmzVUQhr

— BHF (@BlackhawksFocus) January 11, 2026

Star 2: Connor Bedard​


Bedard played last night, but he was really back tonight. The move and assist on the first goal of the night was *chef’s kiss* and he picked up a second primary assist on the second goal of the night.

GOAL: Connor Bedard WHAT A PLAY to set up Bertuzzi for a tap-in goal pic.twitter.com/v83lt7e6rg

— BHF (@BlackhawksFocus) January 11, 2026

Star 3: Nick Lardis​


Lardis only got nine shifts in the first two periods, with one of his four in the second period coming on the power play. But he took advantage of the ice time he received, and scored his fourth goal of the season in the third period.

GOAL: Korchinski to Bedard to Lardis. What a shot. Blackhawks extend the lead pic.twitter.com/bewzjwvrM0

— BHF (@BlackhawksFocus) January 11, 2026

Key Takeaways​

  • Tyler Bertuzzi‘s power play was his 20th high danger goal of the season — the top mark in the entire NHL.
  • Bertuzzi giving the puck to Ryan Greene for the Blackhawks’ third goal was such a class, veteran move. Greene has been fighting to get a goal for so long. Good for him!
GOAL: Bertuzzi steals and Greene buries into the empty net to seal the game pic.twitter.com/A1JQSG2ZjG

— BHF (@BlackhawksFocus) January 11, 2026
  • A much better start from Kevin Korchinski tonight. He was skating well as always, but was much more confident with the puck. He was tied for the team lead with two shots on goal in the 6:42 in the first. He picked up the second assist on Lardis’ goal in the third period.
  • The Blackhawks won 11 of 24 faceoffs in the first period. Jason Dickinson won 6 of 8 at the dot.
  • The Blackhawks won 23 of 51 faceoffs thru two periods. Dickinson won 14 of 19 (13 of 16 at even strength).
  • The Blackhawks won 30 of 64 faceoffs in the game. Dickinson won 17 of 24. He was fabulous. Dickinson was also credited with one blocked shot and one hit. Again, there’s more value in players than just a goal or an assist.
  • Once again, the Blackhawks special teams came up big. The penalty kill was superb again.

Source: https://www.bleachernation.com/blac...awks-3-predators-0-three-stars-key-takeaways/
 
A Great Win, Youth is Served, Sharing is Caring, Prospect Goals Galore, and Other Blackhawks Bullets

What a night in Chicago! I’ll have some links to our coverage of the Bulls win, Cubs landing a big ticket free agent and the Bears breathtaking win at the end of our bullets this morning, but I’m old enough to recommend we all take a step back this morning (in whatever hungover state of affairs you might be) and appreciate how many times in our lives as Chicago sports fans we’ll have a night that special.

Selfishly focusing on the ice last night, the Blackhawks game was another moment on the timeline of the rebuild that we can probably circle as noteworthy, if not possible significant. Consider the circumstances of the game. The Hawks have been bad in the second half of back-to-backs most of this year. They had two options in goal and both of them a) should be in the AHL, and b) started a game on Friday night. They got their butts kicked in the NHL on Friday night because half of the roster was/is sick. And they were still down a few important skaters on top of both NHL goalies going into a road game in Nashville against a Preds team that has been turning things around of late.

Six different Blackhawks registered a point last night. Their ages: 30, 22, 21, 20, 20, 20. The young goalie who got roasted in the comments here and on social media after Friday night’s game pulled out his best Lee Corso impression (“Not so fast my friend!“). And we wake up on Sunday morning with the Blackhawks back at .500 and three points out of a wild card spot.

  • I want to take another moment to talk about Tyler Bertuzzi giving the puck to Ryan Greene in the final minutes for an empty net goal. We’ve talked so much here about Greene generating chances but not getting the payoff. He hadn’t scored a goal in 19 games (since Nov. 30). Bertuzzi giving the puck to him to get that off his back says a lot about the veteran. The hug Greene got from Bedard had a little more joy in it than just an empty-net goal usually does — which tells you a little about the chemistry of this roster. And you could tell how much Greene appreciated it.
#Blackhawks third of the night

Ryan Greene
Tyler Bertuzzi

pic.twitter.com/EozfEpzC0C

— Bleacher Nation Blackhawks (@BN_Blackhawks) January 11, 2026
  • How about another round of applause for Drew Commesso last night? Pitching a 36-save road shutout in his second start in as many days was tremendous. He was calm in the net all night. Made the saves he needed to at some crucial times and was able to keep his composure when things got a little crazy in front of him. Commesso became the fourth goaltender in Blackhawks franchise history to record a shutout in his first NHL win, following Corey Crawford (March 5, 2008), Craig Anderson (Jan. 22, 2004),and Paul Goodman (Jan. 1, 1940). Well done!
  • And I love this for the kid after the game.
that first NHL win + first NHL shutout feeling🥹 pic.twitter.com/U6yvPlF43z

— Chicago Blackhawks (@NHLBlackhawks) January 11, 2026
  • Kevin Korchinski bounced back with a nice night last night. He skated 14:03 and picked up an assist on the Hawks’ third goal of the game. A nice, more settled performance from the young defenseman.
  • Last night, Artyom Levshunov picked up an assist on Bertuzzi’s goal. He now has 19 assists on the year, which ranks third among all NHL rookie behind Ivan Demidov and Beckett Sennecke. Levshunov now has 11 points on the power, play, which is tied for second among all rookies with Zeev Buium. Matthew Schaefer leads rookies with 13 points on the power play.
  • Since the start of December (min. 10 games played), only Schaefer (24:41) is averaging more ice time per game than Levshunov (21:35). In fact, there are only three rookies skating over 20 minutes per game since Dec. 1 (again, min. 10 games).
  • Let’s just keep talking about young guys because it’s fun. Good read here from Ben Pope on how Nick Lardis and Oliver Moore are growing together.
Nick Lardis & Oliver Moore's adjacent lockers are helping them settle into the NHL. They can talk through anything together.

"Was that a no-look?"

"Yeah. You're always there."

"I guess he knows I’m there, which is nice to know."

New Blackhawks story: https://t.co/51npmepLxB

— Ben Pope (@BenPopeCST) January 10, 2026
  • This is a wonderful tribute to Blackhawks icon Glenn Hall, who passed away on Wednesday. One of the other all-time great goalies saw Hall as his hero.
For many hockey fans, their hero was Ken Dryden.

For Ken Dryden, his hero was Glenn Hall. pic.twitter.com/HwfwtkObBQ

— NHL Alumni (@NHLAlumni) January 9, 2026
  • In his first game back with his new gold medal from the World Juniors, Anton Frondell picked up his 11th goal of the season. He added an assist in the game as well.
Eklund till Frondell när Djurgården återtar ledningen! pic.twitter.com/Oerwo0VUXR

— SHL.se (@SHLse) January 10, 2026
  • In the KHL, Roman Kantserov picked up two more assists on Saturday.
  • In the college ranks, Václav Nestrašil got UMass on the board at Boston University. UMass won the game 2-0.
Here's a look at Václav Nestrašil's team-leading 11th of the season to get us on the board in the first

Watch on @ESPNPlus: https://t.co/Pk9CDqNhea#NewMass X #Flagship pic.twitter.com/mLICdgfCWs

— UMass Hockey (@UMassHockey) January 10, 2026
  • In the OHL, Jack Pridham scored the first goal of the night for Kitchener. Pridham also had an assist on their third goal of the night. And then added a second goal later in the third period.
PRIDS COLLECTS HIS OWN REBOUND #RTown | #BattleBuilt | #Blackhawks https://t.co/PYt3id7h4z pic.twitter.com/iZiGGhum4Y

— Kitchener Rangers (@OHLRangers) January 11, 2026
Jack adds one late to cap off a three-point night #RTown | #BattleBuilt | #Blackhawks https://t.co/ae4KNVw0mi pic.twitter.com/ZgOsmAAzkm

— Kitchener Rangers (@OHLRangers) January 11, 2026
  • In the WHL, Nathan Behm scored his 24th of the season in the third period for Kamloops.
Bing. Behm. Boom. pic.twitter.com/79bmfzP3i8

— Kamloops Blazers (@blazerhockey) January 11, 2026
  • One defenseman who will not be hitting them free agent market any time soon is Philip Broberg. The Blues signed him to a six-year extension that has an $8M cap hit on Saturday afternoon.
  • Finally, another defenseman looks like he wants a new home asap. It looks like we’re headed to a divorce in Jersey. The Devils healthy scratched veteran defenseman Dougie Hamilton on Saturday. Based on this comment from his agent to Pierre LeBrun, he isn’t happy and wants out. Elliotte Friedman on Saturday Headlines reported Hamilton rejected a trade to San Jose. Stay tuned here…
image-67.png


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THE GREATEST COMEBACK EVER: Bears 31, Packers 27https://t.co/Las8uiIR94

— Bleacher Nation Bears (@BN_Bears) January 11, 2026

Source: https://www.bleachernation.com/blac...ct-goals-galore-and-other-blackhawks-bullets/
 
Bedard vs. McDavid, Faceoff Wins, Getting Healthy, Rebuilding Canucks, and Other Blackhawks Bullets

The Blackhawks got a well-earned day off on Sunday. Well earned both because they won a game in Nashville on Saturday night and, frankly, they need to get away from each other and get this flu bug out of their collective systems. They’re rolling right now; the Blackhawks’ only loss this calendar year was on Friday night with a bunch of guys missing and others playing at less than 100 percent.

But the calendar doesn’t slow down in the NHL, and it sure doesn’t for the Blackhawks in January of an Olympic year. And tonight, the Hawks will have the opportunity to take their fun, young lineup up against Connor McDavid, Leon Draisaitl and the Edmonton Oilers.

  • Connor Bedard‘s age-specific record chasing/breaking for the Blackhawks organ-I-zation continues. On Saturday night he joined some more big names in the history books. He recorded his 109th and 110th career assists. No. 109 passed Patrick Kane for the second-most by a Blackhawks player before age 21 behind only Eddie Olczyk (115).
  • With two assists on Saturday night, Bedard recorded his 41st career multi-point game. That ties Edzo and Jeremy Roenick for the second-most by a Blackhawks player before age 21, trailing only Denis Savard (44).
Ryan Greene Chicago Blackhawks

Corinne Votaw-Imagn Images
  • After Jason Dickinson won 17 of 24 faceoffs against the Predators on Saturday, I decided to do a little digging. And what I found surprised me. Since January 1, both Dickinson and Ryan Greene rank among the top 20 centers in the entire NHL in faceoffs taken; Greene ranks 13th (96) and Dickinson 18th (92). Greene is winning 54.2 percent of his faceoffs. Dickinson is winning 53.3 percent of his draws.
  • Thanks to those two gentlemen, the Blackhawks rank 13th in the NHL in faceoff percentage as a team (50.8) since the start of the calendar year. Their opponent tonight from Edmonton is winning 50.9 percent.
  • On Sunday night, Artyom Levshunov (61 GP) recorded his 25th career assist in his 61st game, making him the second-fastest rookie defenseman in Blackhawks history to reach that mark, (Doug Crossman did it in 53 games).
  • A good sign on Sunday: the Hawks sent three guys back to Rockford. Hopefully that means they’re full healthy. And, again, I love that Drew Commesso took the L on Friday night, dusted himself off and played a magnificent game on Saturday night. That showed me a lot, and I’m sure I’m not alone.
Good news on the illness situation in Chicago

The #Blackhawks have sent Commesso, Korchinski and Berezhnoy back to Rockford pic.twitter.com/VEKavac6FQ

— Tab Bamford (@The1Tab) January 11, 2026
  • Hey, remember when there were fans who were talking about how much better off the Anaheim Ducks were than the Blackhawks? Because they went out and got some veterans like Chris Kreider and Jacob Trouba? That was a thing in November and December. It shouldn’t be a thing right now. The Ducks have lost five straight and are 1-8-1 in their last 10 games. And, waking up on Monday morning, the Blackhawks are slightly ahead of the Ducks in the standings (by virtue of 15 regulation wins). The Hawks also have the better goal differential. Oh, and this is with Bedard missing almost a full month and still no Frank Nazar.
image-83.png

  • I throw this into our bullets this morning for a few reasons. First: we need a reminder every once in a while that young teams do struggle, no matter who’s behind the bench. When they struggle and when the slide happens might be timed differently for different teams, but it happens.
  • It’s also worth us appreciating that we’re all waking up on Monday seeing the Blackhawks three points out of a Wild Card spot. The second half of the season should now have meaning — and that was our hope in September.
  • Finally, the Vancouver Canucks said the word. The sentence has been uttered. “We (are) transitioning into a rebuild.” So go ahead and start your mock trade lists, folks. Because the Canucks
"The draft is really important for us in the long term plan and the direction we're going here."

General Manager Patrik Allvin speaks in an exclusive interview with Chris Faber about the future of the team and importance of the draft at the #Canucks annual Scouting Meetings. pic.twitter.com/SDO1VjI6lt

— Vancouver Canucks (@Canucks) January 11, 2026

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Source: https://www.bleachernation.com/blac...uilding-canucks-and-other-blackhawks-bullets/
 
OH MAN what a weekend for Chicago sports fans!!! Between the Bears pulling off that miracle against the Packers and the Hawks shutting out Nashville with a sick roster, I don't know what to do with myself!!!

Gotta give it up for Drew Commesso though - kid gets absolutely ROASTED on Friday night giving up 3 goals on 6 shots in the first period, and then comes back the VERY NEXT NIGHT on zero rest and throws up a 36-save shutout?? That's some serious mental toughness right there. Fourth goalie in franchise history to get a shutout in his first NHL win. Put some respect on that name!!!

And can we talk about Bertuzzi giving Greene that empty netter?? THAT'S the kind of veteran leadership you want in a locker room during a rebuild. Greene had been snakebitten for 19 games and Bertuzzi just handed him that goal on a silver platter. Love to see it.

The young core is really starting to cook - Bedard back and looking dangerous, Moore heating up, Lardis showing some grit and finishing ability, Levshunov racking up assists on the backend. Three points out of a wild card spot and we're only halfway through January!

Now we get Bedard vs McDavid tonight??? LET'S GO!!!

Also LOL at Anaheim and all those people who said bringing in Kreider and Trouba made them so much better positioned than us. How's that 1-8-1 stretch treating you, Ducks fans?? 🦆💀
 
BREAKING: Connor Bedard OUT vs Connor McDavid, Oilers

We thought the Blackhawks were done with the whole being sick thing when everyone showed up looking good at the morning skate on Monday.

We are in fact not clear. And this one hurts.

Connor Bedard, who returned from his shoulder injury just two games ago and had two beautiful assists on Saturday night in Nashville, will not play against Connor McDavid and the Edmonton Oilers on Monday night because he’s sick.

Source: https://www.bleachernation.com/blac...g-connor-bedard-out-vs-connor-mcdavid-oilers/
 
2026 NHL Draft: NHL Central Scouting Releases Midterm Prospect Rankings

On Monday evening, NHL Central Scouting released their midterm rankings of prospects for the 2026 NHL Draft.

In October, NHL Central Scouting released its preliminary watch lists. In that process, they assign preliminary letter grades assigning estimated draft value on each player (example: an A grade means the NHL draft prospect has a first round grade). I wrote about those lists when they were released.

As always, NHL Central Scouting breaks up their NHL draft prospect rankings into four categories: North American skaters and goalies, and International skaters and goalies.

Keep in mind these rankings are all separated; NHL Central Scouting has not declared who of Gavin McKenna Ivar Stenberg is their No. 1 overall prospect. They did, however provide a couple comments on the top prospects on the respective skater lists. Before we get to those comments, here are their top ten skaters in North America and International.

Top 10 North American Skaters​

  1. Gavin McKenna, LW
  2. Keaton Verhoeff, RHD
  3. Carson Carels, LHD
  4. Chase Reid, RHD
  5. Caleb Malhotra, C
  6. Daxon Rudolph, RHD
  7. Tynan Lawrence, C
  8. Ilya Morozov, C
  9. Ethan Belchetz, LW
  10. JP Hurlbert, LW

Top 10 International Skaters​

  1. Ivar Stenberg, LW
  2. Alberts Šmits, LHD
  3. Oliver Suvanto, C
  4. Elton Hermansson, RW
  5. Viggo Björck, C
  6. Juho Piiparinen, RHD
  7. Marcus Nordmark, LW
  8. Malte Gustafsson, LHD
  9. William Håkansson, LHD
  10. Simas Ignatavicius, RW

The two No. 1 prospects​

  • On Gavin McKenna:
“Gavin McKenna is an elite talent with exceptional hockey sense, quickness and maturity which has allowed him to dictate the play and influence games at every level he’s played,” said Dan Marr, director of NHL Central Scouting. “He possesses a combination of unteachable skills and attributes which have been on record-setting display the last couple seasons and place him in a category of his own as the top prospect for the 2026 NHL Draft.

“He was the consensus number one for mid-season and belongs in that special player category. The projection is not based on when he plays in the NHL; rather, once he gets established in the NHL.”
  • On Ivar Stenberg:
“He has established himself as a top prospect, already playing regular minutes with powerhouse Frolunda in the SHL,” NHL Director of European Scouting Jukka-Pekka Vuorinen said. “His blend of speed, first-step quickness, and balance makes him a dangerous, dynamic skater who can both create and finish plays.

“Offensively, he displays elite hockey IQ and patience with the puck, often distributing with precision on the power play and in tight spaces. His vision and timing enable him to open up lanes and create high-quality scoring chances.”
  • Corey Pronman and Scott Wheeler at The Athletic shared some thoughts on these new lists.
Some quick thoughts on NHL Central Scouting’s midseason rankings:https://t.co/y7R3wlGz6R

— Scott Wheeler (@scottcwheeler) January 13, 2026

Source: https://www.bleachernation.com/blac...l-scouting-releases-midterm-prospect-rakings/
 
Blackhawks Skaters Load Up New Under-23 Rankings

Okay, Blackhawks fans. I’ll start this with my usual caveat: these are the rankings of one writer. And we’ve talked about the perceptions of different writers and analysts at different publications (sometimes the same outlet) and how they differ; that’s why I present the perspectives of a wide range of those folks here for your consideration.

But the the new, midseason update of Corey Pronman’s under-23 skater rankings at The Athletic are intriguing to me for a number of reasons.

In his latest update, Pronman ranks 137 players and prospects across the NHL. As far as inclusion criteria: “A player must be 22 years old or younger as of Jan. 1, 2026, to qualify.” As always, he puts the players into tiers based on where he views their skillset at the NHL level. Let’s dig into the new rankings with some thoughts before I put a little more context onto why the rankings have a little more interest to me.

New @TheAthleticNHL; Mid season update of my u23 NHL ranking of best young players and prospects in the league https://t.co/3ehDxKaWN5

— Corey Pronman (@coreypronman) January 13, 2026

New Blackhawks Player/Prospect Rankings​


The Blackhawks placed 11 skaters on Pronman’s new list. Here is where they rank with their overall number and the tier in which he placed them (Note: I am including the position Pronman assigned each player on his list):

2. Connor Bedard, C — Tier 1: Elite NHL player
22. Frank Nazar, C — Tier 5: Top of the lineup player
23. Roman Kantserov, RW — Tier 5: Top of the lineup player
35. Artyom Levshunov, RHD — Tier 6: Bubble top and middle of the lineup player
44. Anton Frondell, C — Tier 6: Bubble top and middle of the lineup player
71. Colton Dach, C — Tier 7: Middle of the lineup player
72. Sam Rinzel, RHD — Tier 7: Middle of the lineup player
82. Oliver Moore, C — Tier 7: Middle of the lineup player
95. Sacha Boisvert, C — Tier 7: Middle of the lineup player
104. Václav Nestrašil, RW — Tier 7: Middle of the lineup player
107. Mason West, C — Tier 7: Middle of the lineup player

That’s 11 of the top 107, which is a nice clip for the Blackhawks’ rebuild. And six of the 11 are not in the NHL at the moment, though Rinzel has appeared in NHL games. That’s another reminder that we’re just seeing the first wave of Blackhawks prospects hitting the NHL at this point.

Frank Nazar Chicago Blackhawks

Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images

Intriguing Blackhawks Rank Changes​


The first big rank of note to me is where Nazar came in with Pronman on this updated list. As we’ve discussed over the past few years, Pronman has historically not been a big Nazar fan. When he published his preseason rankings in September, Pronman had Nazar at No. 45. That’s a big jump! Here’s part of what Pronman wrote about Nazar in this update:

He wins way more battles than you would expect for a player his size, and projects as a reliable two-way center in the mold of a Brayden Point. His offense has surprised me as time has gone on. He’s smarter and more creative than I thought when he was a teenager, and he could be an excellent second-line center who plays all situations.

Love read that!

While we’re on the subject of huge jumps from Pronman’s previous rankings to this update, Kantserov moved up from No. 162 to No. 23! For those who are still learning about Kantserov’s game, here are the skill grades that Pronman gave Kantserov:

image-91.png


Levshunov dropped from 22 to 35 in part because “His defensive play doesn’t stand out as much, as he can cheat for offense and he’s not overly physical. As a pro, the offense hasn’t been so spectacular to make up for those issues as well.” I will remind everyone at this point that Levshunov is 20 years old playing top pair minutes in the NHL. We’re seeing a lot of growth this season. I think he’ll climb this list over the next two years that he’s eligible.

Frondell dropped a bit (from 26 to 44). I’m not sure what his performance at the World Juniors did to inform the dip, but his play has been up and down in the SHL based on how is team has used him. With that being said, it isn’t rare for a young player competing in a top league to see a bit of a dip in rankings like this because their numbers can be lower than you might hope.

Dach was the biggest surprise for me on Pronman’s list. He moved up from 151 to 71! Pronman did not write notes on Dach in his update, but ranked his compete as high-end. Pronman actually downgraded his hockey sense from average to below average. Apparently when you’re a big body power forward, compete means a lot to Pronman.

Nestrašil was not ranked before the season, but moved into the list at 104 this time. Based on what I saw at the World Juniors, his arrow will only continue to point up. He’s been very impressive at UMass and for Czechia since being drafted.

There was one omission from Pronman’s list both times that still has me scratching my head, though.

Nick Lardis Chicago Blackhawks

Talia Sprague-Imagn Images

Where’s Nick Lardis?​


After putting up 71 goals and 117 points in 65 regular-season games in the OHL last year, there were understandable questions about whether Lardis’ scoring would translate to the professional levels. Which is okay; not every player who put up big numbers in junior has turned into an automatic offensive threat in the AHL or NHL.

But Lardis started his professional career with 13 goals and 26 points in 24 games with Rockford, which was at/near the top of the rookie ranks in that league. Since being recalled by the Blackhawks, Lardis has scored four goals in his first 15 games. His shot is legit; he’s still learning where he needs to be to make that shot more lethal at the highest level, however.

At this point, not having Lardis on a list of players as deep as Pronman’s is feels like a miss, if not a snub. But, again, these rankings are the perspective of one analyst. We’ll see if Lardis can improve and earn respect from the doubters the way Nazar has early in his NHL career.

Source: https://www.bleachernation.com/blac...khawks-skaters-load-up-new-under-23-rankings/
 
Bear Down, Bedard’s Olympic Door Open? Rinzel’s First, Vanacker, and Other Blackhawks Bullets

On Monday night in Philadelphia, Tampa Bay center Brayden Point suffered a right knee injury and needed help getting off the ice. The scene wasn’t great for Jon Cooper because… Point it not only one of the more important players on his Lightning roster, but he’s also supposed to play for Cooper with Canada’s Olympic team. Reports on Tuesday are that the injury is “not good.”

Jon Cooper on Brayden Point. “We avoided the worst case scenario. His season is not over. But he is week to week”. @TBLightning

— Dave Randorf (@DaveRandorf) January 13, 2026

Chris Johnston and Pierre LeBrun at The Athletic already wrote a piece looking at who might be in line to replace Point — who happens to be a versatile right-handed center/wing who may have been slotted to skate on one of Canada’s top two lines. Bedard, also a right-handed center/wing who could be impactful in a top-six role, is available. And was mentioned — with Wyatt Johnston — as a good fit if Point can’t go.

New, for @TheAthletic with @PierreVLeBrun: What we’re hearing about Brayden Point’s injury, the Olympics and who Team Canada turns to if he’s out https://t.co/YeGafDfr7Fhttps://t.co/YeGafDfr7F

— Chris Johnston (@reporterchris) January 13, 2026
  • Mark Lazerus wrote about a very real vibe shift at the United Center in the past couple weeks. There was more excitement in the stands as this year’s Blackhawks performed better and were more more entertaining. But, since the Bears started their roll, there’s been a noticeable elevation of the noise in the United Center. Starting with the anthem. Many of the Blackhawks watched the end of the Bears-Packers game on Sunday on their way to the airport. Fun comments in here. Nice read.
Caleb Williams reached out to Connor Bedard last summer "just to say what's up." Now Bedard and his Blackhawks teammates want what Williams and the Bears have: The undivided attention and affection of a sports-crazed city that's madly in love.

My column:https://t.co/5XeAZ6Xueo

— Mark Lazerus (@MarkLazerus) January 13, 2026
  • Speaking of vibes during the anthem before a Blackhawks game… Jim Cornelison, the best in the business, confirmed on Tuesday that he will be on the mic at Soldier Field on Sunday. Let’s go!
Bears fans, As loud as you were for opening day this year, as much energy as there was in the stadium, do you think Sunday you will be even louder when we rock the anthem for the @ChicagoBears vs @RamsNFL game? I bet so and I can’t wait!! #gobears #beardown pic.twitter.com/v7Fp95N0Kj

— Jim Cornelison (@Anthem_Singer) January 13, 2026
  • The Rockford IceHogs won a game last night — without their usual starting goaltender. Scott Powers reported Drew Commesso may have taken his first career NHL shutout and the Blackhawks’ team illness back to Rockford with him.
  • The IceHogs beat Manitoba 6-2 last night with goals from six different skaters. That list includes the first AHL goal from Sam Rinzel. Here it is:
SAM RINZEL’S FIRST AS A HOG!! https://t.co/jRnJCJbGWb pic.twitter.com/876pVp6baN

— Rockford IceHogs (@goicehogs) January 14, 2026
  • Keeping on the prospect train, nice read here from Ben Pope on Marek Vanacker putting together a really nice season in Brantford.
Blackhawks prospect Marek Vanacker put too much pressure on himself last season.

Now, he feels more "level-headed." And he's thriving, leading the OHL in goals.

"He's in a far better place this year psychologically."

New story: https://t.co/K2nb7iYvz0

— Ben Pope (@BenPopeCST) January 13, 2026
  • I’m old enough to remember when there was talk that the only prospect in the 2023 NHL Draft class who might rival Bedard on the ice is Matvei Michkov. Fast forward to January of 2026 and things are not going exceedingly well for Michkov in Philadelphia. As Kevin Kurz wrote for The Athletic:

Michkov’s sophomore season has been a dud, and that may be understating it. After settling in late last season and showcasing his immense skill level on the way to leading all NHL rookies in goals with 26, his regression this season has been stunning.

  • I was fascinated to see how this would work when the Flyers hired Rick Tocchet as their head coach. So far: not so good. Are the Flyers going to remain patient with the talented — and still young — winger, or are they going to potentially look to move the player? This could be an interesting situation to watch.
On Matvei Michkov, who hasn't scored a goal in a manned net in a month and a half, and who is simply not improving more than halfway through his sophomore season:https://t.co/MG7uOXk3cn

— Kevin Kurz (@KKurzNHL) January 13, 2026
  • The Blues announced they signed defenseman Logan Mailloux to a one-year, one-way contract extension worth $850,000. So Colton Dach will have a dance partner when the Hawks and Blues play next year.

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Source: https://www.bleachernation.com/blac...-first-vanacker-and-other-blackhawks-bullets/
 
Let’s Talk About Elias Pettersson, Big Ticket Trade Rumors and the Chicago Blackhawks

Earlier this week, Darren Dreger reported the now rebuilding Vancouver Canucks are now actually potentially listening to calls on center Elias Pettersson. The 27-year-old “star” is signed to a massive contract that carries an $11.6 million cap hit through the 2031-32 season.

He put up a career high 102 points during the 2022-23 season, but has seen his production go down in the subsequent seasons. He appeared in only 64 games and scored only 15 goals last year.

Whenever there’s a big name who potentially becomes available, there’s a segment of the Blackhawks’ fan base that grabs its bullhorn and shouts for Chicago’s front office to make a deal.

Here’s a Cliff Notes version of my Chicago Blackhawks — Elias Pettersson FAQ:

  • Could the Blackhawks be interested? Maybe.
  • Can the Blackhawks afford Pettersson’s cap hit? Yup.
  • Do the Blackhawks have assets to make an interesting offer to the Canucks? Absolutely.
  • Does Pettersson fit what the Blackhawks are building? I’m not sold.

I’ve admittedly never been a Pettersson fan and I’m not thrilled at the prospect of a) committing cap space to him for term, b) giving up premium assets to acquire him, and c) committing a top-six spot to him.

There’s one more issue — an elephant in the Blackhawks’ room — that we should jump into at this point.

Kyle Davidson

Do the Blackhawks “need” a “star”?​


Some areas of Blackhawks social media and fans continue to subscribe to the belief that Chicago is going to “need” to look outside the organization for a “star” player to take the rebuild to the next level/over the top.

If you’ve been reading about the Blackhawks here for more than the first portion of this article, you should know by now that I’m not there yet.

What we’re seeing on the NHL ice at this point has been exciting and improving. Which continues to lead impatient fans and some writers to beg for a quick fix to accelerate the path to contention.

But what we’re seeing on the NHL ice at this point is also just the first wave of talent coming to the NHL.

The Blackhawks already have two centerpieces of their top-six in place in Connor Bedard and Frank Nazar. Nick Lardis has been at least intriguing during his first run in the NHL; he’s still learning and developing and, frankly, physically maturing. Oliver Moore is getting more impressive with each game. Ryan Greene has played up and down the lineup with everyone on the roster it seems and hasn’t missed a beat.

There is good reason for excitement that Anton Frondell can be an impact player at the NHL level. He has already signed his entry-level contract and some insiders, including Frank Seravalli, believe there’s an outside chance he could make his NHL debut as soon as the end of this regular season (after his SHL campaign ends).

If you buy into comps, there are folks out there who will point to statistical similarities and tell you there’s a possibility that Roman Kantserov could provide the kind of offense that we’ve seen from Artemi Panarin and Kirill Kaprizov. His KHL contract expires in June, at which point there’s hope he signs with the Blackhawks. Scott Powers, the resident all-things-Russian-prospects guy, has been on that for some time.

I’m willing to be patient to see how Frondell and, hopefully, Kantserov look against NHL competition to begin making proclamations about the organization “needing” to make a bold move.

And then we can start talking about guys like Marek Vanacker, who leads the OHL in goals this season. He’s already signed his entry-level contract and will fully turn pro next season.

Then there are guys like Václav Nestrašil, Nathan Behm and Jack Pridham — each of whom has been very impressive this year. They might be a little further down the road and some might wonder about them being “top-six” fixtures at the NHL level, but there are future waves of prospects coming beyond the guys who might be in Chicago in November as well.

And, don’t forget, the Blackhawks have two picks in the first round of the 2026 NHL Draft. Those two picks could be used to add more talent to the pipeline.

Kyle-Davidson.jpg

So… Blackhawks not buying at all?​


Well, not exactly.

Even considering everything I just wrote about the Blackhawks’ pipeline being enviable and my willingness to be patient — and every indication telling us GMKD is going to stay on plan — I’m not completely excluding the possibility of a trade of some significance.

GMKD told us he was purposefully, intentionally stacking future assets three years ago when he traded Jake McCabe and Sam Lafferty to Toronto for a first-round pick in 2025 (that eventually became Nestrašil). That’s been part of his plan because if/when the time arrives and the right trade opportunity presents itself, the Blackhawks will need assets. And, more importantly, the Blackhawks want to not only build a winner, but be able to sustain the winning once they get back there.

There are teams making decisions to take a step back right now. Vancouver has officially used the word “rebuild.” It sounds like St. Louis is ready to do some retooling as well. And the New York Rangers might be close to implosion. Other teams will probably join that list in the coming weeks.

And, as was the case with the Blackhawks when they embarked on this rebuild, the two things rebuilding teams will likely want are picks and prospects. And the Blackhawks have plenty of both — including five picks in the first two rounds of the 2026 NHL Draft.

My biggest point is this:

If the Chicago Blackhawks are going to make a big swing, they need to do it on the right player at the right time.


I’m not sold that Pettersson is the right player, and that now is the right time to bring him into this room.

For those will inevitably ask because I mentioned the Rangers: I’m not a big fan of the idea of bringing Artemi Panarin back, either. Not unless he helps get Kantserov off to a good start and that’s a significant part of the rationale. And even then, I would wait for free agency this summer and not give up assets when he’s absolutely leaving the Rangers.

And I’m certainly not entertaining “trade rumors” for guys like Brady Tkachuk on social media that would require consuming bong water to even conceive, much less take seriously.

Using the Blackhawks’ dynasty teams — that we’ll celebrate this weekend — as the “mold” for a rebuild is dangerous, because the confluence of perfect circumstances that aligned for that roster to be in place would be impossible to replicate. Two teams passed on Jonathan Toews in the draft, Patrick Kane was the last piece drafted. Toews and Kane joined a young-but-veteran roster that was talented and ready to go. And Marian Hossa became available at the perfect moment to elevate the entire thing to history.

This is going to be different. There likely won’t be “another Hossa” situation because, well, Hossa was a special player. And the escalating cap is going to make big ticket UFAs less likely to hit the open market for the next few years.

Things are going well right now. Some would argue they’re still better than expected. So let’s enjoy the ride a bit and see where things go.

Source: https://www.bleachernation.com/blac...cket-trade-rumors-and-the-chicago-blackhawks/
 
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