News Blackhawks Team Notes

Wyatt Kaiser Earning Blackhawks’ Faith, Confidence

Wyatt Kaiser is an important piece of the Chicago Blackhawks’ future.

His name has come up frequently in comments before an after games here and on social media. And we talked about him a lot this summer and all the way up to the start of training camp as his contract negotiations dragged until hours before the first practice in September. His play after he was recalled from Rockford for good was impressive, and led to expectations he could be a significant player for the Blackhawks this season.

Thru the first seven games of the 2025-26 season, Kaiser has backed up the words and data telling us he could be a critical player on the Blackhawks’ blue line. Indeed, we’ve been seeing more GameScore Impact Cards for the Blackhawks with Kaiser listed where he was on Sunday night: near the top.

NHL GameScore Impact Card for Chicago Blackhawks on 2025-10-19: pic.twitter.com/MLxSoIwaPL

— HockeyStatCards (@hockeystatcards) October 20, 2025

I went to Natural Stat Trick and search for skaters who have played at least 110 minutes thru Sunday’s games. Kaiser ranks tenth overall — ninth among defensemen — in expected Goals For percentage (xGF%) in the entire NHL.

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Some of the defensemen who had played at least 110 minutes of 5-on-5 ice time with a lower xGF% than Kaiser: Vladislav Gavrikov, Moritz Seider, Seth Jones, Quinn Hughes and Brock Faber.

According to MoneyPuck, Kaiser ranks 19th out of 119 defensemen in the NHL (with at least 100 minutes played in all situations) in On-Ice Expected Goals Against/60 minutes (2.58). Kaiser’s on-ice goal differential (plus-five) is tied with Lane Hutson, Mikhail Sergachev and Josh Manson for fifth-best in the league in that group.

Wyatt Kaiser Chicago Blackhawks

Matt Marton-Imagn Images

Kaiser has been more physical that we’ve seen in his previous NHL stints. He’s been credited with 10 hits in 7 games (1.42 per game), which is well higher than his career rate (0.83). Kaiser has been credited with six takeaways in seven games; last year, he had a career high 23 takeaways in 57 NHL games. Again, well above what we’ve seen previously.

When we look at the players the Blackhawks have selected in the first rounds of drafts since Kyle Davidson began his aggressive rebuild, so much has been said and written about the pressure on the organization and players for those youngsters to develop into top-tier players. Especially the guys taken at/near the top of the first round.

Artyom Levshunov and Sam Rinzel are viewed as the top defensemen for the future of the Blackhawks. They’ve spent the majority of their ice time early this year with Kaiser and Alex Vlasic, respectively. In many ways, that puts pressure on Kaiser (23) and Vlasic (24) — both of whom are still developing in their own right — to help the progress of the program as a whole.

I’ve referenced it previously, but Mark Lazerus wrote a nice piece on how — and why — Kaiser and Levshunov have worked so well together this season. Helping a young, raw defenseman like Levshunov isn’t an easy assignment for any veteran defenseman. But a guy who has skated a whole 98 NHL games before the start of this season?

There will be moments where we’re reminded Kaiser is still young, like the penalty he took late in the third period on Sunday night. But there are increasingly more moments where he looks like he belongs playing big, important minutes on a team that has bigger aspirations than not drafting in the top five any more.

Source: https://www.bleachernation.com/blac...t-kaiser-earning-blackhawks-faith-confidence/
 
2026 NHL Draft Watch List: NHL Central Scouting’s First Round Grades

On Monday, NHL Central Scouting released their preliminary watch list for the 2026 NHL Draft.

They rate players as an A, B, C, W or LV, with an “A” grade meaning they’re labeling the player as a first-round prospect for the 2026 NHL Draft. A “B” is a second- or third-round grade, “C” is the fifth or sixth round, “W” is a sixth- or seventh-round grade and “LV” is for limited viewing (usually because of injury).

A couple of the NHL draft writers I cite frequently shared their thoughts on the preliminary watch list:


You will notice a four player are on teams you’ll recognize on the list below because they’re teammates of current Blackhawks prospects. I have noted those players with asterisks after their teams.

Here are the 27 players who received an A grade from NHL Central Scouting on their preliminary watch list for the 2026 NHL Draft.

2026 NHL Draft — First Round Grades​

  • Players listed alphabetically

Ethan Belchetz, LW, Windsor (OHL)**

Carson Carels, LHD, Prince George (WHL)

Alessandro Di Iorio, C, Sarnia (OHL)

Malte Gustafsson, LHD, HV71 U18 (U18 Region — Sweden)

Oscar Hemming, LW, Kitchener (OHL)**

JP Hurlbert, LW, Kamloops (WHL)**

Nikita Klepov, RW, Saginaw (OHL)

Tynan Lawrence, C, Muskegon (USHL)

Ryan Lin, RHD, Vancouver (WHL)

Caleb Malhotra, C, Brantford (OHL)**

Gavin McKenna, LW, Penn State (Big Ten — NCAA)

Marcus Nordmark, LW, Djurgårdens IF U20 (U20 Nationell — Sweden)

Adam Novotný, LW, Peterborough (OHL)

Juho Piiparinen, RHD, Tappara (Liiga — Finland)

Mathis Preston, RW, Spokane (WHL)

Chase Reid, RHD, Soo (OHL)

Brooks Rogowski, C, Oshawa (OHL)

Ryan Roobroeck, LW, Niagara (OHL)

Daxon Rudolph, RHD, Prince Albert (WHL)

Luke Schairer, RHD, USNTDP

Egor Shilov, C, Victoriaville (QMJHL)

Alberts Šmits, LHD, Jukurit (Liiga — Finland)

Ivar Stenberg, LW, Frölunda (SHL — Sweden)

Oliver Suvanto, C, Tappara (Liiga — Finland)

Keaton Verhoeff, RHD, North Dakota (NCHC — NCAA)

Xavier Villeneuve, LHD, Blainville-Boisbriand (QMJHL)

Also Read​


Source: https://www.bleachernation.com/blac...ist-nhl-central-scoutings-first-round-grades/
 
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