The Chicago Blackhawks Could Get A Reality Check In Season Opener
To kick off the tripleheader on Tuesday, Oct. 7, the Blackhawks are in Sunrise to take on the back-to-back defending Stanley Cup champions, the Florida Panthers. Chicago, meanwhile, finished second-last this past season.
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One game won't tell the whole story, but it will set a first impression of how close these rebuilding Blackhawks are to competing against teams of the Panthers' caliber with the pieces each squad has. Suffice it to say, Chicago has a ways to go to end the rebuild as it develops its young talent.
The Panthers' top two defense pairings can compete with that of any team, especially after they acquired Seth Jones from the Blackhawks around the 2025 trade deadline. It's another story for the Blackhawks.
When their highest-scoring blueliner this past season is youngster Alex Vlasic, whose 30 points were a career high, they can't expect any sufficient offensive production from the back end. As for Connor Murphy, whose 117 hits and 160 blocked shots led Hawks blueliners, he's entering the final year of his contract and could be trade bait. Only the Anaheim Ducks allowed more high-danger chances against than Chicago this past season, according to naturalstattrick.com.
That's not to say there isn't some talent in the pipeline, as Chicago has youngsters including Kevin Korchinski, Artyom Levshunov and Sam Rinzel who can grow into important NHL roles.
NHL Prospect Pool Overview '25-26: Chicago Blackhawks Brought In A Stellar Draft Haul
NHL Prospect Pool Overview '25-26: Chicago Blackhawks Brought In A Stellar Draft Haul The Chicago Blackhawks are next up in Tony Ferrari's NHL prospect pool overview series.
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Similarly, comparing the Hawks' forwards with the Panthers' forwards tells you how long their road to respectability truly is.
Yes, the Blackhawks have cornerstone center Connor Bedard as their most important player and prospects Anton Frondell, Sacha Boisvert and Nick Lardis in the system. Teuvo Teravainen and Ryan Donato had 58 and 62 points this past season, while Frank Nazar, 21, established his spot in the NHL full-time.
They'll need Bedard to continue to grow as a difference-maker with help from his supporting cast, but they're still over a season away from the wave of prospects taking this team to the next level. Right now, they don't have enough true needle-movers to be in the same breath as a legitimate Cup contender like the Panthers, which are very deep at every position.
Anton Lundell, Connor Bedard and Dmitry Kulikov (Jim Rassol-Imagn Images)
In net, the Hawks have a young goalie in Spencer Knight, who came over from Florida in the Jones trade, as well as veteran Laurent Brossoit. No goalie will be able to bail out the defensively lacking Blackhawks players in front of them. There may come a day when Knight can thrive between the pipes for Chicago, but that day isn't likely going to come next season.
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Chicago has about $22.3 million in salary cap space, and they used that room to acquire Andre Burakovsky from the Seattle Kraken for an upgrade on offense. But it's unlikely they can weaponize much more of their cap space at this point to get the type of players that will make them beat teams like the Panthers more often than not.
The truth is the Hawks are a dog's breakfast of assets at this stage, and many of their current players include veterans past their prime, like captain Nick Foligno, and second-tier NHLers, such as Tyler Bertuzzi, Teravainen and Burakovsky.
It's clearly easy to see why the Hawks will be a long shot to play meaningful hockey down the stretch in 2025-26. The Panthers are likely to make it clear in Game 1 next year how far the Blackhawks have to go next season. After another year or two, the Blackhawks will be much better built to take the next step.
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