Showing posts with label Blackhawks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blackhawks. Show all posts

Friday, April 14, 2017

Michal Kempny in talks with Blackhawks on new contract, per report


Kane"s hat trick powers Blackhawks past Penguins, 4-1

Chicago Blackhawks defenseman Michal Kempny wants to stay in the NHL next season and has already began negotiations on a new deal before he hits restricted free agency, according to The Athletics Scott Powers.

There was some possibility that Kempny might not want to stay in the NHL after an up and down season with the Blackhawks, but he shot that idea down in an interview with Powers. Not only did Kempny say that hes enjoyed his time with the Blackhawks, he also said hes not interested in returning to the KHL.

Thats good news for the Blackhawks, who will retain Kempnys rights as an RFA this summer. Theyll presumably try to re-sign him to an affordable deal that gives him a slight raise on his current $700,000 base salary while still making him one of the cheaper defensemen on the roster.

One area of interest for Kempny as he looks to sign a new contract is playing time. He appeared 50 times for the Blackhawks in the regular season, but saw his role dwindle in the second half after the acquisition of Johnny Oduya. The defense could look much different next year with Oduya and Brian Campbells contracts expiring, plus the possibility of Trevor van Riemsdyk getting picked by Vegas in the expansion draft.

While Gustav Forsling presumably will be one of the top candidates to fill a spot, Kempny should also be in the mix after a solid debut season. He didnt gain the complete confidence of Joel Quenneville with the ocassional unforced error, but he also finished with a 56.3 percent 5-on-5 Corsi. Thats 6.9 percent better than when hes off the ice, and gives an idea of how he can be useful in driving possession. That kind of talent is a nice luxury to have from a depth player.

So rather than return to the KHL, where Kempny was one of the top defensemen in the league, h**l look to keep carving out his place in the NHL. assuming he figures things out with the blackhawks, expect him to be one of the key competitors for a spot in the top six to open next season.

Source: http://www.secondcityhockey.com/2017/4/14/15302876/michal-kempny-free-agency-blackhawks-contract-talks-2017

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Sunday, April 17, 2016

Blues vs. Blackhawks, 2016 NHL playoffs: Time, TV schedule and live stream


Gotta See It: Wild bounce ends Blackhawks and Blues OT deadlock

Dennis Wierzbicki-USA TODAY Sports

Both teams are knotted at 1-1 as the series heads to Chicago.

You may be surprised to learn the first round series between the Chicago Blackhawks and St. Louis Blues heads into Game 3 on Sunday tied at 1-1. Just kidding. We all know this is going seven games. Puck drop in Chicago is at 3 p.m. ET.

Scouting the Blackhawks

Duncan Keith made an instant impact upon his return from a six-game suspension, registering two points and bolstering the Blackhawks" blue-line in Game 2. Chicago benefited from luck in some ways in the win; if Vladimir Tarasenko"s go-ahead goal in the second period isn"t overturned, the Blues might"ve gone into full Ken Hitchcock "shutdown mode" defensively. Instead, Chicago sustained the momentum. Keeping it through the next two home games is crucial.

Scouting the Blues

It took two playoff games for the Blues to reach a crossroads of sorts. Either they let the missed calls in Game 2 carry over and deflate them, or they rally around it and put up a great road performance in Game 3. Odds are it"ll be the latter, though they"ll have to change their "hit every Blackhawk that moves" strategy. St. Louis has 41 hits in each game and that hasn"t keept the Blackhawks from almost surpassing them in shots both times.

St. Louis Blues at Chicago Blackhawks

3 p.m. ET | Game 3, Western Conference Round 1United Center | Chicago, IllinoisLocal: N/A |Nat"l: NBC, TVAS, SNLive stream atNBC Live Extra andRogers GameCentreMore coverage: Blackhawks blog |Blues blog

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Source: http://www.sbnation.com/nhl/2016/4/17/11444428/blackhawks-blues-2016-live-stream-time-tv-schedule-nhl-playoffs

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Sunday, May 24, 2015

This Blackhawks dad and son are exhausted by overtime playoff hockey



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Source: http://www.sbnation.com/lookit/2015/5/24/8651939/this-blackhawks-dad-and-son-are-exhausted-by-overtime-playoff-hockey



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Wednesday, May 6, 2015

Blackhawks' dark ages should remind us to soak in team's success



Do you remember the bad days?

And I dont mean times when the Blackhawks might have gotten ousted, say, in the second round of the playoffs, which still could happen in this series against the Minnesota Wild.

No, I mean bad days.

Like anywhere from about 1997 to 2008, a stretch when the Hawks made the playoffs once (2002) and were promptly squashed, four games to one by the St. Louis Blues.

That was a period when you wouldnt find the Hawks home games on TV, and sometimes if you attended, you wouldnt find anybody seated next to you.

As recently as the spring of 2007, the Hawks had games with 7,000 people in the nearly 21,000-seat United Center. Some secondary-market tickets went, basically, for the fees needed to process the request. For 10 bucks, you could get in. For nothing, you stood a good chance of snagging one of the Hawks desperation giveaways. On one Sunday afternoon, the minor-league Wolves outdrew the Hawks.

I could go on.

But just to cement the point, I give you two more examples of bad years.

In 2004, Sports Illustrated ran an article with the headline BLACKHAWKS DOWN, with the sub-head, Bad Management Has Made a Once-Beloved NHL Franchise Irrelevant in Chicago. (Hello, Bill Wirtz!)

Also that year, ESPN called the Hawks the worst franchise in professional sports. The Wolves, an AHL team, were one rung above the Blackhawks, according to ESPN the Magazine.

I cant help it, heres one more this regarding how faceless the players on those horrible teams had become: In the fall of 2007, while jogging near the ice rink in Bensenville wearing Blackhawks gear, forward Tuomo Ruutu was detained by police as a potential armed robber.

OK, were past that.

The passing of owner Wirtz almost eight years ago changed everything. No need to explain what those changes entailed they have been documented many times but as president John McDonough has said when asked if he felt like he was starting from scratch when he was hired by Rocky Wirtz to rebuild this downtrodden franchise, I think in many ways we started before scratch.

The Hawks might not win the Stanley Cup this year, but they could.

And if they were to do that, it would mean three championships in six years, plus a run to the conference final.

There are four certifiable Hall of Famers on this team: Jonathan Toews, Patrick Kane, Duncan Keith and Marian Hossa. With one more Cup, somebody such as Patrick Sharp might have to be considered a Hall contender, too, especially if he lights it up the rest of the way.

Mr. Mustache, coach Joel Quenneville, is practically guaranteed a spot.

I guess my point here is, Chicago hockey fans, enjoy what you have and cherish it.

It wasnt always here, and it wont be here forever. The salary cap makes it much harder to build a dynasty than it used to be, back when old boss Wirtz and his first lieutenant, Bob Old-time Hockey Pulford, could have done it but didnt.

Before labor unrest and lockouts and settlements, an owner could have simply outspent other teams for whatever players or management he wanted.

Now you have to be crafty and smart and relentless, as well as rich, to assemble a team like the Blackhawks.

Its not too much to say the NHL has benefitted even more than Chicago fans have from the rebirth of this team. To have an Original Six team, one of only four in the United States, be so wretched that mid-game you could fly paper airplanes from the 300 level and hear nothing but their wings in the dead air, thats a bad year. Or decade.

Sometimes we dont appreciate a good thing until its gone.

Dont do that with these Hawks. Rejoice when the league doesnt start a playoff game at the ludicrous time of 8:30 p.m. And be happy when you see a young guy like Teuvo Teravainen score a game-winning goal (see Game 1).

Remember how we thought it was a done deal that Tiger Woods (14) would get more wins in majors than Jack Nicklaus (18), long in the clubhouse?

We took it for granted. Then life intruded, and its not gonna happen.

Every now and then, its good to appreciate a good thing before its gone. No matter where its headed.

Email: rtelander@suntimes.comTwitter: @ricktelander

Source: http://chicago.suntimes.com/blackhawks-hockey/7/71/580861/blackhawks-dark-ages-remind-us-soak-teams-success



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Tuesday, May 5, 2015

How do Blackhawks prepare for games? Sewer ball, for some



In a hallway deep inside the United Center before a recent game, Blackhawks players are playing a boisterous contest of what many call "sewer ball."

Outside the dressing room, Patrick Sharp is sitting on the floor with his back against the wall, headphones on, bouncing a tennis ball off anything that catches his eye.

Inside the dressing room, captain Jonathan Toews sits at his stall deep in thought, visualizing making plays good and bad to mentally prepare himself for what lays ahead.

While pregame activities differ for each player, they serve a vital role.

"It's really important," Sharp said. "There are a lot of ups and downs throughout a season individually and as a team and that game preparation, whether you have a superstition or a routine, whatever you want to call it, it kind of puts you into that comfort zone and gets you ready to play the game and be ready for whatever can happen."

The most popular pregame warmup is sewer ball, also known as two-touch, and it usually starts with Andrew Shaw and Bryan Bickell departing the dressing room in search of an empty hallway. When they find one, whether at the UC or another NHL arena, the pair begins to kick around a blue soccer ball. Soon, Hawks teammates join in and the group becomes a circle.

It's great fun but also helps work out the kinks and gets their bodies warmed up for three hours of skating and hitting.

The objective of sewer ball is to keep the ball in the air with each player allowed two touches but not with their hands before sending it toward a teammate. If the ball hits the ground, the offending player is out and the game continues until one remains. In the process, some remarkable athletic feats often occur and hilarity can ensue as b***s ricochet off garbage cans, overhead lights and on occasion, passersby.

The origin of the name sewer ball is unclear, but some say it's because the game inspires a certain level of gamesmanship or dubious "rat moves" to succeed.

And, of course, then there is the chirping.

"We call (Marcus) Kruger 'the worst,'" Shaw said with a grin. "He isn't, but we try to get into his head a little bit."

The reigning sewer ball champion is Niklas Hjalmarsson, which makes sense because as a teenager the defenseman participated in Swedish national team tryouts for soccer and hockey.

"It was a tough choice for me when I was younger to decide what to play," Hjalmarsson said. "For a while, I thought about quitting hockey and going all in on soccer. I just liked the more physical aspect of hockey. It's more intense."

During sewer ball, Hjalmarsson doesn't display that intensity as much as Shaw and others do, and that can rankle those involved.

"His work ethic is questionable," Shaw said. "He's got a lot of skill, but I think guys like me and Bickell, guys who try to get every ball possible, sometimes it doesn't work in our favor. If (Hjalmarsson) doesn't think he can't handle it, he doesn't even try for it."

Of course, Hjalmarsson has a response.

"I don't move more than I have to," he said. "I save my energy for the hockey games while Shaw has too much energy so he's always all over the place, especially in sewer ball. He's really working hard."

While an occasional participant in the two-touch ritual, Sharp doesn't have a set routine for preparing for games.

"I'm a little different than most guys," he said. "I kind of go on that day based on how I feel. I do different things, whether it's stretching running, biking or jumping.

"One thing that is consistent is that I like to listen to music mostly Pearl Jam, they're my favorite band and I do have a tennis ball that's been with me since I started playing pro hockey. I just kind of throw that either off guys' backs when they're not looking or off the wall or play catch with somebody."

Wait a minute, Sharp uses the same tennis ball since breaking into the NHL in 2002?

"Same tennis ball," Sharp said. "It's pretty gross. We've had to put some sanitizer on to try to clean it as best we can, but it's the same one."

Not surprisingly, Toews takes a more serious tack during his pregame routine. There is no music or sewer ball.

"I just kind of sit around at my locker and visualize," Toews said. "It's not only to envision things that I want to do successfully, but sometimes it doesn't hurt to envision situations that maybe take your confidence away, like if you get scored on your first shift or if things don't go your way, how are you going to react? Are you going to try to bounce back and maintain your focus and say that it's all right, there's always a way out? That's a thing I've learned to focus on this year. I make sure the body is ready and my mind is in the right place and try to forget about anything else."

Whatever the formula, Kruger said the key for him and most players is to do the same things before each game.

"Most of the guys always try to do the same routine every day," he said. "You get here in the morning, skate and then you do a stretch and go home and maybe take a nap and then get ready for the game. It's getting mentally ready. If you do the same thing you know you're in game mode."

ckuc@tribpub.com

Twitter @ChrisKuc

Copyright 2015, Chicago Tribune

Source: http://www.chicagotribune.com/sports/hockey/blackhawks/ct-blackhawks-pregame-ritual-spt-0504-20150503-story.html



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Thursday, April 23, 2015

Blackhawks up: The story of the American team that nearly knocked off Club ...



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In 1992, the United States' top professional club at the time, the San Francisco Bay Blackhawks, traveled to Mexico City to face the legendary Mexican side Club Amrica in a home-and-away series at the most fearsome venue in North American soccer: Estadio Azteca.

Located on the high plateau just outside Mexico City, the Azteca stands 7,300 feet above sea level. By comparison, Denver, Colorado, the "Mile High City," sits some 2,000 feet lower.

No amount of training, even at altitude, can adequately prepare you to play on its hallowed field.

"I was probably in the best shape of my life by far," recalled Blackhawks and future MLS defender Mark Semioli. "I was 25 years old. I was the perfect age. It felt like I couldn't even move my legs from the get go. It was as if you smoked 100 cigarettes before the game because the altitude was still strong, but the smog was incredible."

Yet despite the altitude and the elements and the hostile crowd, the Blackhawks took that Hugo Snchez-led Amrica to the brink of elimination in the CONCACAF Champions' Cup (the ancestor of the CONCACAF Champions League).

Since then, no professional club team from either Canada or the United States has traveled to Azteca to play against Amrica in international competition.

That all changes on Wednesday, when the Montreal Impact face Mexico's most successful teamin the first leg of the CCL final (9 pm ET; FOX Sports 2, UniMs in USA; Sportsnet World, TVA Sports in Canada).

From the moment they were formed in 1988, the San Francisco Bay Blackhawks signaled their intent to become the biggest and best professional soccer team in America. The club's owner, Bay Area real estate mogul Dan Van Voorhis, spared no expense in providing the team with the best coaches, trainers and travel possible.

When the San Francisco Chronicle asked him why he would risk so much of his own money on a niche sport like soccer, Van Voorhis replied, "I like to work with creative people and I like challenges. Soccer and the Blackhawks certainly present all those to me."

The ambition of the club was evident from the beginning. At a time when many American professional soccer players were struggling to make ends meet, Van Voorhis treated his players like kings, flying them in his private plane, treating them to extravagant meals and putting them up in the finest hotels.

Van Voorhis's lavish spending helped the Blackhawks lure the most talented American players to the Bay Area. From 1989 until the club's final season in 1993, the Blackhawks were home to some of the greatest American players of that era: Eric Wynalda, Marcelo Balboa, John Doyle (pictured right, on a Blackhawks program), Dominic Kinnear, Troy Dayak and Paul Bravo.

Arriving at a tumultuous time in US pro soccer, the Blackhawks competed in an alphabet soup of different leagues over their short existence, including the Western Soccer League, the American Professional Soccer League and the United States Interregional Soccer League (the forerunner of today's USL). But they always ran at the front of the pack.

Between 1989 and 1991, the Blackhawks played in three championships in a row, winning two of them. The last of those championships, the 1991 APSL title, qualified the Blackhawks for a place in the 1992 CONCACAF Champions' Cup.

In international competition for the first time in their history, the Blackhawks believed they could become the first American team to win the entire tournament.

"We had the expectation that we would go far in this thing," said Semioli, who later spent six seasons in MLS with the LA Galaxy and the MetroStars. "We had real plans to win it, and the focus from [Van Voorhis] down was, 'We're going to take this thing.'"

The Blackhawks cruised through the first three rounds of the tournament. They defeated opponents from Panama, Belize and Honduras by a staggering aggregate score of 22-2. All that stood between them and a place in the finals was an eight-time Primera Division and three-time Champions' Cup winner: Club Amrica.

The Blackhawks entered Azteca with a plan. Through 60 minutes of play, it looked like it might actually work. As the Impact did against Costa Rican opponents Alajuelense in this year's semifinal, the Blackhawks played compactly on defense and cautiously ventured forward on the counter.

Semioli explained that his entire job that day was to shadow Amrica's Mexican international midfielder, Luis Roberto Alves. By his own estimation, Semioli didn't cross the midfield line more than five times in the match.

Still, the defensive strategy appeared to pay off. At halftime, the teams left the field deadlocked at zero.

While Amrica got on the scoreboard first in the 47th minute, less than seven minutes later, Jamaican international Peter Isaacs improbably equalized for the visitors. Once again, the teams were even, and the Blackhawks could feel the mood inside the stadium change.

Then disaster struck.

In the 64th minute, Blackhawks defender Troy Dayak (pictured right, with the Earthquakes) was given a straight red card for punching Mexican forward Hugo Snchez then recently returned from Real Madrid in an off-ball incident that was caught not only by the assistant referee, but also by every camera in the stadium.

"We in the United States were so accustomed to bad refereeing and no media coverage at all you think you can get away with almost anything. But not at Azteca Stadium," said former Blackhawks midfielder and captain Derek Van Rheenen.

Dayak describes that red card as one of the defining moments in his career.

"I was playing in a huge stadium in a massive environment," Dayak remembered. "I was doing my job, specifically to mark out their best player, and I was doing that. And the guy found a way to win the game for his team by getting me thrown out."

According to Dayak, who played through the match with a broken bone in his ankle, Snchez repeatedly targeted his foot and ankle with off-ball challenges that went ignored by the referee. After Snchez punched Dayak in the solar plexus, Dayak instinctively swung out. As so often happens, the referee only saw the second punch.

The red card forced an exhausted and demoralized 10-man Blackhawks squad into emergency defending all over the pitch. Within 15 minutes of Dayak's dismissal, Snchez, who would later star in Major League Soccer's inaugural season with the Dallas Burn (now FC Dallas), scored two goals that left the Blackhawks gasping for breath.

Dayak, meanwhile, sat dejectedly in the bowels of the stadium, a sterile, concrete locker room that he described as "the belly of the beast," where he could only listen in horror to the rumble of the crowd above and the stadium loudspeaker blaring the calls: "Goooool! Hugo Snchez!"

"We were in great shape after Peter's goal," Blackhawks coach Laurie Calloway told the media after the game. "But once we lost Troy [Dayak], who we thought kept Snchez under wraps until then, we had a lot of trouble defending."

Part of that stemmed from Dayak's dismissal, but the majority stemmed from a combination of fatigue and Amrica's distinctive home-field advantage.

"Azteca was very hot and a huge field," said Semioli (pictured left, behind Snchez). "It's kind of a spread-out game, and teams [like Amrica] that can possess the ball can run you ragged, much as they did to us."

No Blackhawks player, however fit or fresh, was immune to the debilitating effects of the altitude.

"I don't know how those guys played 90 minutes, because after 20 minutes I felt like there were arrows stuck in both of my lungs," said forward John Garvey, who came into the first leg as a late substitute. "I couldn't breathe. It was just such an advantage. It was the most uncomfortable feeling, that pollution and altitude."

Despite the loss, the Blackhawks were in an optimistic mood heading into the second leg. They would be playing at home and needed just a 2-0 scoreline to push the series to extra time. If they could shut Snchez out of the game, they thought, they would have a chance.

Like their opponents, the Blackhawks possessed a home-field advantage of their own: the narrow confines of San Jose State University's Spartan Stadium.

"When teams came to play on that field, we were very used to it: being in very tight confines, how to play smart on that field, how to move the ball around [on] the fast turf that it had," said Semioli. "We felt pretty confident that this would lend itself to a tremendous advantage, even over a highly skilled Mexican team, because we knew how to work the field to our advantage."

That confidence bore immediate dividends when, in just the sixth minute of the match, forward Joey Leonetti headed a Lawrence Lozzano cross beyond the reach of Amrica goalkeeper Alejandro Garcia.

But in the 27th minute, Blackhawks goalkeeper Mark Dougherty tripped midfielder Alves inside the box. Snchez, who had been kept quiet by Semioli, stepped up and buried the penalty. Like that, the game was even.

"There was contact," Dougherty, who later played for MLS' Tampa Bay Mutiny and Columbus Crew, said of the foul after the match. "But not enough to warrant a penalty."

Despite their howls of protest, the Blackhawks pressed on. Their perseverance paid off as fullback Tim Martin a starter for MLS' San Jose Clash (now Earthquakes) from 1996-98 scored with a right-footed blast from well outside the box.

For the second time in the match, the Blackhawks found themselves needing just a goal to send the series to extra time, and in the 63rd minute, it looked as if they had found it. Leonetti took the ball to the endline and crossed to an unmarked Townsend Qin at the far post.

As the players ran over to celebrate with Qin, they turned and saw that the assistant referee had raised his flag. Offside.

While it sounds as if the Blackhawks had been CONCACAF'd Semioli admitted that the team thought that there was a conspiracy to keep them out of the final the assistant referee responsible for the call was American.

Without Qin's goal, though, the 2-1 scoreline was not enough for the Blackhawks to advance to the next round of the tournament.

The next morning, the San Jose Mercury News led its story this way: "Defender Mark Semioli can tell his children some day that he shut down one of the world's legendary strikers, Hugo Snchez. The rest of the San Francisco Bay Blackhawks can tell their grandchildren that they defeated one of the world's internationally recognized teams, Club Amrica.

"By then, maybe, it won't hurt as much to admit that none of it mattered."

But for the players that traveled to Mexico City, the experience of playing at Azteca, the very ground where Pele and Maradona made World Cup history, is one they still vividly remember more than 20 years later.

"It was just incredible, the venue," said Garvey. "There were two World Cup finals there. And when people ask me where I played, I always say I played at Azteca."

Source: http://www.mlssoccer.com/ccl/news/article/2015/04/21/blackhawks-story-american-team-nearly-knocked-club-america-azteca



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