Blackhawks must prioritize getting Connor Bedard some help in NHL offseason’s busiest week

Connor Bedard needs more talent around him in 2024-25 — and beyond — than he had in 2023-24.

The Blackhawks are well aware of that. As they enter the busiest week of the NHL offseason, with the draft Friday and Saturday and free agency starting Monday, getting the star teenage forward some help has to be at the front of general manager Kyle Davidson’s mind.

This isn’t about simply keeping Bedard happy and committed to the rebuild, because — while important — that doesn’t seem to be in question at all. Alternatively, this is about the Hawks understanding their recipe for ascending up the NHL hierarchy revolves around Bedard, who will likely receive the Calder Trophy on Thursday. He’s worthy of infinite investment.

In a competitive league where almost every team intends to improve from one season to the next, he is their X-factor — the asset nobody else has. If they eventually do climb back to Stanley Cup contention in the latter half of the 2020s, it will almost certainly be because of him.

Davidson has already declared he expects that ascension to begin this coming season, in which they won’t be a playoff team yet need to at least step out of the basement.

Improving depth throughout the roster is part of Davidson’s plan. Accelerating Bedard’s long-term development trajectory while simultaneously maximizing his production in his second NHL season, however, should be the biggest part of his plan.

At the draft, the decision the Hawks make with the No. 2 overall pick won’t affect Bedard in 2024-25 but could greatly impact his long-term development.

Russian forward Ivan Demidov, despite being the higher-risk, higher-reward option, has the potential to be a perfect complementary first-line winger for Bedard down the road.

And if the Hawks opt to select defenseman Artyom Levshunov with that pick instead, which does seem more likely, they’ll probably take a forward with the No. 18 pick. A winger like Michael Brandsegg-Nygard or Igor Chernyshov, two possibilities in that spot, could evolve into a Bedard linemate if things go well.

Through free-agent signings and trade conversations, meanwhile, the Hawks will almost certainly bring in one or two new top-six forwards. Whomever they acquire will immediately compete in training camp for the two vacant first-line spots on both sides of Bedard.

Returning forward Philipp Kurashev, who surprisingly emerged as Bedard’s most consistent linemate last season, will get an opportunity to re-earn that role. But the Hawks shouldn’t have Nick Foligno and Ryan Donato be Bedard’s next-most-frequent linemates again, and they can’t totally count on Kurashev re-creating that chemistry, either.

Davidson will consider tons of options this summer — from trade targets like Nikolaj Ehlers and Martin Necas to free agents like Jake Guentzel and Tyler Bertuzzi — but one particular option who makes a lot of sense is Teuvo Teravainen.

Teravainen, now 29, spent the majority of his Hurricanes tenure as a complementary winger to a star center (Sebastian Aho), tallying far more assists than goals but putting up solid numbers nonetheless. He recorded 53 points in 76 games in 2023-24, marking the fifth time in his last six full seasons he has eclipsed the 50-point threshold.

  Letters: Better solutions | Nation’s heritage | Call for freedom | Misconceptions abound

The nostalgia factor — as a former Hawks draft pick and member of the 2015 Stanley Cup championship team — matters, too.

Fans would rejoice his return, and his familiarity with the city could actually help woo him back. His agent, Markus Lehto, said Tuesday that Teravainen has “always liked [Chicago] a lot.”

The Hawks must remember that Taylor Hall will return to the top-six mix next season, too, since he’s expected to be fully recovered from his ACL surgery in time for camp. Hall is now two seasons removed from his 61-point campaign with the Bruins in 2021-22, but he still has that talent somewhere within him.

(Visited 1 times, 1 visits today)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *