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Chicago Blackhawks

The Chicago Blackhawks (spelled Black Hawks until 1986, and known colloquially as the Hawks) are a professional ice hockey team based in Chicago. The Blackhawks compete in the National Hockey League (NHL) as a member of the Central Division in the Western Conference and have won six Stanley Cup championships since their founding in 1926. They are one of the "Original Six" NHL teams, along with the Detroit Red Wings, Montreal Canadiens, Toronto Maple Leafs, Boston Bruins, and New York Rangers. Since 1995, the team has played their home games at the United Center, which they share with the National Basketball Association's Chicago Bulls; both teams previously played at the now-demolished Chicago Stadium.[4]

Chicago Blackhawks
2022–23 Chicago Blackhawks season
ConferenceWestern
DivisionCentral
Founded1926
HistoryChicago Black Hawks
19261986
Chicago Blackhawks
1986–present
Home arenaUnited Center
CityChicago, Illinois
ColorsRed, black, white[1][2]
     
MediaNBC Sports Chicago
WGN Radio (720 AM)
Owner(s)Wirtz Corporation
(Rocky Wirtz, chairman)[3]
General managerKyle Davidson
Head coachLuke Richardson
CaptainJonathan Toews
Minor league affiliatesRockford IceHogs (AHL)
Indy Fuel (ECHL)
Stanley Cups6 (1933–34, 1937–38, 1960–61, 2009–10, 2012–13, 2014–15)
Conference championships4 (1991–92, 2009–10, 2012–13, 2014–15)
Presidents' Trophy2 (1990–91, 2012–13)
Division championships16 (1969–70, 1970–71, 1971–72, 1972–73, 1975–76, 1977–78, 1978–79, 1979–80, 1982–83, 1985–86, 1989–90, 1990–91, 1992–93, 2009–10, 2012–13, 2016–17)
Official websitewww.nhl.com/blackhawks

The Blackhawks' original owner was Frederic McLaughlin, a "hands-on" owner who fired many coaches during his ownership and led the team to win two Stanley Cup titles in 1934 and 1938, respectively. After McLaughlin's death in 1944, the team came under the ownership of the Norris family, who acted as their landlord as owners of the Chicago Stadium, and also owned stakes in several of the NHL teams. At first, the Norris ownership was as part of a syndicate fronted by longtime executive Bill Tobin, and the team languished in favor of the Norris-owned Detroit Red Wings. After the senior James E. Norris died in 1952, the Norris assets were spread among family members, and James D. Norris became the owner of the Blackhawks. The younger Norris took an active interest in the team, which won another Stanley Cup title under his ownership in 1961. After James D. Norris died in 1966, the Wirtz family became owners of the franchise. In 2007, the team came under the control of Rocky Wirtz, who is credited with turning around the organization, which had lost fan interest and competitiveness; under Wirtz, the Blackhawks won the Stanley Cup three times, in 2010, 2013 and 2015.[5][6]

Franchise history

Founding

On May 1, 1926, the NHL awarded an expansion franchise for Chicago to a syndicate headed by former football star Huntington Hardwick of Boston. At the same meeting, Hardwick arranged the purchase of the players of the Portland Rosebuds of the Western Hockey League for $100,000 from WHL president Frank Patrick in a deal brokered by Boston Bruins' owner Charles Adams.[7] However, only a month later, Hardwick's group sold out to Chicago coffee tycoon Frederic McLaughlin.[8]

McLaughlin had been a commander with the 333rd Machine Gun Battalion of the 86th Infantry Division during World War I.[9] This division was nicknamed the "Blackhawk Division" after Black Hawk,[10] a Native American of the Sauk nation who was a prominent figure in the history of Illinois.[9] McLaughlin named the new hockey team in honor of the military unit, making it one of many sports team names using Native Americans as icons. However, unlike the military division, the team's name was spelled in two words as "Black Hawks" until 1986, when the club officially became the "Blackhawks", based on the spelling found in the original franchise documents.[11]

The Black Hawks began play in the 1926–27 season, along with its fellow expansion franchises, the Detroit Cougars (now the Detroit Red Wings) and New York Rangers. The team had to face immediate competition in Chicago from Eddie Livingstone's rival, the Chicago Cardinals, who played in the same building. McLaughlin took a very active role in running the team despite having no background in the sport. He hired Bill Tobin, a former goaltender who had played in the Western League, as his assistant, but directed the team himself. He was also very interested in promoting American players, then very rare in professional hockey. Several of them, including Doc Romnes, Taffy Abel, Alex Levinsky, Mike Karakas, and Cully Dahlstrom, become staples with the team, and under McLaughlin, the Black Hawks were the first NHL team with an all-American-born lineup.[9]

McLaughlin era (1926–1944)

 
The Chicago Coliseum (pictured in a 1910 postcard), the Black Hawks' home arena from 1926 to 1929

The Black Hawks played their first game on November 17, 1926, against the Toronto St. Patricks at the Chicago Coliseum. They won their first game 4–1, in front of a crowd of over 7,000.[8] The Hawks' first season was a moderate success, as they finished the season in third place with a record of 19–22–3. However, they lost the 1927 first-round playoff series to the Boston Bruins.

Following the series, McLaughlin fired head coach Pete Muldoon. According to Jim Coleman, sportswriter for the Toronto-based Globe and Mail, McLaughlin felt that the Hawks were good enough to finish first. Muldoon disagreed, and in a fit of pique, McLaughlin fired him. According to Coleman, Muldoon responded by yelling, "Fire me, Major, and you'll never finish first. I'll put a curse on this team that will hoodoo it until the end of time." The Curse of Muldoon was born – although Coleman admitted years after the fact that he had fabricated the whole incident[12] – and became one of the first widely known sports "curses." While the team would go on to win three Stanley Cups in its first 39 years of existence, it did so without ever having finished in first place, either in a single- or multi-division format. The Black Hawks proceeded to have the worst record in the league in 1927–28, winning only seven of 44 games.

 
Interior of Chicago Stadium in February 1930, prior to a game between the Hawks and the Boston Bruins; the Black Hawks moved into the arena during the 1929–30 season.

For the 1928–29 season, the Black Hawks were originally slated to play in the newly built Chicago Stadium, but due to construction delays and a dispute between McLaughlin and arena promoter Paddy Harmon, they instead divided their time between the Coliseum, the Detroit Olympia, and the Peace Bridge Arena in Fort Erie, Ontario, before moving to Chicago Stadium the following season.

By 1931, with goal-scorer Johnny Gottselig, Cy Wentworth on defense, and Charlie Gardiner in goal, the Hawks reached their first Stanley Cup Finals, but fizzled in the final two games against the Montreal Canadiens. They had another stellar season in 1932, but that did not translate into playoff success. However, two years later, Gardiner led his team to victory by shutting out the Detroit Red Wings in the final game of the Stanley Cup Finals; Mush March scored the winning goal in double-overtime as the Hawks beat Detroit 1–0.

In 1938, the Black Hawks had a record of 14–25–9, almost missing the playoffs. They stunned the Canadiens and New York Americans on overtime goals in the deciding games of both semi-final series, advancing to the 1938 Stanley Cup Finals against the Toronto Maple Leafs. Black Hawks goaltender Mike Karakas was injured and could not play, forcing a desperate Chicago team to pull minor-leaguer Alfie Moore out of a Toronto bar and onto the ice. Moore played one game and won it. Toronto refused to let Moore play the next, so Chicago used Paul Goodman in Game 2 and lost. However, for the third and fourth games, Karakas was fitted with a special skate to protect his injured toe, and the team won both games. It was too late for Toronto, as the Hawks won their second championship. As of 2019, the 1938 Black Hawks possess the poorest regular-season record of any Stanley Cup champion.

The Black Hawks next returned to the Finals in 1944 behind Doug Bentley's 38 goals, with Bentley's linemate Clint Smith leading the team in assists. After upsetting the Red Wings in the semi-finals, they were promptly dispatched by the dominant Canadiens in four games.

Norris era (1944–1966)

After McLaughlin died in December 1944, his estate sold the team to a syndicate headed by longtime team president Bill Tobin. However, Tobin was only a puppet for James E. Norris, who owned the rival Red Wings. Norris had also been the Black Hawks' landlord since his 1936 purchase of the Chicago Stadium. For the next eight years, the Norris-Tobin ownership, as a rule, paid almost no attention to the Black Hawks. Nearly every trade made between Detroit and Chicago ended up being Red Wing heists. As a result, for the next several years, the Black Hawks were the model of futility in the NHL. Between 1945 and 1958, they only made the playoffs twice.

In 1950, Norris' eldest son, James D. Norris, and Red Wings minority owner Arthur Wirtz (the senior Norris' original partner in buying the Red Wings 23 years earlier) took over the floundering club. They guided it through financial reversals, and rebuilt the team from there. One of their first moves was to hire former Detroit coach and general manager Tommy Ivan as general manager.

 
 
 
Signed as prospects in the late-1950s, Bobby Hull (left), Stan Mikita (center), and Pierre Pilote (right), eventually rose to become preeminent stars in Chicago.

In the late 1950s, the Hawks struck gold, acquiring three young prospects (forwards Bobby Hull and Stan Mikita and defenseman Pierre Pilote), and obtaining both star goaltender Glenn Hall and veteran forward Ted Lindsay (who had just had a career season with 30 goals and 55 assists) from Detroit. Hull, Mikita, Pilote, and Hall became preeminent stars of the team, and all four would eventually be inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame.

After two first-round exits at the hands of the eventual champions from Montreal in 1959 and 1960, it was expected the Canadiens would once again defeat the Hawks when they met in the semi-finals in 1961. A defensive plan that completely wore down Montreal's superstars worked, however, as Chicago won the series in six games. They then bested the Wings to win their third Stanley Cup championship.

 
Ron Murphy and Eric Nesterenko battle in front of the Toronto net

The Hawks made the Cup Finals twice more in the 1960s, losing to the Leafs in 1962 and the Canadiens in 1965. They remained a force to be reckoned with throughout the decade, with Hull enjoying four 50-goal seasons, Mikita winning back-to-back scoring titles and MVP accolades, Pilote winning three consecutive Norris Trophies, and Hall being named the First or Second All-Star goaltender eight out of nine seasons. Hull and Mikita especially were widely regarded as the most feared one-two punch in the league. However, despite a strong supporting cast which included Bill Hay, Ken Wharram, Phil Esposito, Moose Vasko, Doug Mohns and Pat Stapleton, the Hawks never quite put it all together.

In 1966–67, the last season of the six-team NHL, the Black Hawks finished first, breaking the supposed "Curse of Muldoon", 23 years after the death of Frederic McLaughlin. However, they lost in the semi-finals to Toronto, who went on to win their last Stanley Cup of the era. Afterward, Coleman, who first printed the story of the curse in 1943, admitted that he made the story up to break a writer's block he had as a column deadline approached.

Arthur Wirtz era (1966–1983)

Before his death in 1966, one of James D. Norris' last moves in the NHL was to arrange an expansion franchise in St. Louis, where he owned the St. Louis Arena. Tobin died in 1963, a vice president of the team until his death. Ownership now passed to Norris' longtime partner Arthur Wirtz and his son Bill Wirtz. The Wirtz–Norris partnership dated over three decades; Arthur Wirtz had been a minority partner in the syndicate the senior Norris put together to buy the Red Wings in 1932.

Goaltender Glenn Hall was drafted by the St. Louis Blues expansion team for the 1967–68 season, while Pierre Pilote was traded to the Maple Leafs in exchange for Jim Pappin in 1968. In the 1968–69 season, despite Bobby Hull breaking his own previous record of 54 goals in a season with 58, the Black Hawks missed the playoffs for the first time since 1958, and the last time before 1997–98.

In 1967, the Black Hawks made a trade with the Boston Bruins that turned out to be one of the most one-sided in the history of the sport. Chicago sent young forwards Phil Esposito, Ken Hodge and Fred Stanfield to Boston in exchange for Pit Martin, Jack Norris and Gilles Marotte. While Martin would star for the Hawks for many seasons, Esposito, Hodge and Stanfield would lead the Bruins to the top of the NHL for several years and capture two Stanley Cups. In Boston, Esposito set numerous scoring records en route to a career as one of the NHL's all-time greats.

 
Goaltender Tony Esposito tallied a franchise-high 418 wins between 1969 and 1983.

Nonetheless, in the 1970–71 season, life was made easier for the Black Hawks, as in an attempt to better balance the divisions, the expansion Buffalo Sabres and Vancouver Canucks were both placed in the East Division while the Hawks moved into the West Division. The Hawks became the class of the West overnight, rampaging to a 46–17–15 record and an easy first-place finish. With second-year goalie Tony Esposito (Phil's younger brother and winner of the Calder Memorial Trophy for Rookie of the Year the previous season), Hull, his younger brother Dennis, Mikita, and sterling defensemen Stapleton, Keith Magnuson and Bill White, the Hawks reached the Stanley Cup Finals, losing to the Canadiens.

A critical blow to the franchise came in 1972–73 with the start of the World Hockey Association (WHA). Long dissatisfied with how little he was paid as the NHL's marquee star, Hull jumped to the upstart Winnipeg Jets for a million-dollar contract. Former Philadelphia Flyers star Andre Lacroix joined him, having received very little ice time during his single season with Chicago, and the pair became two of the WHA's great stars. However, the Black Hawks repeated their appearance in the Stanley Cup Finals that year, again losing to Montreal. Stapleton also left for the WHA after that year, depleting the team further.

While the team led or was second in the West Division for four straight seasons, for the rest of the 1970s, the Black Hawks made the playoffs each year—winning seven division championships in the decade in all—but were never a successful Stanley Cup contender, losing 16-straight playoff games at one point. The team acquired legendary blueliner Bobby Orr from the Boston Bruins in 1976, but ill health forced him to sit out for most of the season, and he eventually retired in 1979, having played only 26 games for the Hawks. Stan Mikita did the same the following year after playing for Chicago for 22 years, the third-longest career for a single team in league history.

By 1982, the Black Hawks squeaked into the playoffs as the fourth seed in the Norris Division (at the time the top four teams in each division automatically made the playoffs), and were one of the NHL's Cinderella teams that year. Led by second-year Denis Savard's 32 goals and 119 points and Doug Wilson's 39 goals, the Hawks stunned the Minnesota North Stars and St. Louis Blues in the playoffs before losing to another surprise team, the Vancouver Canucks, who made the Stanley Cup Finals. Chicago proved they were no fluke the next season, also making the third round before losing to the eventual runner-up Edmonton Oilers. After an off-year in 1984, the Hawks again faced a now fresh-off-a-ring Edmonton offensive juggernaut of a team and lost in the third round in 1985.

Bill Wirtz era (1983–2007)

In 1983, Arthur Wirtz died and the club came under the sole control of his son Bill Wirtz. Although the Black Hawks continued to make the playoffs each season, the club began a slow decline, punctuated with an appearance in the 1992 Stanley Cup Finals.

During the 1985 playoff series against Edmonton, the Black Hawks and their fans started a tradition of cheering during the singing of "The Star-Spangled Banner".[13]

Prior to the 1986–87 season, while going through the team's records, someone discovered the team's original NHL contract and found that the team's name was printed as a compound word ("Blackhawks") as opposed to two separate words ("Black Hawks"), which was the way most sources had been printing it for 60 years and as the team had always officially listed it. The name officially became "Chicago Blackhawks" from that point on.[14]

In the late 1980s, Chicago still made the playoffs on an annual basis but made early-round exits each time. In 1988–89, after three-straight first-round defeats and despite a fourth-place finish in their division in the regular season, Chicago made it to the Conference Final in the rookie seasons of both goalie Ed Belfour and center Jeremy Roenick. However, they would once again fail to make the Stanley Cup Finals, losing to the eventual champions, the Calgary Flames.

The following season, the Hawks did prove they were late-round playoff material, running away with the Norris Division title, but, yet again, the third round continued to stymie them, this time against the eventual champion Oilers, despite 1970s Soviet star goaltender Vladislav Tretiak coming to Chicago to become the Blackhawks' goaltender coach.

In 1990–91, Chicago was poised to fare even better in the playoffs, winning the Presidents' Trophy for best regular-season record, but the Minnesota North Stars stunned them in six games in the first round en route to an improbable Stanley Cup Finals appearance. In 1991–92, the Blackhawks – with Roenick scoring 53 goals, Steve Larmer scoring 29 goals, Chris Chelios (acquired from Montreal two years earlier) on defense, and Belfour in goal – finally reached the Final after 19 years out of such status, winning 11 consecutive playoff games that year, setting an NHL record in the process. However, they were swept four games to none by the Mario Lemieux-led defending Stanley Cup champion, the Pittsburgh Penguins (who, in sweeping the Blackhawks, tied the record Chicago had set only days before). Although the 4–0 sweep indicated Pittsburgh's dominance in games won, it was actually a close series that could have gone either way. Game 1 saw the Blackhawks squander leads of 3–0 and 4–1, and would eventually be beaten 5–4 after a Lemieux power-play goal with nine seconds remaining in regulation. The Blackhawks' most lackluster match was game two, losing 3–1. A frustrating loss of 1–0 followed in game three, and a natural hat trick from Dirk Graham and stellar play from Dominik Hasek (who showed indications of the goaltender he would later become) could not secure a win in game four, which ended in a 6–5 final in favor of Pittsburgh. The defending NBA champion Chicago Bulls were in their finals in 1992, but won their championship in six. This was the only year the city of Chicago would host the NBA and NHL finals concurrently in the same year; Blackhawks head coach Mike Keenan would see this again in New York, when he coached the Rangers to their first Stanley Cup in 54 years in 1994.

Belfour posted a 40-win season in 1992–93 as the Hawks looked to go deep yet again, and Chelios accumulated career-high penalty time with 282 minutes in the box, but St. Louis stunned Chicago with a first-round sweep to continue Chicago's playoff losing streak.

 
The Blackhawks moved to the United Center (pictured in 2006) in the middle of the 1994–95 season.

Although they finished near .500 in 1994, the Blackhawks again qualified for the playoffs. They were eliminated by eventual Western Conference finalist Toronto, but broke their playoff losing streak at 10 games with a game three win. It wasn't enough, however, and the Blackhawks fell in six games. The 1993–94 season was also the Blackhawks' last at the Chicago Stadium, as the team moved into the newly built United Center across the street for the lockout-shortened 1995 season. Bernie Nicholls and Joe Murphy both scored 20 goals over 48 games, and Chicago once again made it to the Western Conference Final, losing to the rival Detroit Red Wings. Also in 1994, management fired Wayne Messmer, popular singer of "The Star-Spangled Banner".

Roenick, Belfour and Chelios were all traded away as the Blackhawks faltered through the late 1990s, until they missed the playoffs by five points in 1998 for the first time in 29 years, one season short of tying the Boston Bruins' record for the longest such streak in North American professional sport history. Chicago would also miss the playoffs for a second consecutive season in 1999, and missed the playoffs again in 2000 and 2001.

The new millennium started with disappointment for the Blackhawks. Éric Daze, Alexei Zhamnov and Tony Amonte emerged as some of the team's leading stars by this time. However, aside from a quick first-round exit in 2002 (where they lost to the St. Louis Blues in five games after winning Game 1 of the series), the Hawks were consistently out of the playoffs from the 1997–98 season until the 2008–09 season, in most years finishing well out of contention, despite finishing in third place in the Central Division six times. Amonte left for the Phoenix Coyotes in the summer of 2002. During the 2002–03 season, the Blackhawks finished third in the Central Division with 79 points, but would finish ninth in the Western Conference, which would make them miss the playoffs by 13 points.

A somber note was struck in February 2004, when ESPN named the Blackhawks the worst franchise in professional sports.[15] Indeed, the Blackhawks were viewed with much indifference by Chicagoans for much of the 1990s and early 2000s due to anger over several policies instituted by then-owner Bill Wirtz, who was derisively known as "Dollar Bill". For example, Wirtz did not allow home games to be televised in the Chicago area, claiming it was unfair to the team's season ticket holders. He also raised ticket prices to an average of $50, making them among the most expensive in the NHL. The Chicago Wolves, an American Hockey League (AHL) team based in Rosemont, Illinois, mocked the Blackhawks' struggle by using the marketing slogan "We Play Hockey the Old-Fashioned Way: We Actually Win."[16]

Following the lockout of the 2004–05 season, new general manager Dale Tallon set about restructuring the team in the hopes of making a playoff run. Tallon made several moves in the summer of 2005, most notably the signing of the Tampa Bay Lightning's Stanley Cup-winning goaltender Nikolai Khabibulin and All-Star defenseman Adrian Aucoin. However, injuries plagued Khabibulin and Aucoin among others, and the Blackhawks again finished well out of the playoffs with a 26–43–13 record – next-to-last in the Western Conference, and the second-worst in the NHL. The Blackhawks reached another low point on May 16, 2006, when they announced that popular TV/radio play-by-play announcer Pat Foley would not be brought back after 25 years with the team, a move unpopular amongst most fans; Foley then became the television/radio voice for the Chicago Wolves.

With the third overall pick in the 2006 NHL Entry Draft, the team selected Jonathan Toews, who led the University of North Dakota Fighting Sioux hockey team to the 2006 NCAA Frozen Four. The Blackhawks were eager to make a splash in the free-agent market, and offered big money to many of the top free agents. However, they were denied, only being able to acquire two backup goaltenders in Patrick Lalime and Sebastien Caron. Chicago was one of the biggest buyers in the trade market, acquiring a future franchise player in left-winger Martin Havlat, as well as center Bryan Smolinski from the Ottawa Senators in a three-way trade that also involved the San Jose Sharks. The Hawks dealt forward Mark Bell to the Sharks, Michal Barinka and a 2008 second-round draft pick to the Senators, while Ottawa also received defenseman Tom Preissing and center Josh Hennessy from San Jose. Havlat gave the Blackhawks the talented first-line caliber game breaker they desperately needed. The Havlat trade was soon followed by another major trade: winger and key Blackhawk player Kyle Calder was traded to the Philadelphia Flyers in exchange for grinding defensive center Michal Handzus. The move caused a stir in Chicago, as Calder had won an increase in his contract through arbitration, which was accepted by the Hawks, but rather than ink their leading scorer, the team decided to address their need for a proven center by acquiring Handzus. Injuries to both Havlat and Handzus hurt the Blackhawks, and Smolinski was eventually traded at the trade deadline to the Vancouver Canucks. On November 26, 2006, Blackhawks general manager Dale Tallon fired head coach Trent Yawney and appointed assistant coach Denis Savard as the head coach. Savard had been the assistant coach of the team since 1997, a year after he retired as one of the most popular and successful Blackhawks players of all time. The Blackhawks continued to struggle, and finished last in the Central Division, 12 points out of the playoffs. They finished with the fourth-worst record in the NHL, and in the Draft Lottery, won the opportunity to select first overall in the draft. The team had never had a draft pick higher than third overall before, and used the pick to draft right wing Patrick Kane from the London Knights of the Ontario Hockey League (OHL).

Rocky Wirtz era (2007–present)

2007–2009: Rebuilding

On September 26, 2007, longtime Blackhawks owner Bill Wirtz died after a brief battle with cancer.[17] He was succeeded by his son Rocky, who drastically altered his father's long-standing policies.[18]

Midway into the 2007–08 NHL season, the franchise experimented with a partnership with Comcast SportsNet Chicago and WGN-TV by airing selected Blackhawks home games on television.[19] During the next season, Comcast and WGN began airing all of the team's regular season games.[19] Rocky also named John McDonough, former president of Major League Baseball's Chicago Cubs, as the Blackhawks' new president.[20] After taking over the position, McDonough was an instrumental figure in the Blackhawks' current marketing success.[21] Wirtz was also able to bring back former Blackhawks greats Tony Esposito, Stan Mikita and Bobby Hull as the franchise's "hockey ambassadors".[22]

 
Jonathan Toews (pictured in 2009), named captain before the season started, became the youngest player to captain the Hawks at age 20.

In addition to the changes in the team's policies and front office, the younger Wirtz also made a concerted effort to rebuild the team.[23] The Blackhawks roster was bolstered by the addition of Patrick Kane, the first overall selection in the 2007 NHL Entry Draft, who led all rookies in points.[24] Kane and Jonathan Toews were finalists for the Calder Memorial Trophy, awarded to the NHL's best rookie. Kane ultimately beat his teammate for the award.[25] Kane finished the 2007–08 season with 21 goals and 51 assists in 82 games. The Blackhawks finished with a record of 40–34–8, missing the playoffs by three points. The 2007–08 season marked the first time in six years that the team finished above .500.[26]

Prior to the 2008–09 season opener, the Blackhawks named 20-year-old Toews as the new captain, succeeding Adrian Aucoin (who was traded to the Calgary Flames, after the 2006–07 season) and making him the third youngest captain at the time of appointment. In addition to a new captain, the Blackhawks made several major roster changes before the season, trading Tuomo Ruutu, their longest tenured player, to the Carolina Hurricanes in exchange for forward Andrew Ladd on February 26, 2008.[27] Later that day, the Blackhawks traded captain Martin Lapointe to the Ottawa Senators in exchange for a sixth-round draft pick in the 2008 NHL Entry Draft.[27] On July 1, the first day of free agency, the team signed goaltender Cristobal Huet to a four-year, US$22.5 million contract, and later signed defenseman Brian Campbell to an eight-year, $56.8 million contract.[28] They also added former coaches Joel Quenneville and Scotty Bowman to their organization.[29][30][31]

On February 13, 2008, the Blackhawks announced they would hold their first fan convention. On July 16, 2008, the team announced that they would host the 2009 NHL Winter Classic on a temporary ice rink at the Chicago Cubs' home park Wrigley Field on New Year's Day against fellow "Original Six" members, the Detroit Red Wings;[32] the Red Wings defeated Chicago 6–4. On June 16, Pat Foley returned as the Blackhawks' TV play-by-play man, replacing Dan Kelly; Foley called Blackhawks games from 1981 to 2006, and spent the next two years broadcasting for the Chicago Wolves. Foley was partnered with Eddie Olczyk to broadcast all of the Blackhawks' games.[33][34] On October 16, 2008, the Blackhawks relieved Denis Savard of his head coaching duties and replaced him with Joel Quenneville.[35] Savard has since been brought back to the organization as an ambassador.

 
The Blackhawks hosted the Detroit Red Wings at the 2009 NHL Winter Classic at Wrigley Field.

The Blackhawks finished the 2008–09 regular season in second place in their division with a record of 46–24–12, putting them in fourth place in the Western Conference with 104 points. The Blackhawks clinched a playoff berth for the first time since the 2001–02 season with a 3–1 win over Nashville on April 3. On April 8, with a shootout loss to the Columbus Blue Jackets, the Hawks clinched their first 100-point season in 17 years. The Blackhawks defeated the fifth-seeded Calgary Flames in six games to advance to the Western Conference Semifinals for the first time since 1996.[36] The team proceeded to defeat the third-seeded Vancouver Canucks in six games,[37] and then played the then-Stanley Cup champion, the Detroit Red Wings, for the Western Conference Championship, losing the series in five games.[38]

During the 2008–09 season, the team led the NHL in home attendance, with a total of 912,155 spectators, averaging 22,247 per game.[39] This figure includes the 40,818 fans from the Winter Classic at Wrigley Field. Therefore, the total attendance for games hosted at the United Center is 871,337, good for an average of 21,783, which still led the NHL over Montreal's 21,273 average. The Blackhawks welcomed their one millionth fan of the season at the United Center before Game 6 of the Western Conference Semifinals on May 11, 2009.[40]

2009–10: The Stanley Cup returns to Chicago

 
Chicago skyline with the CNA Center showing the Blackhawks logo, the Smurfit-Stone Building reading "Go Hawks", and the Blue Cross Blue Shield Tower reading "Hawks win" the night after the 2009–10 Chicago Blackhawks won the 2010 Stanley Cup Finals, viewed from the Petrillo Music Shell lawn in Grant Park.

Prior to the 2009–10 NHL season, the Blackhawks made another major free agent purchase, signing Marian Hossa to a 12-year, US$62.8 million contract.[41] The team also acquired Tomas Kopecky, John Madden and Richard Petiot.[41][42] In early July, general manager Dale Tallon and the Blackhawks management came under fire when the National Hockey League Players' Association (NHLPA) claimed that the team did not submit offers to their restricted free agents before the deadline.[43] In the worst-case scenario, the team's unsigned restricted free agents at the time, including Calder Memorial Trophy finalist Kris Versteeg, would have become unrestricted free agents.[43] Despite the ordeal, the Blackhawks were able to sign Versteeg and all of their restricted free agents before the NHLPA could take further action.[43] On July 14, 2009, the Blackhawks demoted Tallon to the position of senior adviser. Stan Bowman, son of Scotty Bowman, was promoted to general manager.[44] The Blackhawks continued to sell-out games, with the best average attendance of 21,356 over Montreal's 21,273 in the NHL, and had a total of 854,267, excluding the playoffs. The Blackhawks reached the one million mark in Game 3 of the Western Conference Finals against the San Jose Sharks.

 
Patrick Kane hoisting the Stanley Cup and Jonathan Toews holding the Conn Smythe Trophy during the Blackhawks victory parade.
 
U.S. President Barack Obama with members of the Blackhawks after a ceremony to honor their 2010 Stanley Cup victory at the White House.

The Blackhawks re-signed Patrick Kane and Jonathan Toews to contract extensions worth $31.5 million over five years, and Duncan Keith to a 13-year extension worth $72 million on December 1, 2009. On April 6, 2010, the Hawks won their 50th game of the 2009–10 season against the Dallas Stars, setting a new franchise record for wins in a season. The next night, the Hawks notched their 109th point of the season against the St. Louis Blues, setting another franchise record.

The Blackhawks made the playoffs for the second consecutive season with a regular-season record of 52–22–8. They defeated the Nashville Predators in six games in the first round before defeating the third-seeded Vancouver Canucks for the second straight year, again in six games. The Blackhawks then swept the top-seeded San Jose Sharks in the Western Conference Finals, advancing to the Stanley Cup Finals for the first time since 1992, where they played the Philadelphia Flyers. The Blackhawks prevailed in six games to secure their fourth Stanley Cup in franchise history, and their first since 1961, ending the team's 49-year championship drought.[45]

2010–2012

The Blackhawks immediately faced salary cap constraints prior to the 2010–11 NHL season. The team was forced to trade many players who played an integral role to their 2009–10 Stanley Cup victory, including Dustin Byfuglien, Andrew Ladd, Kris Versteeg, Brent Sopel, Ben Eager and Colin Fraser.[46] The team was also unable to agree to terms with starting goaltender Antti Niemi, who left as restricted free agent to the San Jose Sharks.[47] The Blackhawks signed former Dallas Stars starting goalie Marty Turco as his replacement, but eventually turned to rookie Corey Crawford to become their full-time starting goaltender.[48] The Blackhawks also made a mid-season trade to acquire winger Michael Frolik from the Florida Panthers in exchange for Jack Skille, Hugh Jessiman and David Pacan.[49]

Amidst the roster turnaround, the Blackhawks finished the season with a 44–29–9 record, and placed third in the Central Division and eighth in the Western Conference. The team's playoff fate was determined on the final day of the regular season.[50] The Blackhawks lost their regular season finale to the Detroit Red Wings, but received the final seed in the Western Conference after the Minnesota Wild defeated the Dallas Stars.[50] In the first round of the 2011 playoffs, the Blackhawks faced the top-seeded Vancouver Canucks, marking the third consecutive post-season the two teams faced each other.[51] The Canucks built a three-game lead in the series before the Blackhawks were able to win three games in a row.[51] Alex Burrows won Game 7 for the Canucks in overtime, 2–1.[51]

Before the 2011–12 season, the Blackhawks continued to make roster moves to optimize their salary cap situation. The team traded Troy Brouwer to the Washington Capitals in exchange for the 26th overall pick in the 2011 NHL Entry Draft (used to select Phillip Danault), and traded defenseman Brian Campbell, who had one of the richest contracts in the franchise's history, to the Florida Panthers.[52] The team bolstered their forward depth by signing veterans Daniel Carcillo, Jamal Mayers and Andrew Brunette,[53] while also acquiring goaltender Ray Emery to back up Corey Crawford.[54] The Blackhawks called up prospects Brandon Saad, Andrew Shaw, Nick Leddy, and Marcus Kruger, who became regular starters.[55]

The Blackhawks placed fourth in the Central Division with a 45–26–11 record, and qualified for the playoffs for a fourth consecutive season.[56] They faced the Phoenix Coyotes in the opening round, who eliminated the Blackhawks in six games. The series saw five of the six games going to overtime, with Bryan Bickell (game 2) and Jonathan Toews (game 5) scoring the only Blackhawk overtime winners of the series.[57]

2012–13: Presidents' Trophy and fifth Stanley Cup

The Blackhawks started the lockout-shortened 2012–13 season with much success by establishing several new records. On January 27, 2013, they set a new franchise record for starting the season 6–0–0 after a win against the Detroit Red Wings.[58] On February 19, the Blackhawks tied the NHL record previously set by the Anaheim Ducks in the 2006–07 season for earning points in the first 16 consecutive games of a season, and beat the Ducks record (28 points) by one point.[59] On March 6, the Blackhawks extended the NHL record to 24 games with a record of 21–0–3, and the franchise record for most consecutive wins to 11 games.[60] However, they lost 6–2 to the Colorado Avalanche on March 8,[60] their first loss in regulation, which ended their 24-game streak in which they earned at least one point, an NHL record to start a season[60] and the third-longest in NHL history.[61][62]

 
The 2013 Stanley Cup champion Blackhawks meet President Obama at the White House.

The United Center also recorded its 200th consecutive combined regular season and playoff Blackhawks sell-out on March 1 against the Columbus Blue Jackets, which began during the 2007–08 season with the game against the Blue Jackets on March 30, 2008.[63] The Blackhawks won the 2012–13 Presidents' Trophy for the best regular season record in the NHL, and clinched home-ice advantage throughout the playoffs.[64] After dispatching the Minnesota Wild in the first round, the Blackhawks faced the Detroit Red Wings in the Western Conference Semifinals. The Blackhawks won the series opener but lost the next three games and faced elimination. However, the Blackhawks clawed back into the series, eventually winning the series on a goal by Brent Seabrook in overtime of Game 7.[65] The team then defeated the Los Angeles Kings in five games to secure a second Stanley Cup Finals appearance in four seasons.[66]

The Blackhawks faced the Boston Bruins, another Original Six team, in the 2013 Stanley Cup Finals.[67] It was the first time since 1979 that two Original Six teams had made the Stanley Cup Finals and the first time since 1945 that the last four teams to win the Stanley Cup were in the Conference Finals.[67] The Bruins made their second appearance in the Finals in three years (winning in 2011) and were making a similar resurgence as the Blackhawks. On June 24, the Blackhawks defeated the Bruins in the sixth game of the series to win the Stanley Cup, having overcome a 2–1 deficit with just over a minute remaining in the game.[64] Bryan Bickell and Dave Bolland scored goals with 1:16 and 0:58.3 remaining in the game, just 17 seconds apart, to win 3–2.[64]

2013–14

 
The Blackhawks played the Pittsburgh Penguins at Soldier Field for game four of the 2014 NHL Stadium Series.

The Blackhawks began the 2013–14 season in hopes of becoming the first team to win consecutive Stanley Cups since the Detroit Red Wings in 1997 and 1998.[68] The team was dramatically altered in the off-season to remain under the salary cap.[69] The team traded Dave Bolland, Daniel Carcillo and Michael Frolik in exchange for future draft picks, while parting ways with Ray Emery and Viktor Stalberg.[70] Despite these changes, the Blackhawks tallied a 28–7–7 record going into January 2014. The team played their second outdoor game in franchise history, against the Pittsburgh Penguins at Soldier Field, as part of the 2014 NHL Stadium Series. The Blackhawks defeated the Penguins 5–1 in front of 62,921 fans.[71]

The franchise recorded its 2,500th regular season win, while head coach Joel Quenneville won 693 wins as a coach, the third most in the history of the NHL.[72][73] The Blackhawks finished the season with a 46–21–15 record, good for third in the Central Division. They opened the playoffs by losing two games to the St. Louis Blues. The Blackhawks surged back with four straight wins to take the series.[74] The team then defeated the Minnesota Wild for the second consecutive year. However, the Los Angeles Kings defeated the Blackhawks in seven games and ultimately went on to win the Stanley Cup.[75] After the season's conclusion, Duncan Keith won the James Norris Memorial Trophy for the second time in his career, and Jonathan Toews was named a finalist for the Frank J. Selke Trophy.[76][77]

2014–15: Sixth Stanley Cup

The Blackhawks' roster remained largely intact following the 2013–14 season. The team signed veteran center Brad Richards and rookie goaltender Scott Darling to one-year contracts, and traded defenseman Nick Leddy to the New York Islanders in exchange for three prospects.[78][79][80] For the first half of the season, Patrick Kane led the team in scoring and points. The Blackhawks mustered a 30–15–2 record going into the All-Star break.[81] The Blackhawks sent six players to the All-Star Game, including Kane, Jonathan Toews, Duncan Keith, Brent Seabrook and Corey Crawford.[82] The team also played in the 2015 NHL Winter Classic at Nationals Park in Washington, D.C., where they lost 3–2 to the Washington Capitals.[83]

However, in late February, Kane suffered a shoulder injury that was expected to sideline him for the remainder of the regular season and much of the playoffs.[84] The team called up rookie Teuvo Teravainen from the AHL, and traded their first-round pick in the 2015 NHL Entry Draft to acquire center Antoine Vermette from the Arizona Coyotes.[85] The Blackhawks also acquired veteran defenseman Kimmo Timonen from the Philadelphia Flyers for second round picks in 2015 and 2016,[86] and Andrew Desjardins from the San Jose Sharks in exchange for Ben Smith.[87] The Blackhawks finished the season with a 48–28–6 record, placing third in their division, and allowed the fewest goals in the NHL.[88]

President Obama welcomes the Blackhawks to the White House for a third time to commemorate the team's 2015 Stanley Cup victory

Kane recovered quicker than expected, and was ready for the start of the playoffs.[89] The Blackhawks dispatched the Nashville Predators in six games and swept the Minnesota Wild to advance to the Western Conference Finals for the fifth time in seven years.[90] The top-seeded Anaheim Ducks held a 3–2 lead in the series, but the Blackhawks rallied back in the series to win games six and seven. The team then defeated the Tampa Bay Lightning in the 2015 Stanley Cup Finals to secure their third Stanley Cup in six seasons.[91]

2015–2020

The Blackhawks' roster experienced another dramatic reconstruction before the 2015–16 season. The team was unable to come to terms with pending free agent Brandon Saad, who had played a pivotal role in the 2015 playoffs.[92] The Blackhawks traded Saad's negotiation rights (along with prospects Alex Broadhurst and Michael Paliotta) to the Columbus Blue Jackets in exchange for Artem Anisimov, Marko Dano, Corey Tropp, Jeremy Morin, and fourth-round draft pick Anatoly Golyshev in the 2016 NHL Entry Draft.[93] The Blackhawks were unable to re-sign unrestricted free agents Brad Richards, Antoine Vermette and Johnny Oduya due to salary cap constraints.[94] The team then traded longtime veteran and fan-favorite Patrick Sharp (along with Stephen Johns) to the Dallas Stars in exchange for Trevor Daley and forward Ryan Garbutt in order to stay under the salary cap.[95] Amidst the roster turnover, the Blackhawks signed free agent Artemi Panarin from the Kontinental Hockey League (KHL) to an entry-level contract.[96]

The Blackhawks' offense was led by Patrick Kane, who scored an NHL-best 106 points in 2015–16 and also won the season's Hart Memorial Trophy as league MVP.[97] Panarin, who skated on Kane's line, won the Calder Memorial Trophy, awarded to the NHL's best first-year player.[98] Midway through the season, the Blackhawks attempted to supplement their roster by making several trades. The Blackhawks dealt Jeremy Morin to the Toronto Maple Leafs in exchange for Richard Panik.[99] The team then reacquired Andrew Ladd from the Winnipeg Jets in exchange for their first round selection in the 2016 NHL Entry Draft and Marko Dano.[100] The team then traded Phillip Danault and their 2018 second round pick to the Montreal Canadiens in exchange for forwards Dale Weise and Tomas Fleischmann.[101] The team finished with a 46-26-9 record, good for 103 points and third place in their division. The Blackhawks were defeated by the St. Louis Blues in a seven-game series in the first round of the 2016 playoffs.[102] The loss marked the Blackhawks earliest playoff exit since 2012.[103]

Salary cap constraints forced the Blackhawks to make additional trades before the 2016–17 season. The team traded pending free-agent Andrew Shaw to Montreal in exchange for two second-round 2016 draft picks.[104] The Blackhawks also traded Bryan Bickell and Teuvo Teravaainen to the Carolina Hurricanes in exchange for another 2016 second-round pick in order to free additional salary cap space.[105] The Blackhawks signed veteran Brian Campbell and KHL stand-out Michal Kempny during free agency.[106][107] The team then turned to their farm system to replenish their depth. The Blackhawks promoted rookies Ryan Hartman, Gustav Forsling, Tyler Motte, Nick Schmaltz and Vinnie Hinostroza to their starting line-up to fill the vacancies left by Shaw, Bickell and Teravainen.[108]

Patrick Kane spearheaded the Blackhawks offense with 34 goals and 55 assists, tying for second in scoring during the regular season among all skaters.[109] He was aided by his linemate, Panarin, who scored 31 goals and 43 assists.[109] In addition to Kane and Panarin, Jonathan Toews, Marian Hossa, Artem Anisimov and Richard Panik all scored at least 20 goals.[110] Toews, Kane, Duncan Keith and Corey Crawford were also selected to play in the All-Star Game.[111] The Blackhawks finished the season with 109 points, placing first in the Central Division and earning the top-seed in the Western Conference for the 2017 playoffs.[109] However, they were swept in the first round by the eighth-seeded Nashville Predators in one of the biggest upsets in NHL playoff history; this was the first time that an eighth seed swept a playoff series against the top team in the conference.[112] Goaltender Pekka Rinne and the Predators' defense marginalized the Blackhawks' offense, limiting the team to only three total goals in the series, including a pair of shutouts in Game 1 (1–0) and Game 2 (5–0) at the United Center to begin the series.[113]

Prior to the 2017–18 season, the Blackhawks revealed Marian Hossa would miss the entire 2017–18 season due to a progressive skin disorder.[114][115] The team made two major trades before the 2017 NHL Entry Draft; veteran defenseman Niklas Hjalmarsson was dealt to the Arizona Coyotes in exchange for Connor Murphy and Laurent Dauphin, while Artemi Panarin was traded to the Columbus Blue Jackets to reacquire Brandon Saad in a four-player deal.[116] Both Hjalmarsson and Hossa were core members of the Blackhawks roster that won three Stanley Cups in 2010, 2013 and 2015.[116] The team also traded goaltender Scott Darling to the Carolina Hurricanes and center Marcus Kruger to the Vegas Golden Knights, while also lost defensemen Trevor van Riemsdyk to the Golden Knights in the 2017 NHL Expansion Draft and Brian Campbell, who retired.[117] The Blackhawks acquired wingers Patrick Sharp, Tommy Wingels and Lance Bouma in free agency.[117]

The Blackhawks opened the 2017–18 season with a resounding 10–1 victory over the Pittsburgh Penguins.[118] The Blackhawks were four games above .500 with an 18–14–6 record at the end of December 2017, and only four points out of a playoff spot.[119] However, goaltender Corey Crawford missed much of 2018 due to an upper-body injury.[120] Inconsistent defense and goaltending, coupled with limited offense, resulted in the team falling to the bottom of the Central Division.[121][122] The Blackhawks were eliminated from playoff contention on March 20, 2018, marking the first time in nine years that the team failed to qualify for the Stanley Cup playoffs.[122] The team finished the season with a 33–39–10 record and 76 points in the standings.[123]

The Blackhawks made modest acquisitions during the opening day of free agency by acquiring veterans Cam Ward, Chris Kunitz and Brandon Manning.[124] The team made their biggest move of the offseason by offloading Hossa's contract onto the Arizona Coyotes by trading Vinnie Hinostroza, Jordan Oesterle and third-round draft pick in the 2019 NHL Draft in exchange for Marcus Kruger, MacKenzie Entwistle, Jordan Maletta, Andrew Campbell and a fifth-round draft pick in the 2019 NHL Draft.[125] Quenneville named Ward the team's starting goaltender as Crawford missed the first five games of the 2018–19 season with concussion-like symptoms. The Blackhawks opened the season with a promising 6–2–2 start despite Crawford's initial absence.[126] However, after losing their next five games,[126] head coach Quenneville (as well as assistant coaches Kevin Dineen and Ulf Samuelsson) were fired on November 6, 2018. Jeremy Colliton, previously the head coach of the Blackhawks' AHL affiliate, the Rockford IceHogs, was named the 38th head coach in franchise history.[127]

The team adjusted their roster by trading Nick Schmaltz to the Arizona Coyotes in exchange for Dylan Strome and Brendan Perlini.[128] The Blackhawks then dealt Brandon Manning to the Edmonton Oilers for Drake Caggiula.[129] The team struggled despite these changes and plummeted to the bottom of the NHL's standings by the All-Star break,[130] but then rebounded with an 18–10–3 record during the second half of the season, and missed playoffs by six points, while finishing in sixth place in the Central Division.[131] After missing the playoffs for the second straight season, the Blackhawks won the third-overall pick in the 2019 NHL Entry Draft at the NHL Draft Lottery, which they used to select Kirby Dach.[132][133]

Prior to the 2019–20 season, the Blackhawks signed center Ryan Carpenter and goaltender Robin Lehner on the opening day of free agency.[134] The team made three separate trades to acquire Olli Maatta, Calvin de Haan, and Alex Nylander.[135] The team reacquired fan-favorite Andrew Shaw in a trade with the Montreal Canadiens.[136] The Blackhawks also inserted rookie Dominik Kubalik into their roster, whom they acquired from the Los Angeles Kings in the previous season.[137] The Blackhawks posted a 32–30–8 record and finished last in their division before the remainder of the regular season was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[138] The team fired John McDonough, who served as the Blackhawks' president for 13 years.[139] The Blackhawks obtained a spot in the 2020 Stanley Cup playoffs, which used a 24-team playoff format among the top 12 teams in each conference.[140] The 12th-seeded Blackhawks defeated the Edmonton Oilers in the qualifying round of the playoffs to advance to the Western Conference first round,[141] where they lost to the Vegas Golden Knights in five games.[142]

The 2020–21 NHL season would be delayed to January 2021 and condensed to 56 games due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The Blackhawks signed forwards Mattias Janmark, Lucas Wallmark, and Carl Soderberg during free agency to one-year deals.[143] Veteran forward Brandon Saad was dealt to the Colorado Avalanche for defensemen Nikita Zadorov and Anton Lindholm.[144] The team's captain, Jonathan Toews, announced he would forgo the season due to an undisclosed medical illness.[145] The Blackhawks parted with longtime netminder Corey Crawford, who signed with the New Jersey Devils but ultimately retired before the season's start.[146] Brent Seabrook, the team's veteran defenseman, announced his retirement midway through the season due a lingering hip injury sustained in 2019.[147] Andrew Shaw, who previously rejoined the Blackhawks in 2019, also announced he would retire from playing due to concussions suffered throughout his career.[148] The Blackhawks relied heavily on their rookies during the season to replenish their depth, including forwards Brandon Hagel, Philipp Kurashev, and Pius Suter, defensemen Ian Mitchell and Wyatt Kalynuk, and goaltender Kevin Lankinen.[149][150] Despite the roster turnaround, the Blackhawks completed the first half of the season with a 14–9–5 record and sat in fourth place in their division.[151] The team struggled from mid-March through April, going 8–15–1, and subsequently traded away Janmark, Wallmark, and Soderberg at the trade deadline.[150] The Blackhawks failed to qualify for the playoffs and finished in sixth place with a 24–25–7 record.[150][151] The Blackhawks also re-arranged their front office in 2020 by naming Danny Wirtz, Rocky Wirtz's son, as their CEO and promoting general manager Stan Bowman to President of Hockey Operations.[152]

2021–present

Prior to the 2021–22 season, former Blackhawks prospect Kyle Beach alleged he was sexually assaulted by Brad Aldrich, the team's former video coach, during the 2009–10 season.[153][154] Beach filed a lawsuit against the Blackhawks for failing to adequately address Aldrich's wrongdoings or file formal police reports.[155] A separate party, a former high school student whom Aldrich sexually assaulted during his tenure at Houghton High School also filed a lawsuit against the Blackhawks, alleging the team gave a positive reference on behalf of Aldrich and failed to disclose any details about his sexual assault in 2010.[153] The Blackhawks partnered with law firm Jenner & Block to conduct an internal investigation that spanned 139 interviews over four months. It revealed that the team's brain trust, including team president John McDonough, executive vice president Jay Blunk, general manager Stan Bowman, assistant general manager Kevin Cheveldayoff, and head coach Joel Quenneville met just days before the start of the 2010 Stanley Cup Finals and deferred any action on Aldrich until after the Finals. Aldrich was subsequently allowed to quietly resign after taking part in the Stanley Cup victory celebration.[154]

Within hours of the report's release on October 26, 2021, Bowman and senior director of hockey operations Al MacIsaac, the only participants in the 2010 meeting still with the Blackhawks, resigned. Assistant general manager Kyle Davidson took over as interim general manager.[154] The NHL also imposed a $2 million fine on the Blackhawks for "inadequate internal procedures and insufficient and untimely response in the handling of matters related to former video coach Brad Aldrich's employment." It also stated that most of the participants in the meeting, including McDonough, Bowman, Blunk, and MacIssac, will not be allowed to work in the NHL again without permission from the league office.[156] Quenneville, by then head coach of the Florida Panthers, resigned after meeting with Bettman on October 28, and will also have to meet with Bettman if he wants to work in the league again.[157][158] Bettman subsequently met with Cheveldayoff, by now the general manager of the Winnipeg Jets, but cleared him of wrongdoing. Bettman stated that he could not "assign to [Cheveldayoff] responsibility for the Club's actions, or inactions" because Cheveldayoff was not a member of the Blackhawks' senior leadership team at the time.[159] Aldrich's name was removed from the Cup, as requested by the team.[160] Beach and the Blackhawks reached an undisclosed settlement on December 15.[161] However, the second lawsuit filed against the Blackhawks by a former high school student was dismissed.[162]

Before his resignation, Bowman intended on building a competitive team that could make the playoffs immediately rather than focusing on rebuilding for the future.[163] The team dealt veteran defenseman Duncan Keith to the Edmonton Oilers in exchange for a draft pick and Caleb Jones.[164] The Blackhawks traded Brent Seabrook's contract to the Tampa Bay Lightning in exchange for center Tyler Johnson.[163] The team then acquired Seth Jones from the Columbus Blue Jackets in exchange for two draft picks and prospect Adam Boqvist.[163] The Blackhawks leveraged their open salary cap to acquire reigning Vezina Trophy-winner Marc-Andre Fleury from the Vegas Golden Knights who were in desperate need of cap relief.[163] The team signed defensemen Jake McCabe and winger Jujhar Khaira in free agency.[163] Blackhawks captain Jonathan Toews, who had missed the previous seasons due to chronic immune response syndrome, also announced he would return for the 2021–22 season.[165]

On November 6, Colliton was fired after leading the team to a 1–9–2 record to start the season, the second worst in the NHL at the time. Derek King, former IceHogs head coach, was named his interim replacement.[166] Davidson was formally named the team's general manager on March 1, 2022.[167] The Blackhawks were unable to recover from their poor start and fell out of playoff contention by the trade deadline. The team dealt Brandon Hagel to Tampa Bay in exchange for two first-round picks, Boris Katchouk, and Taylor Raddysh,[168] while also trading Fleury to the Minnesota Wild for a second-round pick.[169] The team finished sixth place in Central Division with a 28–42–12 record.[170] The 2021–22 season also marked announcer Pat Foley's final season with the Blackhawks, who had been with the team for 39 years.[171]

 
The Blackhawks hired Luke Richardson as the 40th coach in their franchise's history in 2022.

On June 27, 2022, the Blackhawks named Luke Richardson as their 40th head coach in franchise history.[172] General manager Davidson announced the Blackhawks would commit to rebuilding their roster and acquiring draft capital.[173] The team traded Alex DeBrincat to the Ottawa Senators and Kirby Dach to the Montreal Canadiens for the seventh and thirteenth picks in the 2022 NHL Entry Draft.[173] Chicago also acquired the twenty-fifth overall pick in the draft from the Toronto Maple Leafs by taking on goalie Petr Mrazek's contract.[173] The Blackhawks made modest acquisitions in free agency, signing veteran forwards Andreas Athanasiou, Colin Blackwell, and Max Domi.[174] The team fell to the bottom of the Central Division and again emerged as sellers at the 2022–23 trade deadline.[175] Patrick Kane was traded to the Arizona Coyotes for Vili Saarijarvi and Kane was then later sent to the New York Rangers as part of a three-team trade. The Blackhawks received Andy Welinski, a conditional second-round pick in 2023 and a fourth-round pick in 2025 from the Rangers to complete the trade.[175] The Blackhawks also dealt Jake McCabe, Sam Lafferty, and Max Domi, while also taking on Nikita Zaitsev's contract from the Ottawa Senators in exchange for additional draft capital.[175][176] Captain Jonathan Toews missed 29 games while recovering from Long COVID.[177] The Blackhawks finished last in their division with the third-worst record in the NHL.[178] Before their final regular season game the team also announced that they would not re-sign captain Jonathan Toews.[179]

Team information

Jerseys

The Blackhawks wear predominantly red jerseys featuring three sets of black and white stripes along the sleeves and waist.[180][181] The team's logo is displayed on the front of each jersey, along with a 'C', representing 'Chicago', on each shoulder with two crossed tomahawks.[180] The Blackhawks debuted this design in 1955, and have since only made minor modifications to the jersey.[180][181] In 2007, The Blackhawks along with all other NHL teams, made minute changes to their uniforms by adding larger logo, a new collar with the NHL logo and a "baseball-style cut" along the bottom.[182] The team previously donned alternate third jersey that was primarily black with red and white stripes between 1996 and 2007.[181][183] The Blackhawks brought this design back in 2008, before making their 2009 Winter Classic jerseys their alternates between 2009 and 2011. After the 2019 Winter Classic, the Blackhawks made their jersey from the game their alternate, wearing it for three more games in 2019 and in three games during the 2019–20 season.[184]

The Blackhawks' uniform was voted one of the 25 best in professional sports by Paul Lukas of GQ in November 2004.[185] The Hockey News voted the team's jersey as the best in the NHL.[186] Greg Wyshynski of Yahoo! Sports listed the Blackhawks home jerseys as the second best NHL jersey in the history of the NHL in 2017.[187] The Blackhawks were voted to have the best uniform in the history of the NHL in a fan-vote conducted by the NHL in 2017.[188]

 
The Blackhawks have donned Camouflage practice jerseys for Veterans Day to show support for servicemen since 2009.

Since 2009, the Blackhawks have worn special camouflage jerseys on Veterans Day during their pregame warm-ups. The jerseys are later sold in auctions to raise money for the USO of Illinois.[189]

The Blackhawks wore jerseys based on the design worn in the 1936–37 season for the 2009 NHL Winter Classic. The jersey is predominantly black with a large beige stripe across the chest (also on the sleeves), with a red border, and an old-style circular Black Hawks logo.[190] The Blackhawks used this Winter Classic design as their third jersey for the 2009–10 season until they retired after the 2010–11 season, with the only change in the design was by adding the familiar "C" with crossed tomahawks on the shoulders.

For the 2014 NHL Stadium Series, the Blackhawks wore a black uniform similar to the alternates they wore from 1996 to 2009, but the stripes around the waist are no longer straight, they are jagged around the sides in order to follow the shape of the bottom of the jersey. Keeping with stripes, the ones on the arms simply stop halfway round; angled numbers are above these sleeve half-stripes. On one shoulder is the familiar "C" with crossed tomahawks logo and the Chicago 2014 Stadium Series logo on the other. Each 2014 NHL Stadium Series jerseys features chrome-treated logo designs inspired by the NHL shield. The chrome crest was developed using new technology that fuses print and embroidery and allows logos to be displayed as a high-resolution image incorporated into the crest. As a result, the design reduces the weight of the crest, creating in a lighter jersey. Numbering on the back of the jersey is enlarged and sleeve numbers are angled to improve visibility in outdoor venues.[191]

The team wore a uniform which was inspired by their 1957–58 jersey for the 2015 NHL Winter Classic. This uniform is nearly identical to the road uniform that the Blackhawks currently wear. The main differences between this design and the current road design come in the form of the lace-up collar, the name/number block font (which is serifed), and the C-Tomahawk logo, which is mostly red, black, and white (with a tad bit of yellow) instead of being mostly red, yellow, green black and white.[192]

For the 2016 NHL Stadium Series, the Blackhawks wore a unique uniform for their game against the Minnesota Wild. This uniform is primarily white with black/red/black stripes on the sleeves and socks. The current logo is on the chest. Framed between the two black stripes and over the red stripe on the sleeve is the familiar "C" with crossed tomahawks. The collar of the uniform features two different colors. The four, six-pointed red stars from the Flag of Chicago is featured on the white portion of the collar, while the other side of the collar is black. Sleeve numbers have been shifted to the shoulders and enlarged. With the shoulders being black, the numbering is white. But, the numbering and lettering on the back is also enlarged and black in color.[193]

For the 2017 NHL Winter Classic, the Blackhawks wore uniforms very similar to what they wore at the 2015 NHL Winter Classic. These new uniforms however feature a few modifications that were made to them. The most notable changes are to the logo and the cross tomahawks. The logo this time is the appropriate logo that the franchise used in 1957–65. But, they removed the roundel and the lettering so that just the logo itself stands out. The placement of the familiar "C" with crossed tomahawks is featured in the same position with the same striping pattern on the sleeve as the 2015 NHL Winter Classic uniform had. The only differences between the tomahawks from the 2015 NHL Winter Classic uniform and the 2017 NHL Winter Classic uniform are where the colors are placed for the tomahawk. The 2017 NHL Winter Classic patch is featured on the right shoulder.[194]

To honor the NHL's centennial year, a special anniversary logo was designed for the remainder of the 2016–17 season, which started on January 1, 2017, for all thirty teams, featuring a banner wrapped around the number 100 with the current NHL shield in the foreground. Both the banner and the number 100 are in same silver color as the NHL shield.[195] The Blackhawks wore this logo patch underneath the numbering on the right-sleeve on both the home and away jerseys. The Blackhawks debuted this patch on their home jerseys on January 5, 2017, and then they debuted the patch on the away jerseys on January 13, 2017. All home and away jerseys for all thirty teams will continue to have patches of the NHL's centennial emblem for the 2017–18 season, located above or below the numbers on their right sleeves, for at least up to the playing of the NHL 100 Classic on December 16, 2017.[196]

Adidas signed an agreement with the NHL to be the official outfitter of uniforms and licensed apparel for all teams, starting with the 2017–18 season, replacing Reebok.[197] The Reebok Edge template will now be retired in favor of the Adidas' ADIZERO template. The home and away uniforms that were debuted in the 2007–08 season remain nearly identical with the exception of the new Adidas ADIZERO template and the new collar. With the new collar, the NHL shield remains but is no longer placed on a lower layer with flaps nearby, as it's now front and center on a pentagon with a new "Chrome Flex" style.[198] The waist stripes are now curved instead of being straight across. The Adidas logo replaces the Reebok logo on the back collar.

For the entire 2018–19 season, on both the home and away uniforms, the Blackhawks wore memorial patches in remembrance of Stan Mikita, who died on August 7, 2018. The memorial patch featured 21 in white on a black circle that is placed on the upper left corner on the front side of the uniform.[199][200][non-primary source needed]

For the 2019 NHL Winter Classic, the Blackhawks wore uniforms similar to what they wore from the 1926–27 season to the 1934–35 season. The black and white uniform features the black and white Native American head logo on a black and white roundel with the wording "Blackhawks" arched on top and "Chicago" arched below. The Native American head logo inside the roundel features the 1999–2000 native American head logo that they currently wear. The uniform has four white stripes on each of the shoulders, and five white stripes of varying thickness on each sleeve and around the waist. Inside the collar, we see several diagonal white lines, which is a nod to the end zone design used at Notre Dame Stadium. Mixed in between these white lines are the six years written in red, the six years the Blackhawks won the Stanley Cup. The Blackhawks won the Stanley Cup in 1934, 1938, 1961, 2010, 2013, and 2015.[201] After the 2019 NHL Winter Classic, the team announced that uniforms from the game would be worn in three home games of the 2018–19 season.[202]

For the 2019–20 NHL season, the home and away uniforms that were unveiled for the 2017–18 season remain nearly identical with the exception of the new collar designs. The new collar on the home uniform transitions from white to a solid red on the front as it comes over the shoulder, leading into the NHL logo with a red background in the center. The new collar on the away uniform transitions from red to a solid white on the front as it comes over the shoulder, leading into the NHL logo with a white background in the center.[203][204]

Beginning with the 2020–21 NHL season, the league allowed for advertising on its gameday uniforms for the first time, starting with helmet ads.[205] The Blackhawks' first helmet ad sponsor was United Airlines.[206]

For the 2020–21 NHL season, the Blackhawks would wear "Reverse Retro" alternate uniforms. The design was largely inspired from the team's 1940s uniforms minus the barber-pole elements.[207] A second "Reverse Retro" uniform was released in the 2022–23 season, based on their 1938 uniform. Across the chest is "CHICAGO" in white with red trim, inspired by the 2019 NHL Winter Classic crest and the current Blackhawks primary logo is added as a shoulder patch on the left side.[208]

Starting with the 2021-22 NHL regular season, Adidas introduced new environmentally-friendly uniforms for all teams with its Adidas ADIZERO Primegreen Authentic template.[209] The template is made with a minimum of 50% recycled content while still retaining their high-performance materials. Each team uniform will maintain its classic stripping and logo, while boasting dimensional embroidery that draws attention to their sustainable materials, and a two-layer twill that underscores the product's authenticity. For the Blackhawks, the logo on their uniforms now feature raised markings on the face of their logo, the forehead lines, the eyebrow and eye, as well as the facepaint are all now raised rather than flat as it had been before.[210]

For the entire 2021–22 NHL season, on both the home and away uniforms, the Blackhawks are wearing memorial patches in remembrance of Tony Esposito, who died on August 10, 2021. The memorial patch features 35 in white on a black circle that is placed on the upper left corner on the front side of the uniform.[211][212][213]

 
This vintage logo was brought back in 1991, 2008, and 2021; it was their primary logo from the 1937–38 to 1954–55 seasons.

Irene Castle, McLaughlin's wife, designed the original version of the team's logo, which featured a crudely drawn black and white Native head in a circle.[214] This design went through several significant changes between 1926 and 1955. During this period, seven distinct versions of the primary logo were worn on the team's uniforms. At the beginning of the 1955–56 season, the outer circle was removed and the head began to resemble the team's current primary logo. This crest and uniform went through subtle changes until the 1964–65 season; the basic logo and jersey design have remained constant ever since. In 2008, The Hockey News' staff voted the team's main logo to be the best in the NHL.[215] In 2010, sports columnist Damien Cox called on the franchise to retire the "racially insensitive" logo, saying that, "Clearly, no right-thinking person would name a team after an aboriginal figure these days any more than they would use Muslims or Africans or Chinese or any ethnic group to depict a specific sporting notion."[216] Furthermore, the National Congress of American Indians (NCAI) believes that all Native-themed logos, including that of the Blackhawks, "continue to profit from harmful stereotypes originated during a time when white superiority and segregation were common place."[217]

In 2019, the American Indian Center of Chicago ended all ties to the Chicago Blackhawks Foundation, stating they will no longer affiliate "with organizations that perpetuate stereotypes through the use of 'Indian' mascots." The AIC noted in its statement that they "previously held a relationship with the Chicago Blackhawks Foundation with the intention of educating the general public about American Indians and the use of logos and mascots. The AIC, along with members of the community have since decided to end this relationship" and stated that "going forward, AIC will have no professional ties with the Blackhawks, or any other organization that perpetuates harmful stereotypes."[218][219]

On July 7, 2020, the Blackhawks issued a press release to defend their team's name and logo. The team stated, "The Chicago Blackhawks name and logo symbolizes an important and historic person, Black Hawk of Illinois' Sac & Fox Nation, whose leadership and life has inspired generations of Native Americans, veterans and the public." The Blackhawks further stated they would "expand awareness" of Black Hawk and all Indigenous American contributions. The press release came after other American professional sports teams, including the Washington Redskins and Cleveland Indians, reevaluated their names and logos.[220]

The National Congress of American Indians, The American Indian Center of Chicago, The Chi-Nations Youth Council and over 1,500 Native organizations and advocates from over 150 federally recognized tribes across the country, including members of the Sac and Fox Nation, support changing the team name and logo.[221][222][223][224] Members of Black Hawk's family have also spoken out opposing the use of Black Hawk as a mascot and caricature logo.[224]

The Chi-Nations Youth Council (CNYC), an Indigenous youth organization in Chicago, has said "The Chicago Blackhawks name and logo symbolizes a legacy of imperialism and genocide." "As statutes (sic) of invaders, slave holders, and white supremacists fall across the nation so too should the images and language of the savage and dead 'Indians'." CNYC also noted "As social consciousness has grown over the past decades so has the Blackhawks performative gestures of buying their reprieve from those willing to sell out the health and humanity of our future generations."[225]

Mascot

The Blackhawks mascot is Tommy Hawk, an anthropomorphic black hawk who wears the Blackhawks' four feathers on his head, along with a Blackhawks jersey and hockey pants.[226] Tommy Hawk often participates in the T-shirt toss and puck chuck at the United Center.[226] He walks around the concourse greeting fans before and during the game.[226] The team introduced Tommy Hawk in the 2001–02 season.[227] Tommy Hawk was inducted into the Mascot Hall of Fame in 2019.[228]

Fan apparel

On July 29, 2020, the team agreed to ban headdresses from being worn at home games held in the United Center in recognition of being sacred symbols.[229][230] Before the ban was enacted, headdresses were among the apparel worn by Blackhawk fans during games.[231][232][230]

Fight and goal songs

"Here Come the Hawks!" is the official fight song and introduction of the Chicago Blackhawks. The song was written by J. Swayzee, an avid Blackhawks fan, and produced by the Dick Marx Orchestra and Choir in 1968 and is heard quite often both in vocal and organ renditions during Blackhawks home games.[233] In late 2007 the song "Keys to the City" was released by Ministry & Co Conspirators as a gift to the Blackhawks organization.[234]

The Blackhawks were the first NHL team to sound a horn whenever they scored a goal at home. Bill Wirtz installed his yacht's horn in the Chicago Stadium sound system and had it blare after every Blackhawks goal.[235] The goal horn became a popular trend among other NHL teams after the Blackhawks played the Montreal Canadiens in the 1973 Stanley Cup Finals.[235] The current incarnation of the goal horn dates from 1990.

The Blackhawks began playing "Chelsea Dagger" by The Fratellis as their official goal song during the 2008–09 NHL season.[233][236] The Blackhawks also had dedicated goal songs for Patrick Kane ("Rock You Like a Hurricane" by The Scorpions), Jonathan Toews ("Johnny B. Goode" by Chuck Berry), and Patrick Sharp ("Sharp Dressed Man" by ZZ Top).[237]

National anthem

 
Jim Cornelison sings the "Star-Spangled Banner" at the United Center

It is a tradition for Blackhawks fans to applaud and cheer loudly during the singing of the national anthem. This tradition originated during a 1985 Campbell Conference playoff game at Chicago Stadium versus the Edmonton Oilers.[238] Wayne Messmer, the Blackhawks home games national anthem singer from 1980 to 1994, was the anthem singer when this tradition began.[239] Jim Cornelison sings the national anthems for all home games and he is accompanied by organist Frank Pellico.[239] Before Game 2 of the 2010 Stanley Cup Finals at the United Center, the cheering during the anthem was registered between 116 and 122 decibels.[240]

Practice facilities

The Blackhawks practice facility, the Fifth Third Arena, is located in Chicago's Near West Side. The 125,000 square-foot facility opened in 2017 and cost $65 million to construct.[241] The Fifth Third Arena also serves as community center and hosts youth, high school, and adult hockey and ice skating programs.[242]

The Blackhawks had previously used Johnny's Ice House West and The Edge Ice Arena in suburban Bensenville as their practice facility.[243]

Circus trip

The Blackhawks and their arena mates, the Chicago Bulls, embarked on an annual two-week road trip in mid-November dating back to when both teams inhabited Chicago Stadium.[244] The Wirtz Family, who at one point owned the Blackhawks, Bulls, and Chicago Stadium, would lease the venue to circus acts and ice skating troupes.[245][246][247] The Blackhawks played between six and seven games in western Canada and California during this time.[244] In November 2016, the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus announced they would not return to the United Center in 2017.[244] As a result, Disney on Ice performed its last two week show in 2017 before being condensed to one week in 2018.

Media and announcers

For the first time in team history, all 82 games plus playoffs were broadcast on television during the 2008–09 season. At least 20 of them aired on WGN-TV (Channel 9), the first time the Blackhawks had been seen on local over-the-air television in 30 years. Games produced by WGN-TV through its WGN Sports department are not available in its superstation feed WGN America due to league broadcast rights restrictions. Other games not broadcast by WGN-TV are aired on regional sports network NBC Sports Chicago, the first time in at least 35 years that non-nationally broadcast home games were seen locally, either over-the-air or on cable. On February 15, 2011, it was announced that the team had renewed their broadcast contract with WGN-TV for the next five years, starting in the 2011–12 NHL season. The deal was further extended for three more years on May 15, 2014, keeping the team on Channel 9 until the end of the 2018–19 season.[248] On January 2, 2019, the Blackhawks (along with the Chicago Bulls and Chicago White Sox) agreed to an exclusive multi-year deal with NBC Sports Chicago beginning with the 2019–20 season, ending the team's broadcasts on WGN-TV.[249]

Radio broadcasts since the 1970s and into the mid-2000s varied between WBBM (780) and WMAQ/WSCR (670). Both frequencies are 50,000-watt clear channel stations that allowed the Blackhawks to be heard across the country at night, but Blackhawks games often came into conflict with White Sox baseball by the start of April. On April 30, 2008, the team signed a three-year deal with WGN Radio (720 AM), another 50,000-watt station, with games airing alternately instead on WIND (560 AM) in scheduling conflict situations during the baseball season due to the Cubs having contractual preference to air on WGN; these moved to WGWG-LP (Channel 6/87.7 FM, an analog television station carrying an audio-only sports talk format using a quirk in the FM band) in mid-2014 when Tribune began a local marketing agreement with that station's owner. During the 2010 Stanley Cup Finals, the Cubs agreed to allow the Blackhawks games to be broadcast on WGN and have the Cubs revert to WIND when there was a conflict. This allowed the Finals games to be heard over a larger area due to WGN's clear-channel signal. All Blackhawk games are also streamed live on wgnradio.com, regardless of whether the games are on WGN or WGWG-LP. WLUP-FM (97.9 FM) was also utilized as an alternate station.

As of the 2022–23 season, Chris Vosters and John Wiedeman call play-by-play on television and radio, respectively. Patrick Sharp and Troy Murray serve as the TV color commentator, with Colby Cohen and Caley Chelios providing occasional game analysis and other content on various media.[250]

Season-by-season record

This is a partial list of the last five seasons completed by the Blackhawks. For the full season-by-season history, see List of Chicago Blackhawks seasons.

Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, OTL = Overtime losses, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against

Season GP W L OTL Pts GF GA Finish Playoffs
2018–19 82 36 34 12 84 270 292 6th, Central Did not qualify
2019–20 70 32 30 8 72 212 218 7th, Central Lost in First Round, 1–4 (Golden Knights)
2020–21 56 24 25 7 55 161 186 6th, Central Did not qualify
2021–22 82 28 42 12 68 219 291 7th, Central Did not qualify
2022–23 82 26 49 7 59 204 301 8th, Central Did not qualify

Players

Current roster

Updated April 13, 2023[251][252]

No. Nat Player Pos S/G Age Acquired Birthplace
89   Andreas Athanasiou LW L 28 2022 London, Ontario
24   Anders Bjork LW L 26 2023 Mequon, Wisconsin
43   Colin Blackwell   C R 30 2022 North Andover, Massachusetts
17   Jason Dickinson C L 27 2022 Georgetown, Ontario
28   Andreas Englund D L 27 2023 Stockholm, Sweden
58   MacKenzie Entwistle RW R 23 2018 Mississauga, Ontario
70   Cole Guttman   C R 24 2022 Northridge, California
52   Reese Johnson RW R 24 2019 Regina, Saskatchewan
90   Tyler Johnson C R 32 2021 Liberty Lake, Washington
82   Caleb Jones D L 25 2021 Arlington, Texas
4   Seth Jones (A) D R 28 2021 Arlington, Texas
46   Wyatt Kaiser D L 20 2020 Andover, Minnesota
14   Boris Katchouk LW L 24 2022 Vancouver, British Columbia
16   Jujhar Khaira LW L 28 2021 Surrey, British Columbia
23   Philipp Kurashev C L 23 2018 Munsingen, Switzerland
51   Ian Mitchell D R 24 2017 St. Albert, Alberta
34   Petr Mrazek G L 31 2022 Ostrava, Czechoslovakia
5   Connor Murphy (A) D R 30 2017 Boston, Massachusetts
11   Taylor Raddysh RW R 25 2022 Caledon, Ontario
32   Alex Stalock G L 35 2022 St. Paul, Minnesota
25   Jarred Tinordi D L 31 2022 Burnsville, Minnesota
19   Jonathan Toews (C) C L 34 2006 Winnipeg, Manitoba
26   Austin Wagner LW L 25 2023 Calgary, Alberta
22   Nikita Zaitsev D R 31 2023 Moscow, Soviet Union

Retired numbers

 
The Blackhawks unveiled a sculpture honoring Glenn Hall, Tony Esposito, Stan Mikita, Bobby Hull, and Denis Savard in 2000.
Chicago Blackhawks retired numbers
No. Player Position Career No. retirement
1 Glenn Hall G 1957–1967 November 20, 1988
3 Keith Magnuson 1 D 1969–1980 November 12, 2008
Pierre Pilote 1 D 1955–1968
9 Bobby Hull LW 1957–1972 December 18, 1983
18 Denis Savard C 1980–1990
1995–1997
March 19, 1998
21 Stan Mikita C 1958–1980 October 19, 1980
35 Tony Esposito G 1969–1984 November 20, 1988
81 Marian Hossa RW 2009–2017 November 20, 2022

Notes:

Hall of Famers

The Chicago Blackhawks presently acknowledge an affiliation with a number of inductees to the Hockey Hall of Fame. Inductees affiliated with the Blackhawks include 41 former players and 10 builders of the sport.[254] The 10 individuals recognized as builders by the Hall of Fame include former Blackhawks executives, general managers, head coaches, and owners. In addition to players and builders, the team recognizes an affiliation with three broadcasters who were awarded the Foster Hewitt Memorial Award from the Hockey Hall of Fame. Lloyd Pettit, a sportscaster, was the first Blackhawks broadcaster to receive the award, in 1986. Other Blackhawks broadcasters awarded the Foster Hewitt Memorial Award include Pat Foley (awarded in 2014).[254] In 2016, team historian Bob Verdi was awarded the Elmer Ferguson Memorial Award.[255]

Team captains

Franchise scoring leaders

Franchise regular season scoring leaders

These are the top-ten point-scorers in franchise regular season history. Figures are updated after each completed NHL regular season.

  •  *  – current Blackhawks player

Note: Pos = Position; GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; P/G = Points per game

 
Stan Mikita is the Blackhawks all-time leading scorer with 1,467 career points.

Franchise playoff scoring leaders

These are the top-ten playoff point-scorers in franchise playoff history. Figures are updated after each completed NHL season.

  •  *  – current Blackhawks player

Note: Pos = Position; GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; P/G = Points per game

See also

References

Notes

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chicago, blackhawks, american, football, team, chicago, black, hawks, american, football, blackhawks, black, hawks, redirect, here, other, uses, black, hawk, disambiguation, spelled, black, hawks, until, 1986, known, colloquially, hawks, professional, hockey, . For the American football team see Chicago Black Hawks American football Blackhawks and Black Hawks redirect here For other uses see Black Hawk disambiguation The Chicago Blackhawks spelled Black Hawks until 1986 and known colloquially as the Hawks are a professional ice hockey team based in Chicago The Blackhawks compete in the National Hockey League NHL as a member of the Central Division in the Western Conference and have won six Stanley Cup championships since their founding in 1926 They are one of the Original Six NHL teams along with the Detroit Red Wings Montreal Canadiens Toronto Maple Leafs Boston Bruins and New York Rangers Since 1995 the team has played their home games at the United Center which they share with the National Basketball Association s Chicago Bulls both teams previously played at the now demolished Chicago Stadium 4 Chicago Blackhawks2022 23 Chicago Blackhawks seasonConferenceWesternDivisionCentralFounded1926HistoryChicago Black Hawks1926 1986Chicago Blackhawks1986 presentHome arenaUnited CenterCityChicago IllinoisColorsRed black white 1 2 MediaNBC Sports ChicagoWGN Radio 720 AM Owner s Wirtz Corporation Rocky Wirtz chairman 3 General managerKyle DavidsonHead coachLuke RichardsonCaptainJonathan ToewsMinor league affiliatesRockford IceHogs AHL Indy Fuel ECHL Stanley Cups6 1933 34 1937 38 1960 61 2009 10 2012 13 2014 15 Conference championships4 1991 92 2009 10 2012 13 2014 15 Presidents Trophy2 1990 91 2012 13 Division championships16 1969 70 1970 71 1971 72 1972 73 1975 76 1977 78 1978 79 1979 80 1982 83 1985 86 1989 90 1990 91 1992 93 2009 10 2012 13 2016 17 Official websitewww wbr nhl wbr com wbr blackhawksThe Blackhawks original owner was Frederic McLaughlin a hands on owner who fired many coaches during his ownership and led the team to win two Stanley Cup titles in 1934 and 1938 respectively After McLaughlin s death in 1944 the team came under the ownership of the Norris family who acted as their landlord as owners of the Chicago Stadium and also owned stakes in several of the NHL teams At first the Norris ownership was as part of a syndicate fronted by longtime executive Bill Tobin and the team languished in favor of the Norris owned Detroit Red Wings After the senior James E Norris died in 1952 the Norris assets were spread among family members and James D Norris became the owner of the Blackhawks The younger Norris took an active interest in the team which won another Stanley Cup title under his ownership in 1961 After James D Norris died in 1966 the Wirtz family became owners of the franchise In 2007 the team came under the control of Rocky Wirtz who is credited with turning around the organization which had lost fan interest and competitiveness under Wirtz the Blackhawks won the Stanley Cup three times in 2010 2013 and 2015 5 6 Contents 1 Franchise history 1 1 Founding 1 2 McLaughlin era 1926 1944 1 3 Norris era 1944 1966 1 4 Arthur Wirtz era 1966 1983 1 5 Bill Wirtz era 1983 2007 1 6 Rocky Wirtz era 2007 present 1 6 1 2007 2009 Rebuilding 1 6 2 2009 10 The Stanley Cup returns to Chicago 1 6 3 2010 2012 1 6 4 2012 13 Presidents Trophy and fifth Stanley Cup 1 6 5 2013 14 1 6 6 2014 15 Sixth Stanley Cup 1 6 7 2015 2020 1 6 8 2021 present 2 Team information 2 1 Jerseys 2 2 Logo 2 3 Mascot 2 4 Fan apparel 2 5 Fight and goal songs 2 6 National anthem 2 7 Practice facilities 2 8 Circus trip 3 Media and announcers 4 Season by season record 5 Players 5 1 Current roster 5 2 Retired numbers 5 3 Hall of Famers 5 4 Team captains 5 5 Franchise scoring leaders 5 5 1 Franchise regular season scoring leaders 5 5 2 Franchise playoff scoring leaders 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Notes 7 2 Sources 7 3 Further reading 8 External linksFranchise history EditFounding Edit On May 1 1926 the NHL awarded an expansion franchise for Chicago to a syndicate headed by former football star Huntington Hardwick of Boston At the same meeting Hardwick arranged the purchase of the players of the Portland Rosebuds of the Western Hockey League for 100 000 from WHL president Frank Patrick in a deal brokered by Boston Bruins owner Charles Adams 7 However only a month later Hardwick s group sold out to Chicago coffee tycoon Frederic McLaughlin 8 McLaughlin had been a commander with the 333rd Machine Gun Battalion of the 86th Infantry Division during World War I 9 This division was nicknamed the Blackhawk Division after Black Hawk 10 a Native American of the Sauk nation who was a prominent figure in the history of Illinois 9 McLaughlin named the new hockey team in honor of the military unit making it one of many sports team names using Native Americans as icons However unlike the military division the team s name was spelled in two words as Black Hawks until 1986 when the club officially became the Blackhawks based on the spelling found in the original franchise documents 11 The Black Hawks began play in the 1926 27 season along with its fellow expansion franchises the Detroit Cougars now the Detroit Red Wings and New York Rangers The team had to face immediate competition in Chicago from Eddie Livingstone s rival the Chicago Cardinals who played in the same building McLaughlin took a very active role in running the team despite having no background in the sport He hired Bill Tobin a former goaltender who had played in the Western League as his assistant but directed the team himself He was also very interested in promoting American players then very rare in professional hockey Several of them including Doc Romnes Taffy Abel Alex Levinsky Mike Karakas and Cully Dahlstrom become staples with the team and under McLaughlin the Black Hawks were the first NHL team with an all American born lineup 9 McLaughlin era 1926 1944 Edit The Chicago Coliseum pictured in a 1910 postcard the Black Hawks home arena from 1926 to 1929 The Black Hawks played their first game on November 17 1926 against the Toronto St Patricks at the Chicago Coliseum They won their first game 4 1 in front of a crowd of over 7 000 8 The Hawks first season was a moderate success as they finished the season in third place with a record of 19 22 3 However they lost the 1927 first round playoff series to the Boston Bruins Following the series McLaughlin fired head coach Pete Muldoon According to Jim Coleman sportswriter for the Toronto based Globe and Mail McLaughlin felt that the Hawks were good enough to finish first Muldoon disagreed and in a fit of pique McLaughlin fired him According to Coleman Muldoon responded by yelling Fire me Major and you ll never finish first I ll put a curse on this team that will hoodoo it until the end of time The Curse of Muldoon was born although Coleman admitted years after the fact that he had fabricated the whole incident 12 and became one of the first widely known sports curses While the team would go on to win three Stanley Cups in its first 39 years of existence it did so without ever having finished in first place either in a single or multi division format The Black Hawks proceeded to have the worst record in the league in 1927 28 winning only seven of 44 games Interior of Chicago Stadium in February 1930 prior to a game between the Hawks and the Boston Bruins the Black Hawks moved into the arena during the 1929 30 season For the 1928 29 season the Black Hawks were originally slated to play in the newly built Chicago Stadium but due to construction delays and a dispute between McLaughlin and arena promoter Paddy Harmon they instead divided their time between the Coliseum the Detroit Olympia and the Peace Bridge Arena in Fort Erie Ontario before moving to Chicago Stadium the following season By 1931 with goal scorer Johnny Gottselig Cy Wentworth on defense and Charlie Gardiner in goal the Hawks reached their first Stanley Cup Finals but fizzled in the final two games against the Montreal Canadiens They had another stellar season in 1932 but that did not translate into playoff success However two years later Gardiner led his team to victory by shutting out the Detroit Red Wings in the final game of the Stanley Cup Finals Mush March scored the winning goal in double overtime as the Hawks beat Detroit 1 0 In 1938 the Black Hawks had a record of 14 25 9 almost missing the playoffs They stunned the Canadiens and New York Americans on overtime goals in the deciding games of both semi final series advancing to the 1938 Stanley Cup Finals against the Toronto Maple Leafs Black Hawks goaltender Mike Karakas was injured and could not play forcing a desperate Chicago team to pull minor leaguer Alfie Moore out of a Toronto bar and onto the ice Moore played one game and won it Toronto refused to let Moore play the next so Chicago used Paul Goodman in Game 2 and lost However for the third and fourth games Karakas was fitted with a special skate to protect his injured toe and the team won both games It was too late for Toronto as the Hawks won their second championship As of 2019 update the 1938 Black Hawks possess the poorest regular season record of any Stanley Cup champion The Black Hawks next returned to the Finals in 1944 behind Doug Bentley s 38 goals with Bentley s linemate Clint Smith leading the team in assists After upsetting the Red Wings in the semi finals they were promptly dispatched by the dominant Canadiens in four games Norris era 1944 1966 Edit After McLaughlin died in December 1944 his estate sold the team to a syndicate headed by longtime team president Bill Tobin However Tobin was only a puppet for James E Norris who owned the rival Red Wings Norris had also been the Black Hawks landlord since his 1936 purchase of the Chicago Stadium For the next eight years the Norris Tobin ownership as a rule paid almost no attention to the Black Hawks Nearly every trade made between Detroit and Chicago ended up being Red Wing heists As a result for the next several years the Black Hawks were the model of futility in the NHL Between 1945 and 1958 they only made the playoffs twice In 1950 Norris eldest son James D Norris and Red Wings minority owner Arthur Wirtz the senior Norris original partner in buying the Red Wings 23 years earlier took over the floundering club They guided it through financial reversals and rebuilt the team from there One of their first moves was to hire former Detroit coach and general manager Tommy Ivan as general manager Signed as prospects in the late 1950s Bobby Hull left Stan Mikita center and Pierre Pilote right eventually rose to become preeminent stars in Chicago In the late 1950s the Hawks struck gold acquiring three young prospects forwards Bobby Hull and Stan Mikita and defenseman Pierre Pilote and obtaining both star goaltender Glenn Hall and veteran forward Ted Lindsay who had just had a career season with 30 goals and 55 assists from Detroit Hull Mikita Pilote and Hall became preeminent stars of the team and all four would eventually be inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame After two first round exits at the hands of the eventual champions from Montreal in 1959 and 1960 it was expected the Canadiens would once again defeat the Hawks when they met in the semi finals in 1961 A defensive plan that completely wore down Montreal s superstars worked however as Chicago won the series in six games They then bested the Wings to win their third Stanley Cup championship Ron Murphy and Eric Nesterenko battle in front of the Toronto net The Hawks made the Cup Finals twice more in the 1960s losing to the Leafs in 1962 and the Canadiens in 1965 They remained a force to be reckoned with throughout the decade with Hull enjoying four 50 goal seasons Mikita winning back to back scoring titles and MVP accolades Pilote winning three consecutive Norris Trophies and Hall being named the First or Second All Star goaltender eight out of nine seasons Hull and Mikita especially were widely regarded as the most feared one two punch in the league However despite a strong supporting cast which included Bill Hay Ken Wharram Phil Esposito Moose Vasko Doug Mohns and Pat Stapleton the Hawks never quite put it all together In 1966 67 the last season of the six team NHL the Black Hawks finished first breaking the supposed Curse of Muldoon 23 years after the death of Frederic McLaughlin However they lost in the semi finals to Toronto who went on to win their last Stanley Cup of the era Afterward Coleman who first printed the story of the curse in 1943 admitted that he made the story up to break a writer s block he had as a column deadline approached Arthur Wirtz era 1966 1983 Edit Before his death in 1966 one of James D Norris last moves in the NHL was to arrange an expansion franchise in St Louis where he owned the St Louis Arena Tobin died in 1963 a vice president of the team until his death Ownership now passed to Norris longtime partner Arthur Wirtz and his son Bill Wirtz The Wirtz Norris partnership dated over three decades Arthur Wirtz had been a minority partner in the syndicate the senior Norris put together to buy the Red Wings in 1932 Goaltender Glenn Hall was drafted by the St Louis Blues expansion team for the 1967 68 season while Pierre Pilote was traded to the Maple Leafs in exchange for Jim Pappin in 1968 In the 1968 69 season despite Bobby Hull breaking his own previous record of 54 goals in a season with 58 the Black Hawks missed the playoffs for the first time since 1958 and the last time before 1997 98 In 1967 the Black Hawks made a trade with the Boston Bruins that turned out to be one of the most one sided in the history of the sport Chicago sent young forwards Phil Esposito Ken Hodge and Fred Stanfield to Boston in exchange for Pit Martin Jack Norris and Gilles Marotte While Martin would star for the Hawks for many seasons Esposito Hodge and Stanfield would lead the Bruins to the top of the NHL for several years and capture two Stanley Cups In Boston Esposito set numerous scoring records en route to a career as one of the NHL s all time greats Goaltender Tony Esposito tallied a franchise high 418 wins between 1969 and 1983 Nonetheless in the 1970 71 season life was made easier for the Black Hawks as in an attempt to better balance the divisions the expansion Buffalo Sabres and Vancouver Canucks were both placed in the East Division while the Hawks moved into the West Division The Hawks became the class of the West overnight rampaging to a 46 17 15 record and an easy first place finish With second year goalie Tony Esposito Phil s younger brother and winner of the Calder Memorial Trophy for Rookie of the Year the previous season Hull his younger brother Dennis Mikita and sterling defensemen Stapleton Keith Magnuson and Bill White the Hawks reached the Stanley Cup Finals losing to the Canadiens A critical blow to the franchise came in 1972 73 with the start of the World Hockey Association WHA Long dissatisfied with how little he was paid as the NHL s marquee star Hull jumped to the upstart Winnipeg Jets for a million dollar contract Former Philadelphia Flyers star Andre Lacroix joined him having received very little ice time during his single season with Chicago and the pair became two of the WHA s great stars However the Black Hawks repeated their appearance in the Stanley Cup Finals that year again losing to Montreal Stapleton also left for the WHA after that year depleting the team further While the team led or was second in the West Division for four straight seasons for the rest of the 1970s the Black Hawks made the playoffs each year winning seven division championships in the decade in all but were never a successful Stanley Cup contender losing 16 straight playoff games at one point The team acquired legendary blueliner Bobby Orr from the Boston Bruins in 1976 but ill health forced him to sit out for most of the season and he eventually retired in 1979 having played only 26 games for the Hawks Stan Mikita did the same the following year after playing for Chicago for 22 years the third longest career for a single team in league history By 1982 the Black Hawks squeaked into the playoffs as the fourth seed in the Norris Division at the time the top four teams in each division automatically made the playoffs and were one of the NHL s Cinderella teams that year Led by second year Denis Savard s 32 goals and 119 points and Doug Wilson s 39 goals the Hawks stunned the Minnesota North Stars and St Louis Blues in the playoffs before losing to another surprise team the Vancouver Canucks who made the Stanley Cup Finals Chicago proved they were no fluke the next season also making the third round before losing to the eventual runner up Edmonton Oilers After an off year in 1984 the Hawks again faced a now fresh off a ring Edmonton offensive juggernaut of a team and lost in the third round in 1985 Bill Wirtz era 1983 2007 Edit In 1983 Arthur Wirtz died and the club came under the sole control of his son Bill Wirtz Although the Black Hawks continued to make the playoffs each season the club began a slow decline punctuated with an appearance in the 1992 Stanley Cup Finals During the 1985 playoff series against Edmonton the Black Hawks and their fans started a tradition of cheering during the singing of The Star Spangled Banner 13 Prior to the 1986 87 season while going through the team s records someone discovered the team s original NHL contract and found that the team s name was printed as a compound word Blackhawks as opposed to two separate words Black Hawks which was the way most sources had been printing it for 60 years and as the team had always officially listed it The name officially became Chicago Blackhawks from that point on 14 In the late 1980s Chicago still made the playoffs on an annual basis but made early round exits each time In 1988 89 after three straight first round defeats and despite a fourth place finish in their division in the regular season Chicago made it to the Conference Final in the rookie seasons of both goalie Ed Belfour and center Jeremy Roenick However they would once again fail to make the Stanley Cup Finals losing to the eventual champions the Calgary Flames The following season the Hawks did prove they were late round playoff material running away with the Norris Division title but yet again the third round continued to stymie them this time against the eventual champion Oilers despite 1970s Soviet star goaltender Vladislav Tretiak coming to Chicago to become the Blackhawks goaltender coach In 1990 91 Chicago was poised to fare even better in the playoffs winning the Presidents Trophy for best regular season record but the Minnesota North Stars stunned them in six games in the first round en route to an improbable Stanley Cup Finals appearance In 1991 92 the Blackhawks with Roenick scoring 53 goals Steve Larmer scoring 29 goals Chris Chelios acquired from Montreal two years earlier on defense and Belfour in goal finally reached the Final after 19 years out of such status winning 11 consecutive playoff games that year setting an NHL record in the process However they were swept four games to none by the Mario Lemieux led defending Stanley Cup champion the Pittsburgh Penguins who in sweeping the Blackhawks tied the record Chicago had set only days before Although the 4 0 sweep indicated Pittsburgh s dominance in games won it was actually a close series that could have gone either way Game 1 saw the Blackhawks squander leads of 3 0 and 4 1 and would eventually be beaten 5 4 after a Lemieux power play goal with nine seconds remaining in regulation The Blackhawks most lackluster match was game two losing 3 1 A frustrating loss of 1 0 followed in game three and a natural hat trick from Dirk Graham and stellar play from Dominik Hasek who showed indications of the goaltender he would later become could not secure a win in game four which ended in a 6 5 final in favor of Pittsburgh The defending NBA champion Chicago Bulls were in their finals in 1992 but won their championship in six This was the only year the city of Chicago would host the NBA and NHL finals concurrently in the same year Blackhawks head coach Mike Keenan would see this again in New York when he coached the Rangers to their first Stanley Cup in 54 years in 1994 Belfour posted a 40 win season in 1992 93 as the Hawks looked to go deep yet again and Chelios accumulated career high penalty time with 282 minutes in the box but St Louis stunned Chicago with a first round sweep to continue Chicago s playoff losing streak The Blackhawks moved to the United Center pictured in 2006 in the middle of the 1994 95 season Although they finished near 500 in 1994 the Blackhawks again qualified for the playoffs They were eliminated by eventual Western Conference finalist Toronto but broke their playoff losing streak at 10 games with a game three win It wasn t enough however and the Blackhawks fell in six games The 1993 94 season was also the Blackhawks last at the Chicago Stadium as the team moved into the newly built United Center across the street for the lockout shortened 1995 season Bernie Nicholls and Joe Murphy both scored 20 goals over 48 games and Chicago once again made it to the Western Conference Final losing to the rival Detroit Red Wings Also in 1994 management fired Wayne Messmer popular singer of The Star Spangled Banner Roenick Belfour and Chelios were all traded away as the Blackhawks faltered through the late 1990s until they missed the playoffs by five points in 1998 for the first time in 29 years one season short of tying the Boston Bruins record for the longest such streak in North American professional sport history Chicago would also miss the playoffs for a second consecutive season in 1999 and missed the playoffs again in 2000 and 2001 The new millennium started with disappointment for the Blackhawks Eric Daze Alexei Zhamnov and Tony Amonte emerged as some of the team s leading stars by this time However aside from a quick first round exit in 2002 where they lost to the St Louis Blues in five games after winning Game 1 of the series the Hawks were consistently out of the playoffs from the 1997 98 season until the 2008 09 season in most years finishing well out of contention despite finishing in third place in the Central Division six times Amonte left for the Phoenix Coyotes in the summer of 2002 During the 2002 03 season the Blackhawks finished third in the Central Division with 79 points but would finish ninth in the Western Conference which would make them miss the playoffs by 13 points A somber note was struck in February 2004 when ESPN named the Blackhawks the worst franchise in professional sports 15 Indeed the Blackhawks were viewed with much indifference by Chicagoans for much of the 1990s and early 2000s due to anger over several policies instituted by then owner Bill Wirtz who was derisively known as Dollar Bill For example Wirtz did not allow home games to be televised in the Chicago area claiming it was unfair to the team s season ticket holders He also raised ticket prices to an average of 50 making them among the most expensive in the NHL The Chicago Wolves an American Hockey League AHL team based in Rosemont Illinois mocked the Blackhawks struggle by using the marketing slogan We Play Hockey the Old Fashioned Way We Actually Win 16 Following the lockout of the 2004 05 season new general manager Dale Tallon set about restructuring the team in the hopes of making a playoff run Tallon made several moves in the summer of 2005 most notably the signing of the Tampa Bay Lightning s Stanley Cup winning goaltender Nikolai Khabibulin and All Star defenseman Adrian Aucoin However injuries plagued Khabibulin and Aucoin among others and the Blackhawks again finished well out of the playoffs with a 26 43 13 record next to last in the Western Conference and the second worst in the NHL The Blackhawks reached another low point on May 16 2006 when they announced that popular TV radio play by play announcer Pat Foley would not be brought back after 25 years with the team a move unpopular amongst most fans Foley then became the television radio voice for the Chicago Wolves With the third overall pick in the 2006 NHL Entry Draft the team selected Jonathan Toews who led the University of North Dakota Fighting Sioux hockey team to the 2006 NCAA Frozen Four The Blackhawks were eager to make a splash in the free agent market and offered big money to many of the top free agents However they were denied only being able to acquire two backup goaltenders in Patrick Lalime and Sebastien Caron Chicago was one of the biggest buyers in the trade market acquiring a future franchise player in left winger Martin Havlat as well as center Bryan Smolinski from the Ottawa Senators in a three way trade that also involved the San Jose Sharks The Hawks dealt forward Mark Bell to the Sharks Michal Barinka and a 2008 second round draft pick to the Senators while Ottawa also received defenseman Tom Preissing and center Josh Hennessy from San Jose Havlat gave the Blackhawks the talented first line caliber game breaker they desperately needed The Havlat trade was soon followed by another major trade winger and key Blackhawk player Kyle Calder was traded to the Philadelphia Flyers in exchange for grinding defensive center Michal Handzus The move caused a stir in Chicago as Calder had won an increase in his contract through arbitration which was accepted by the Hawks but rather than ink their leading scorer the team decided to address their need for a proven center by acquiring Handzus Injuries to both Havlat and Handzus hurt the Blackhawks and Smolinski was eventually traded at the trade deadline to the Vancouver Canucks On November 26 2006 Blackhawks general manager Dale Tallon fired head coach Trent Yawney and appointed assistant coach Denis Savard as the head coach Savard had been the assistant coach of the team since 1997 a year after he retired as one of the most popular and successful Blackhawks players of all time The Blackhawks continued to struggle and finished last in the Central Division 12 points out of the playoffs They finished with the fourth worst record in the NHL and in the Draft Lottery won the opportunity to select first overall in the draft The team had never had a draft pick higher than third overall before and used the pick to draft right wing Patrick Kane from the London Knights of the Ontario Hockey League OHL Rocky Wirtz era 2007 present Edit 2007 2009 Rebuilding Edit On September 26 2007 longtime Blackhawks owner Bill Wirtz died after a brief battle with cancer 17 He was succeeded by his son Rocky who drastically altered his father s long standing policies 18 Midway into the 2007 08 NHL season the franchise experimented with a partnership with Comcast SportsNet Chicago and WGN TV by airing selected Blackhawks home games on television 19 During the next season Comcast and WGN began airing all of the team s regular season games 19 Rocky also named John McDonough former president of Major League Baseball s Chicago Cubs as the Blackhawks new president 20 After taking over the position McDonough was an instrumental figure in the Blackhawks current marketing success 21 Wirtz was also able to bring back former Blackhawks greats Tony Esposito Stan Mikita and Bobby Hull as the franchise s hockey ambassadors 22 Jonathan Toews pictured in 2009 named captain before the season started became the youngest player to captain the Hawks at age 20 In addition to the changes in the team s policies and front office the younger Wirtz also made a concerted effort to rebuild the team 23 The Blackhawks roster was bolstered by the addition of Patrick Kane the first overall selection in the 2007 NHL Entry Draft who led all rookies in points 24 Kane and Jonathan Toews were finalists for the Calder Memorial Trophy awarded to the NHL s best rookie Kane ultimately beat his teammate for the award 25 Kane finished the 2007 08 season with 21 goals and 51 assists in 82 games The Blackhawks finished with a record of 40 34 8 missing the playoffs by three points The 2007 08 season marked the first time in six years that the team finished above 500 26 Prior to the 2008 09 season opener the Blackhawks named 20 year old Toews as the new captain succeeding Adrian Aucoin who was traded to the Calgary Flames after the 2006 07 season and making him the third youngest captain at the time of appointment In addition to a new captain the Blackhawks made several major roster changes before the season trading Tuomo Ruutu their longest tenured player to the Carolina Hurricanes in exchange for forward Andrew Ladd on February 26 2008 27 Later that day the Blackhawks traded captain Martin Lapointe to the Ottawa Senators in exchange for a sixth round draft pick in the 2008 NHL Entry Draft 27 On July 1 the first day of free agency the team signed goaltender Cristobal Huet to a four year US 22 5 million contract and later signed defenseman Brian Campbell to an eight year 56 8 million contract 28 They also added former coaches Joel Quenneville and Scotty Bowman to their organization 29 30 31 On February 13 2008 the Blackhawks announced they would hold their first fan convention On July 16 2008 the team announced that they would host the 2009 NHL Winter Classic on a temporary ice rink at the Chicago Cubs home park Wrigley Field on New Year s Day against fellow Original Six members the Detroit Red Wings 32 the Red Wings defeated Chicago 6 4 On June 16 Pat Foley returned as the Blackhawks TV play by play man replacing Dan Kelly Foley called Blackhawks games from 1981 to 2006 and spent the next two years broadcasting for the Chicago Wolves Foley was partnered with Eddie Olczyk to broadcast all of the Blackhawks games 33 34 On October 16 2008 the Blackhawks relieved Denis Savard of his head coaching duties and replaced him with Joel Quenneville 35 Savard has since been brought back to the organization as an ambassador The Blackhawks hosted the Detroit Red Wings at the 2009 NHL Winter Classic at Wrigley Field The Blackhawks finished the 2008 09 regular season in second place in their division with a record of 46 24 12 putting them in fourth place in the Western Conference with 104 points The Blackhawks clinched a playoff berth for the first time since the 2001 02 season with a 3 1 win over Nashville on April 3 On April 8 with a shootout loss to the Columbus Blue Jackets the Hawks clinched their first 100 point season in 17 years The Blackhawks defeated the fifth seeded Calgary Flames in six games to advance to the Western Conference Semifinals for the first time since 1996 36 The team proceeded to defeat the third seeded Vancouver Canucks in six games 37 and then played the then Stanley Cup champion the Detroit Red Wings for the Western Conference Championship losing the series in five games 38 During the 2008 09 season the team led the NHL in home attendance with a total of 912 155 spectators averaging 22 247 per game 39 This figure includes the 40 818 fans from the Winter Classic at Wrigley Field Therefore the total attendance for games hosted at the United Center is 871 337 good for an average of 21 783 which still led the NHL over Montreal s 21 273 average The Blackhawks welcomed their one millionth fan of the season at the United Center before Game 6 of the Western Conference Semifinals on May 11 2009 40 2009 10 The Stanley Cup returns to Chicago Edit Chicago skyline with the CNA Center showing the Blackhawks logo the Smurfit Stone Building reading Go Hawks and the Blue Cross Blue Shield Tower reading Hawks win the night after the 2009 10 Chicago Blackhawks won the 2010 Stanley Cup Finals viewed from the Petrillo Music Shell lawn in Grant Park Prior to the 2009 10 NHL season the Blackhawks made another major free agent purchase signing Marian Hossa to a 12 year US 62 8 million contract 41 The team also acquired Tomas Kopecky John Madden and Richard Petiot 41 42 In early July general manager Dale Tallon and the Blackhawks management came under fire when the National Hockey League Players Association NHLPA claimed that the team did not submit offers to their restricted free agents before the deadline 43 In the worst case scenario the team s unsigned restricted free agents at the time including Calder Memorial Trophy finalist Kris Versteeg would have become unrestricted free agents 43 Despite the ordeal the Blackhawks were able to sign Versteeg and all of their restricted free agents before the NHLPA could take further action 43 On July 14 2009 the Blackhawks demoted Tallon to the position of senior adviser Stan Bowman son of Scotty Bowman was promoted to general manager 44 The Blackhawks continued to sell out games with the best average attendance of 21 356 over Montreal s 21 273 in the NHL and had a total of 854 267 excluding the playoffs The Blackhawks reached the one million mark in Game 3 of the Western Conference Finals against the San Jose Sharks Patrick Kane hoisting the Stanley Cup and Jonathan Toews holding the Conn Smythe Trophy during the Blackhawks victory parade U S President Barack Obama with members of the Blackhawks after a ceremony to honor their 2010 Stanley Cup victory at the White House The Blackhawks re signed Patrick Kane and Jonathan Toews to contract extensions worth 31 5 million over five years and Duncan Keith to a 13 year extension worth 72 million on December 1 2009 On April 6 2010 the Hawks won their 50th game of the 2009 10 season against the Dallas Stars setting a new franchise record for wins in a season The next night the Hawks notched their 109th point of the season against the St Louis Blues setting another franchise record The Blackhawks made the playoffs for the second consecutive season with a regular season record of 52 22 8 They defeated the Nashville Predators in six games in the first round before defeating the third seeded Vancouver Canucks for the second straight year again in six games The Blackhawks then swept the top seeded San Jose Sharks in the Western Conference Finals advancing to the Stanley Cup Finals for the first time since 1992 where they played the Philadelphia Flyers The Blackhawks prevailed in six games to secure their fourth Stanley Cup in franchise history and their first since 1961 ending the team s 49 year championship drought 45 2010 2012 Edit The Blackhawks immediately faced salary cap constraints prior to the 2010 11 NHL season The team was forced to trade many players who played an integral role to their 2009 10 Stanley Cup victory including Dustin Byfuglien Andrew Ladd Kris Versteeg Brent Sopel Ben Eager and Colin Fraser 46 The team was also unable to agree to terms with starting goaltender Antti Niemi who left as restricted free agent to the San Jose Sharks 47 The Blackhawks signed former Dallas Stars starting goalie Marty Turco as his replacement but eventually turned to rookie Corey Crawford to become their full time starting goaltender 48 The Blackhawks also made a mid season trade to acquire winger Michael Frolik from the Florida Panthers in exchange for Jack Skille Hugh Jessiman and David Pacan 49 Amidst the roster turnaround the Blackhawks finished the season with a 44 29 9 record and placed third in the Central Division and eighth in the Western Conference The team s playoff fate was determined on the final day of the regular season 50 The Blackhawks lost their regular season finale to the Detroit Red Wings but received the final seed in the Western Conference after the Minnesota Wild defeated the Dallas Stars 50 In the first round of the 2011 playoffs the Blackhawks faced the top seeded Vancouver Canucks marking the third consecutive post season the two teams faced each other 51 The Canucks built a three game lead in the series before the Blackhawks were able to win three games in a row 51 Alex Burrows won Game 7 for the Canucks in overtime 2 1 51 Before the 2011 12 season the Blackhawks continued to make roster moves to optimize their salary cap situation The team traded Troy Brouwer to the Washington Capitals in exchange for the 26th overall pick in the 2011 NHL Entry Draft used to select Phillip Danault and traded defenseman Brian Campbell who had one of the richest contracts in the franchise s history to the Florida Panthers 52 The team bolstered their forward depth by signing veterans Daniel Carcillo Jamal Mayers and Andrew Brunette 53 while also acquiring goaltender Ray Emery to back up Corey Crawford 54 The Blackhawks called up prospects Brandon Saad Andrew Shaw Nick Leddy and Marcus Kruger who became regular starters 55 The Blackhawks placed fourth in the Central Division with a 45 26 11 record and qualified for the playoffs for a fourth consecutive season 56 They faced the Phoenix Coyotes in the opening round who eliminated the Blackhawks in six games The series saw five of the six games going to overtime with Bryan Bickell game 2 and Jonathan Toews game 5 scoring the only Blackhawk overtime winners of the series 57 2012 13 Presidents Trophy and fifth Stanley Cup Edit The Blackhawks started the lockout shortened 2012 13 season with much success by establishing several new records On January 27 2013 they set a new franchise record for starting the season 6 0 0 after a win against the Detroit Red Wings 58 On February 19 the Blackhawks tied the NHL record previously set by the Anaheim Ducks in the 2006 07 season for earning points in the first 16 consecutive games of a season and beat the Ducks record 28 points by one point 59 On March 6 the Blackhawks extended the NHL record to 24 games with a record of 21 0 3 and the franchise record for most consecutive wins to 11 games 60 However they lost 6 2 to the Colorado Avalanche on March 8 60 their first loss in regulation which ended their 24 game streak in which they earned at least one point an NHL record to start a season 60 and the third longest in NHL history 61 62 The 2013 Stanley Cup champion Blackhawks meet President Obama at the White House The United Center also recorded its 200th consecutive combined regular season and playoff Blackhawks sell out on March 1 against the Columbus Blue Jackets which began during the 2007 08 season with the game against the Blue Jackets on March 30 2008 63 The Blackhawks won the 2012 13 Presidents Trophy for the best regular season record in the NHL and clinched home ice advantage throughout the playoffs 64 After dispatching the Minnesota Wild in the first round the Blackhawks faced the Detroit Red Wings in the Western Conference Semifinals The Blackhawks won the series opener but lost the next three games and faced elimination However the Blackhawks clawed back into the series eventually winning the series on a goal by Brent Seabrook in overtime of Game 7 65 The team then defeated the Los Angeles Kings in five games to secure a second Stanley Cup Finals appearance in four seasons 66 The Blackhawks faced the Boston Bruins another Original Six team in the 2013 Stanley Cup Finals 67 It was the first time since 1979 that two Original Six teams had made the Stanley Cup Finals and the first time since 1945 that the last four teams to win the Stanley Cup were in the Conference Finals 67 The Bruins made their second appearance in the Finals in three years winning in 2011 and were making a similar resurgence as the Blackhawks On June 24 the Blackhawks defeated the Bruins in the sixth game of the series to win the Stanley Cup having overcome a 2 1 deficit with just over a minute remaining in the game 64 Bryan Bickell and Dave Bolland scored goals with 1 16 and 0 58 3 remaining in the game just 17 seconds apart to win 3 2 64 2013 14 Edit The Blackhawks played the Pittsburgh Penguins at Soldier Field for game four of the 2014 NHL Stadium Series The Blackhawks began the 2013 14 season in hopes of becoming the first team to win consecutive Stanley Cups since the Detroit Red Wings in 1997 and 1998 68 The team was dramatically altered in the off season to remain under the salary cap 69 The team traded Dave Bolland Daniel Carcillo and Michael Frolik in exchange for future draft picks while parting ways with Ray Emery and Viktor Stalberg 70 Despite these changes the Blackhawks tallied a 28 7 7 record going into January 2014 The team played their second outdoor game in franchise history against the Pittsburgh Penguins at Soldier Field as part of the 2014 NHL Stadium Series The Blackhawks defeated the Penguins 5 1 in front of 62 921 fans 71 The franchise recorded its 2 500th regular season win while head coach Joel Quenneville won 693 wins as a coach the third most in the history of the NHL 72 73 The Blackhawks finished the season with a 46 21 15 record good for third in the Central Division They opened the playoffs by losing two games to the St Louis Blues The Blackhawks surged back with four straight wins to take the series 74 The team then defeated the Minnesota Wild for the second consecutive year However the Los Angeles Kings defeated the Blackhawks in seven games and ultimately went on to win the Stanley Cup 75 After the season s conclusion Duncan Keith won the James Norris Memorial Trophy for the second time in his career and Jonathan Toews was named a finalist for the Frank J Selke Trophy 76 77 2014 15 Sixth Stanley Cup Edit The Hawks faced the Washington Capitals at Nationals Park for the 2015 NHL Winter Classic The Blackhawks roster remained largely intact following the 2013 14 season The team signed veteran center Brad Richards and rookie goaltender Scott Darling to one year contracts and traded defenseman Nick Leddy to the New York Islanders in exchange for three prospects 78 79 80 For the first half of the season Patrick Kane led the team in scoring and points The Blackhawks mustered a 30 15 2 record going into the All Star break 81 The Blackhawks sent six players to the All Star Game including Kane Jonathan Toews Duncan Keith Brent Seabrook and Corey Crawford 82 The team also played in the 2015 NHL Winter Classic at Nationals Park in Washington D C where they lost 3 2 to the Washington Capitals 83 However in late February Kane suffered a shoulder injury that was expected to sideline him for the remainder of the regular season and much of the playoffs 84 The team called up rookie Teuvo Teravainen from the AHL and traded their first round pick in the 2015 NHL Entry Draft to acquire center Antoine Vermette from the Arizona Coyotes 85 The Blackhawks also acquired veteran defenseman Kimmo Timonen from the Philadelphia Flyers for second round picks in 2015 and 2016 86 and Andrew Desjardins from the San Jose Sharks in exchange for Ben Smith 87 The Blackhawks finished the season with a 48 28 6 record placing third in their division and allowed the fewest goals in the NHL 88 source source source source source source source source source source source source track President Obama welcomes the Blackhawks to the White House for a third time to commemorate the team s 2015 Stanley Cup victory Kane recovered quicker than expected and was ready for the start of the playoffs 89 The Blackhawks dispatched the Nashville Predators in six games and swept the Minnesota Wild to advance to the Western Conference Finals for the fifth time in seven years 90 The top seeded Anaheim Ducks held a 3 2 lead in the series but the Blackhawks rallied back in the series to win games six and seven The team then defeated the Tampa Bay Lightning in the 2015 Stanley Cup Finals to secure their third Stanley Cup in six seasons 91 2015 2020 Edit The Blackhawks roster experienced another dramatic reconstruction before the 2015 16 season The team was unable to come to terms with pending free agent Brandon Saad who had played a pivotal role in the 2015 playoffs 92 The Blackhawks traded Saad s negotiation rights along with prospects Alex Broadhurst and Michael Paliotta to the Columbus Blue Jackets in exchange for Artem Anisimov Marko Dano Corey Tropp Jeremy Morin and fourth round draft pick Anatoly Golyshev in the 2016 NHL Entry Draft 93 The Blackhawks were unable to re sign unrestricted free agents Brad Richards Antoine Vermette and Johnny Oduya due to salary cap constraints 94 The team then traded longtime veteran and fan favorite Patrick Sharp along with Stephen Johns to the Dallas Stars in exchange for Trevor Daley and forward Ryan Garbutt in order to stay under the salary cap 95 Amidst the roster turnover the Blackhawks signed free agent Artemi Panarin from the Kontinental Hockey League KHL to an entry level contract 96 The Blackhawks offense was led by Patrick Kane who scored an NHL best 106 points in 2015 16 and also won the season s Hart Memorial Trophy as league MVP 97 Panarin who skated on Kane s line won the Calder Memorial Trophy awarded to the NHL s best first year player 98 Midway through the season the Blackhawks attempted to supplement their roster by making several trades The Blackhawks dealt Jeremy Morin to the Toronto Maple Leafs in exchange for Richard Panik 99 The team then reacquired Andrew Ladd from the Winnipeg Jets in exchange for their first round selection in the 2016 NHL Entry Draft and Marko Dano 100 The team then traded Phillip Danault and their 2018 second round pick to the Montreal Canadiens in exchange for forwards Dale Weise and Tomas Fleischmann 101 The team finished with a 46 26 9 record good for 103 points and third place in their division The Blackhawks were defeated by the St Louis Blues in a seven game series in the first round of the 2016 playoffs 102 The loss marked the Blackhawks earliest playoff exit since 2012 103 Salary cap constraints forced the Blackhawks to make additional trades before the 2016 17 season The team traded pending free agent Andrew Shaw to Montreal in exchange for two second round 2016 draft picks 104 The Blackhawks also traded Bryan Bickell and Teuvo Teravaainen to the Carolina Hurricanes in exchange for another 2016 second round pick in order to free additional salary cap space 105 The Blackhawks signed veteran Brian Campbell and KHL stand out Michal Kempny during free agency 106 107 The team then turned to their farm system to replenish their depth The Blackhawks promoted rookies Ryan Hartman Gustav Forsling Tyler Motte Nick Schmaltz and Vinnie Hinostroza to their starting line up to fill the vacancies left by Shaw Bickell and Teravainen 108 Patrick Kane spearheaded the Blackhawks offense with 34 goals and 55 assists tying for second in scoring during the regular season among all skaters 109 He was aided by his linemate Panarin who scored 31 goals and 43 assists 109 In addition to Kane and Panarin Jonathan Toews Marian Hossa Artem Anisimov and Richard Panik all scored at least 20 goals 110 Toews Kane Duncan Keith and Corey Crawford were also selected to play in the All Star Game 111 The Blackhawks finished the season with 109 points placing first in the Central Division and earning the top seed in the Western Conference for the 2017 playoffs 109 However they were swept in the first round by the eighth seeded Nashville Predators in one of the biggest upsets in NHL playoff history this was the first time that an eighth seed swept a playoff series against the top team in the conference 112 Goaltender Pekka Rinne and the Predators defense marginalized the Blackhawks offense limiting the team to only three total goals in the series including a pair of shutouts in Game 1 1 0 and Game 2 5 0 at the United Center to begin the series 113 Prior to the 2017 18 season the Blackhawks revealed Marian Hossa would miss the entire 2017 18 season due to a progressive skin disorder 114 115 The team made two major trades before the 2017 NHL Entry Draft veteran defenseman Niklas Hjalmarsson was dealt to the Arizona Coyotes in exchange for Connor Murphy and Laurent Dauphin while Artemi Panarin was traded to the Columbus Blue Jackets to reacquire Brandon Saad in a four player deal 116 Both Hjalmarsson and Hossa were core members of the Blackhawks roster that won three Stanley Cups in 2010 2013 and 2015 116 The team also traded goaltender Scott Darling to the Carolina Hurricanes and center Marcus Kruger to the Vegas Golden Knights while also lost defensemen Trevor van Riemsdyk to the Golden Knights in the 2017 NHL Expansion Draft and Brian Campbell who retired 117 The Blackhawks acquired wingers Patrick Sharp Tommy Wingels and Lance Bouma in free agency 117 The Blackhawks opened the 2017 18 season with a resounding 10 1 victory over the Pittsburgh Penguins 118 The Blackhawks were four games above 500 with an 18 14 6 record at the end of December 2017 and only four points out of a playoff spot 119 However goaltender Corey Crawford missed much of 2018 due to an upper body injury 120 Inconsistent defense and goaltending coupled with limited offense resulted in the team falling to the bottom of the Central Division 121 122 The Blackhawks were eliminated from playoff contention on March 20 2018 marking the first time in nine years that the team failed to qualify for the Stanley Cup playoffs 122 The team finished the season with a 33 39 10 record and 76 points in the standings 123 The Blackhawks made modest acquisitions during the opening day of free agency by acquiring veterans Cam Ward Chris Kunitz and Brandon Manning 124 The team made their biggest move of the offseason by offloading Hossa s contract onto the Arizona Coyotes by trading Vinnie Hinostroza Jordan Oesterle and third round draft pick in the 2019 NHL Draft in exchange for Marcus Kruger MacKenzie Entwistle Jordan Maletta Andrew Campbell and a fifth round draft pick in the 2019 NHL Draft 125 Quenneville named Ward the team s starting goaltender as Crawford missed the first five games of the 2018 19 season with concussion like symptoms The Blackhawks opened the season with a promising 6 2 2 start despite Crawford s initial absence 126 However after losing their next five games 126 head coach Quenneville as well as assistant coaches Kevin Dineen and Ulf Samuelsson were fired on November 6 2018 Jeremy Colliton previously the head coach of the Blackhawks AHL affiliate the Rockford IceHogs was named the 38th head coach in franchise history 127 The team adjusted their roster by trading Nick Schmaltz to the Arizona Coyotes in exchange for Dylan Strome and Brendan Perlini 128 The Blackhawks then dealt Brandon Manning to the Edmonton Oilers for Drake Caggiula 129 The team struggled despite these changes and plummeted to the bottom of the NHL s standings by the All Star break 130 but then rebounded with an 18 10 3 record during the second half of the season and missed playoffs by six points while finishing in sixth place in the Central Division 131 After missing the playoffs for the second straight season the Blackhawks won the third overall pick in the 2019 NHL Entry Draft at the NHL Draft Lottery which they used to select Kirby Dach 132 133 Prior to the 2019 20 season the Blackhawks signed center Ryan Carpenter and goaltender Robin Lehner on the opening day of free agency 134 The team made three separate trades to acquire Olli Maatta Calvin de Haan and Alex Nylander 135 The team reacquired fan favorite Andrew Shaw in a trade with the Montreal Canadiens 136 The Blackhawks also inserted rookie Dominik Kubalik into their roster whom they acquired from the Los Angeles Kings in the previous season 137 The Blackhawks posted a 32 30 8 record and finished last in their division before the remainder of the regular season was canceled due to the COVID 19 pandemic 138 The team fired John McDonough who served as the Blackhawks president for 13 years 139 The Blackhawks obtained a spot in the 2020 Stanley Cup playoffs which used a 24 team playoff format among the top 12 teams in each conference 140 The 12th seeded Blackhawks defeated the Edmonton Oilers in the qualifying round of the playoffs to advance to the Western Conference first round 141 where they lost to the Vegas Golden Knights in five games 142 The 2020 21 NHL season would be delayed to January 2021 and condensed to 56 games due to the COVID 19 pandemic The Blackhawks signed forwards Mattias Janmark Lucas Wallmark and Carl Soderberg during free agency to one year deals 143 Veteran forward Brandon Saad was dealt to the Colorado Avalanche for defensemen Nikita Zadorov and Anton Lindholm 144 The team s captain Jonathan Toews announced he would forgo the season due to an undisclosed medical illness 145 The Blackhawks parted with longtime netminder Corey Crawford who signed with the New Jersey Devils but ultimately retired before the season s start 146 Brent Seabrook the team s veteran defenseman announced his retirement midway through the season due a lingering hip injury sustained in 2019 147 Andrew Shaw who previously rejoined the Blackhawks in 2019 also announced he would retire from playing due to concussions suffered throughout his career 148 The Blackhawks relied heavily on their rookies during the season to replenish their depth including forwards Brandon Hagel Philipp Kurashev and Pius Suter defensemen Ian Mitchell and Wyatt Kalynuk and goaltender Kevin Lankinen 149 150 Despite the roster turnaround the Blackhawks completed the first half of the season with a 14 9 5 record and sat in fourth place in their division 151 The team struggled from mid March through April going 8 15 1 and subsequently traded away Janmark Wallmark and Soderberg at the trade deadline 150 The Blackhawks failed to qualify for the playoffs and finished in sixth place with a 24 25 7 record 150 151 The Blackhawks also re arranged their front office in 2020 by naming Danny Wirtz Rocky Wirtz s son as their CEO and promoting general manager Stan Bowman to President of Hockey Operations 152 2021 present Edit Prior to the 2021 22 season former Blackhawks prospect Kyle Beach alleged he was sexually assaulted by Brad Aldrich the team s former video coach during the 2009 10 season 153 154 Beach filed a lawsuit against the Blackhawks for failing to adequately address Aldrich s wrongdoings or file formal police reports 155 A separate party a former high school student whom Aldrich sexually assaulted during his tenure at Houghton High School also filed a lawsuit against the Blackhawks alleging the team gave a positive reference on behalf of Aldrich and failed to disclose any details about his sexual assault in 2010 153 The Blackhawks partnered with law firm Jenner amp Block to conduct an internal investigation that spanned 139 interviews over four months It revealed that the team s brain trust including team president John McDonough executive vice president Jay Blunk general manager Stan Bowman assistant general manager Kevin Cheveldayoff and head coach Joel Quenneville met just days before the start of the 2010 Stanley Cup Finals and deferred any action on Aldrich until after the Finals Aldrich was subsequently allowed to quietly resign after taking part in the Stanley Cup victory celebration 154 Within hours of the report s release on October 26 2021 Bowman and senior director of hockey operations Al MacIsaac the only participants in the 2010 meeting still with the Blackhawks resigned Assistant general manager Kyle Davidson took over as interim general manager 154 The NHL also imposed a 2 million fine on the Blackhawks for inadequate internal procedures and insufficient and untimely response in the handling of matters related to former video coach Brad Aldrich s employment It also stated that most of the participants in the meeting including McDonough Bowman Blunk and MacIssac will not be allowed to work in the NHL again without permission from the league office 156 Quenneville by then head coach of the Florida Panthers resigned after meeting with Bettman on October 28 and will also have to meet with Bettman if he wants to work in the league again 157 158 Bettman subsequently met with Cheveldayoff by now the general manager of the Winnipeg Jets but cleared him of wrongdoing Bettman stated that he could not assign to Cheveldayoff responsibility for the Club s actions or inactions because Cheveldayoff was not a member of the Blackhawks senior leadership team at the time 159 Aldrich s name was removed from the Cup as requested by the team 160 Beach and the Blackhawks reached an undisclosed settlement on December 15 161 However the second lawsuit filed against the Blackhawks by a former high school student was dismissed 162 Before his resignation Bowman intended on building a competitive team that could make the playoffs immediately rather than focusing on rebuilding for the future 163 The team dealt veteran defenseman Duncan Keith to the Edmonton Oilers in exchange for a draft pick and Caleb Jones 164 The Blackhawks traded Brent Seabrook s contract to the Tampa Bay Lightning in exchange for center Tyler Johnson 163 The team then acquired Seth Jones from the Columbus Blue Jackets in exchange for two draft picks and prospect Adam Boqvist 163 The Blackhawks leveraged their open salary cap to acquire reigning Vezina Trophy winner Marc Andre Fleury from the Vegas Golden Knights who were in desperate need of cap relief 163 The team signed defensemen Jake McCabe and winger Jujhar Khaira in free agency 163 Blackhawks captain Jonathan Toews who had missed the previous seasons due to chronic immune response syndrome also announced he would return for the 2021 22 season 165 On November 6 Colliton was fired after leading the team to a 1 9 2 record to start the season the second worst in the NHL at the time Derek King former IceHogs head coach was named his interim replacement 166 Davidson was formally named the team s general manager on March 1 2022 167 The Blackhawks were unable to recover from their poor start and fell out of playoff contention by the trade deadline The team dealt Brandon Hagel to Tampa Bay in exchange for two first round picks Boris Katchouk and Taylor Raddysh 168 while also trading Fleury to the Minnesota Wild for a second round pick 169 The team finished sixth place in Central Division with a 28 42 12 record 170 The 2021 22 season also marked announcer Pat Foley s final season with the Blackhawks who had been with the team for 39 years 171 The Blackhawks hired Luke Richardson as the 40th coach in their franchise s history in 2022 On June 27 2022 the Blackhawks named Luke Richardson as their 40th head coach in franchise history 172 General manager Davidson announced the Blackhawks would commit to rebuilding their roster and acquiring draft capital 173 The team traded Alex DeBrincat to the Ottawa Senators and Kirby Dach to the Montreal Canadiens for the seventh and thirteenth picks in the 2022 NHL Entry Draft 173 Chicago also acquired the twenty fifth overall pick in the draft from the Toronto Maple Leafs by taking on goalie Petr Mrazek s contract 173 The Blackhawks made modest acquisitions in free agency signing veteran forwards Andreas Athanasiou Colin Blackwell and Max Domi 174 The team fell to the bottom of the Central Division and again emerged as sellers at the 2022 23 trade deadline 175 Patrick Kane was traded to the Arizona Coyotes for Vili Saarijarvi and Kane was then later sent to the New York Rangers as part of a three team trade The Blackhawks received Andy Welinski a conditional second round pick in 2023 and a fourth round pick in 2025 from the Rangers to complete the trade 175 The Blackhawks also dealt Jake McCabe Sam Lafferty and Max Domi while also taking on Nikita Zaitsev s contract from the Ottawa Senators in exchange for additional draft capital 175 176 Captain Jonathan Toews missed 29 games while recovering from Long COVID 177 The Blackhawks finished last in their division with the third worst record in the NHL 178 Before their final regular season game the team also announced that they would not re sign captain Jonathan Toews 179 Team information EditJerseys Edit The Blackhawks wear predominantly red jerseys featuring three sets of black and white stripes along the sleeves and waist 180 181 The team s logo is displayed on the front of each jersey along with a C representing Chicago on each shoulder with two crossed tomahawks 180 The Blackhawks debuted this design in 1955 and have since only made minor modifications to the jersey 180 181 In 2007 The Blackhawks along with all other NHL teams made minute changes to their uniforms by adding larger logo a new collar with the NHL logo and a baseball style cut along the bottom 182 The team previously donned alternate third jersey that was primarily black with red and white stripes between 1996 and 2007 181 183 The Blackhawks brought this design back in 2008 before making their 2009 Winter Classic jerseys their alternates between 2009 and 2011 After the 2019 Winter Classic the Blackhawks made their jersey from the game their alternate wearing it for three more games in 2019 and in three games during the 2019 20 season 184 The Blackhawks uniform was voted one of the 25 best in professional sports by Paul Lukas of GQ in November 2004 185 The Hockey News voted the team s jersey as the best in the NHL 186 Greg Wyshynski of Yahoo Sports listed the Blackhawks home jerseys as the second best NHL jersey in the history of the NHL in 2017 187 The Blackhawks were voted to have the best uniform in the history of the NHL in a fan vote conducted by the NHL in 2017 188 The Blackhawks have donned Camouflage practice jerseys for Veterans Day to show support for servicemen since 2009 Since 2009 the Blackhawks have worn special camouflage jerseys on Veterans Day during their pregame warm ups The jerseys are later sold in auctions to raise money for the USO of Illinois 189 The Blackhawks wore jerseys based on the design worn in the 1936 37 season for the 2009 NHL Winter Classic The jersey is predominantly black with a large beige stripe across the chest also on the sleeves with a red border and an old style circular Black Hawks logo 190 The Blackhawks used this Winter Classic design as their third jersey for the 2009 10 season until they retired after the 2010 11 season with the only change in the design was by adding the familiar C with crossed tomahawks on the shoulders For the 2014 NHL Stadium Series the Blackhawks wore a black uniform similar to the alternates they wore from 1996 to 2009 but the stripes around the waist are no longer straight they are jagged around the sides in order to follow the shape of the bottom of the jersey Keeping with stripes the ones on the arms simply stop halfway round angled numbers are above these sleeve half stripes On one shoulder is the familiar C with crossed tomahawks logo and the Chicago 2014 Stadium Series logo on the other Each 2014 NHL Stadium Series jerseys features chrome treated logo designs inspired by the NHL shield The chrome crest was developed using new technology that fuses print and embroidery and allows logos to be displayed as a high resolution image incorporated into the crest As a result the design reduces the weight of the crest creating in a lighter jersey Numbering on the back of the jersey is enlarged and sleeve numbers are angled to improve visibility in outdoor venues 191 The team wore a uniform which was inspired by their 1957 58 jersey for the 2015 NHL Winter Classic This uniform is nearly identical to the road uniform that the Blackhawks currently wear The main differences between this design and the current road design come in the form of the lace up collar the name number block font which is serifed and the C Tomahawk logo which is mostly red black and white with a tad bit of yellow instead of being mostly red yellow green black and white 192 For the 2016 NHL Stadium Series the Blackhawks wore a unique uniform for their game against the Minnesota Wild This uniform is primarily white with black red black stripes on the sleeves and socks The current logo is on the chest Framed between the two black stripes and over the red stripe on the sleeve is the familiar C with crossed tomahawks The collar of the uniform features two different colors The four six pointed red stars from the Flag of Chicago is featured on the white portion of the collar while the other side of the collar is black Sleeve numbers have been shifted to the shoulders and enlarged With the shoulders being black the numbering is white But the numbering and lettering on the back is also enlarged and black in color 193 For the 2017 NHL Winter Classic the Blackhawks wore uniforms very similar to what they wore at the 2015 NHL Winter Classic These new uniforms however feature a few modifications that were made to them The most notable changes are to the logo and the cross tomahawks The logo this time is the appropriate logo that the franchise used in 1957 65 But they removed the roundel and the lettering so that just the logo itself stands out The placement of the familiar C with crossed tomahawks is featured in the same position with the same striping pattern on the sleeve as the 2015 NHL Winter Classic uniform had The only differences between the tomahawks from the 2015 NHL Winter Classic uniform and the 2017 NHL Winter Classic uniform are where the colors are placed for the tomahawk The 2017 NHL Winter Classic patch is featured on the right shoulder 194 To honor the NHL s centennial year a special anniversary logo was designed for the remainder of the 2016 17 season which started on January 1 2017 for all thirty teams featuring a banner wrapped around the number 100 with the current NHL shield in the foreground Both the banner and the number 100 are in same silver color as the NHL shield 195 The Blackhawks wore this logo patch underneath the numbering on the right sleeve on both the home and away jerseys The Blackhawks debuted this patch on their home jerseys on January 5 2017 and then they debuted the patch on the away jerseys on January 13 2017 All home and away jerseys for all thirty teams will continue to have patches of the NHL s centennial emblem for the 2017 18 season located above or below the numbers on their right sleeves for at least up to the playing of the NHL 100 Classic on December 16 2017 196 Adidas signed an agreement with the NHL to be the official outfitter of uniforms and licensed apparel for all teams starting with the 2017 18 season replacing Reebok 197 The Reebok Edge template will now be retired in favor of the Adidas ADIZERO template The home and away uniforms that were debuted in the 2007 08 season remain nearly identical with the exception of the new Adidas ADIZERO template and the new collar With the new collar the NHL shield remains but is no longer placed on a lower layer with flaps nearby as it s now front and center on a pentagon with a new Chrome Flex style 198 The waist stripes are now curved instead of being straight across The Adidas logo replaces the Reebok logo on the back collar For the entire 2018 19 season on both the home and away uniforms the Blackhawks wore memorial patches in remembrance of Stan Mikita who died on August 7 2018 The memorial patch featured 21 in white on a black circle that is placed on the upper left corner on the front side of the uniform 199 200 non primary source needed For the 2019 NHL Winter Classic the Blackhawks wore uniforms similar to what they wore from the 1926 27 season to the 1934 35 season The black and white uniform features the black and white Native American head logo on a black and white roundel with the wording Blackhawks arched on top and Chicago arched below The Native American head logo inside the roundel features the 1999 2000 native American head logo that they currently wear The uniform has four white stripes on each of the shoulders and five white stripes of varying thickness on each sleeve and around the waist Inside the collar we see several diagonal white lines which is a nod to the end zone design used at Notre Dame Stadium Mixed in between these white lines are the six years written in red the six years the Blackhawks won the Stanley Cup The Blackhawks won the Stanley Cup in 1934 1938 1961 2010 2013 and 2015 201 After the 2019 NHL Winter Classic the team announced that uniforms from the game would be worn in three home games of the 2018 19 season 202 For the 2019 20 NHL season the home and away uniforms that were unveiled for the 2017 18 season remain nearly identical with the exception of the new collar designs The new collar on the home uniform transitions from white to a solid red on the front as it comes over the shoulder leading into the NHL logo with a red background in the center The new collar on the away uniform transitions from red to a solid white on the front as it comes over the shoulder leading into the NHL logo with a white background in the center 203 204 Beginning with the 2020 21 NHL season the league allowed for advertising on its gameday uniforms for the first time starting with helmet ads 205 The Blackhawks first helmet ad sponsor was United Airlines 206 For the 2020 21 NHL season the Blackhawks would wear Reverse Retro alternate uniforms The design was largely inspired from the team s 1940s uniforms minus the barber pole elements 207 A second Reverse Retro uniform was released in the 2022 23 season based on their 1938 uniform Across the chest is CHICAGO in white with red trim inspired by the 2019 NHL Winter Classic crest and the current Blackhawks primary logo is added as a shoulder patch on the left side 208 Starting with the 2021 22 NHL regular season Adidas introduced new environmentally friendly uniforms for all teams with its Adidas ADIZERO Primegreen Authentic template 209 The template is made with a minimum of 50 recycled content while still retaining their high performance materials Each team uniform will maintain its classic stripping and logo while boasting dimensional embroidery that draws attention to their sustainable materials and a two layer twill that underscores the product s authenticity For the Blackhawks the logo on their uniforms now feature raised markings on the face of their logo the forehead lines the eyebrow and eye as well as the facepaint are all now raised rather than flat as it had been before 210 For the entire 2021 22 NHL season on both the home and away uniforms the Blackhawks are wearing memorial patches in remembrance of Tony Esposito who died on August 10 2021 The memorial patch features 35 in white on a black circle that is placed on the upper left corner on the front side of the uniform 211 212 213 Logo Edit Further information Chicago Blackhawks name and logo controversy This vintage logo was brought back in 1991 2008 and 2021 it was their primary logo from the 1937 38 to 1954 55 seasons Irene Castle McLaughlin s wife designed the original version of the team s logo which featured a crudely drawn black and white Native head in a circle 214 This design went through several significant changes between 1926 and 1955 During this period seven distinct versions of the primary logo were worn on the team s uniforms At the beginning of the 1955 56 season the outer circle was removed and the head began to resemble the team s current primary logo This crest and uniform went through subtle changes until the 1964 65 season the basic logo and jersey design have remained constant ever since In 2008 The Hockey News staff voted the team s main logo to be the best in the NHL 215 In 2010 sports columnist Damien Cox called on the franchise to retire the racially insensitive logo saying that Clearly no right thinking person would name a team after an aboriginal figure these days any more than they would use Muslims or Africans or Chinese or any ethnic group to depict a specific sporting notion 216 Furthermore the National Congress of American Indians NCAI believes that all Native themed logos including that of the Blackhawks continue to profit from harmful stereotypes originated during a time when white superiority and segregation were common place 217 In 2019 the American Indian Center of Chicago ended all ties to the Chicago Blackhawks Foundation stating they will no longer affiliate with organizations that perpetuate stereotypes through the use of Indian mascots The AIC noted in its statement that they previously held a relationship with the Chicago Blackhawks Foundation with the intention of educating the general public about American Indians and the use of logos and mascots The AIC along with members of the community have since decided to end this relationship and stated that going forward AIC will have no professional ties with the Blackhawks or any other organization that perpetuates harmful stereotypes 218 219 On July 7 2020 the Blackhawks issued a press release to defend their team s name and logo The team stated The Chicago Blackhawks name and logo symbolizes an important and historic person Black Hawk of Illinois Sac amp Fox Nation whose leadership and life has inspired generations of Native Americans veterans and the public The Blackhawks further stated they would expand awareness of Black Hawk and all Indigenous American contributions The press release came after other American professional sports teams including the Washington Redskins and Cleveland Indians reevaluated their names and logos 220 The National Congress of American Indians The American Indian Center of Chicago The Chi Nations Youth Council and over 1 500 Native organizations and advocates from over 150 federally recognized tribes across the country including members of the Sac and Fox Nation support changing the team name and logo 221 222 223 224 Members of Black Hawk s family have also spoken out opposing the use of Black Hawk as a mascot and caricature logo 224 The Chi Nations Youth Council CNYC an Indigenous youth organization in Chicago has said The Chicago Blackhawks name and logo symbolizes a legacy of imperialism and genocide As statutes sic of invaders slave holders and white supremacists fall across the nation so too should the images and language of the savage and dead Indians CNYC also noted As social consciousness has grown over the past decades so has the Blackhawks performative gestures of buying their reprieve from those willing to sell out the health and humanity of our future generations 225 Mascot Edit The Blackhawks mascot is Tommy Hawk an anthropomorphic black hawk who wears the Blackhawks four feathers on his head along with a Blackhawks jersey and hockey pants 226 Tommy Hawk often participates in the T shirt toss and puck chuck at the United Center 226 He walks around the concourse greeting fans before and during the game 226 The team introduced Tommy Hawk in the 2001 02 season 227 Tommy Hawk was inducted into the Mascot Hall of Fame in 2019 228 Fan apparel Edit On July 29 2020 the team agreed to ban headdresses from being worn at home games held in the United Center in recognition of being sacred symbols 229 230 Before the ban was enacted headdresses were among the apparel worn by Blackhawk fans during games 231 232 230 Fight and goal songs Edit Here Come the Hawks is the official fight song and introduction of the Chicago Blackhawks The song was written by J Swayzee an avid Blackhawks fan and produced by the Dick Marx Orchestra and Choir in 1968 and is heard quite often both in vocal and organ renditions during Blackhawks home games 233 In late 2007 the song Keys to the City was released by Ministry amp Co Conspirators as a gift to the Blackhawks organization 234 The Blackhawks were the first NHL team to sound a horn whenever they scored a goal at home Bill Wirtz installed his yacht s horn in the Chicago Stadium sound system and had it blare after every Blackhawks goal 235 The goal horn became a popular trend among other NHL teams after the Blackhawks played the Montreal Canadiens in the 1973 Stanley Cup Finals 235 The current incarnation of the goal horn dates from 1990 The Blackhawks began playing Chelsea Dagger by The Fratellis as their official goal song during the 2008 09 NHL season 233 236 The Blackhawks also had dedicated goal songs for Patrick Kane Rock You Like a Hurricane by The Scorpions Jonathan Toews Johnny B Goode by Chuck Berry and Patrick Sharp Sharp Dressed Man by ZZ Top 237 National anthem Edit Jim Cornelison sings the Star Spangled Banner at the United Center It is a tradition for Blackhawks fans to applaud and cheer loudly during the singing of the national anthem This tradition originated during a 1985 Campbell Conference playoff game at Chicago Stadium versus the Edmonton Oilers 238 Wayne Messmer the Blackhawks home games national anthem singer from 1980 to 1994 was the anthem singer when this tradition began 239 Jim Cornelison sings the national anthems for all home games and he is accompanied by organist Frank Pellico 239 Before Game 2 of the 2010 Stanley Cup Finals at the United Center the cheering during the anthem was registered between 116 and 122 decibels 240 Practice facilities Edit The Blackhawks practice facility the Fifth Third Arena is located in Chicago s Near West Side The 125 000 square foot facility opened in 2017 and cost 65 million to construct 241 The Fifth Third Arena also serves as community center and hosts youth high school and adult hockey and ice skating programs 242 The Blackhawks had previously used Johnny s Ice House West and The Edge Ice Arena in suburban Bensenville as their practice facility 243 Circus trip Edit The Blackhawks and their arena mates the Chicago Bulls embarked on an annual two week road trip in mid November dating back to when both teams inhabited Chicago Stadium 244 The Wirtz Family who at one point owned the Blackhawks Bulls and Chicago Stadium would lease the venue to circus acts and ice skating troupes 245 246 247 The Blackhawks played between six and seven games in western Canada and California during this time 244 In November 2016 the Ringling Bros and Barnum amp Bailey Circus announced they would not return to the United Center in 2017 244 As a result Disney on Ice performed its last two week show in 2017 before being condensed to one week in 2018 Media and announcers EditMain article List of Chicago Blackhawks broadcasters For the first time in team history all 82 games plus playoffs were broadcast on television during the 2008 09 season At least 20 of them aired on WGN TV Channel 9 the first time the Blackhawks had been seen on local over the air television in 30 years Games produced by WGN TV through its WGN Sports department are not available in its superstation feed WGN America due to league broadcast rights restrictions Other games not broadcast by WGN TV are aired on regional sports network NBC Sports Chicago the first time in at least 35 years that non nationally broadcast home games were seen locally either over the air or on cable On February 15 2011 it was announced that the team had renewed their broadcast contract with WGN TV for the next five years starting in the 2011 12 NHL season The deal was further extended for three more years on May 15 2014 keeping the team on Channel 9 until the end of the 2018 19 season 248 On January 2 2019 the Blackhawks along with the Chicago Bulls and Chicago White Sox agreed to an exclusive multi year deal with NBC Sports Chicago beginning with the 2019 20 season ending the team s broadcasts on WGN TV 249 Radio broadcasts since the 1970s and into the mid 2000s varied between WBBM 780 and WMAQ WSCR 670 Both frequencies are 50 000 watt clear channel stations that allowed the Blackhawks to be heard across the country at night but Blackhawks games often came into conflict with White Sox baseball by the start of April On April 30 2008 the team signed a three year deal with WGN Radio 720 AM another 50 000 watt station with games airing alternately instead on WIND 560 AM in scheduling conflict situations during the baseball season due to the Cubs having contractual preference to air on WGN these moved to WGWG LP Channel 6 87 7 FM an analog television station carrying an audio only sports talk format using a quirk in the FM band in mid 2014 when Tribune began a local marketing agreement with that station s owner During the 2010 Stanley Cup Finals the Cubs agreed to allow the Blackhawks games to be broadcast on WGN and have the Cubs revert to WIND when there was a conflict This allowed the Finals games to be heard over a larger area due to WGN s clear channel signal All Blackhawk games are also streamed live on wgnradio com regardless of whether the games are on WGN or WGWG LP WLUP FM 97 9 FM was also utilized as an alternate station As of the 2022 23 season Chris Vosters and John Wiedeman call play by play on television and radio respectively Patrick Sharp and Troy Murray serve as the TV color commentator with Colby Cohen and Caley Chelios providing occasional game analysis and other content on various media 250 Season by season record EditThis is a partial list of the last five seasons completed by the Blackhawks For the full season by season history see List of Chicago Blackhawks seasons Note GP Games played W Wins L Losses T Ties OTL Overtime losses Pts Points GF Goals for GA Goals against Season GP W L OTL Pts GF GA Finish Playoffs2018 19 82 36 34 12 84 270 292 6th Central Did not qualify2019 20 70 32 30 8 72 212 218 7th Central Lost in First Round 1 4 Golden Knights 2020 21 56 24 25 7 55 161 186 6th Central Did not qualify2021 22 82 28 42 12 68 219 291 7th Central Did not qualify2022 23 82 26 49 7 59 204 301 8th Central Did not qualifyPlayers EditMain article List of Chicago Blackhawks players Current roster Edit viewtalkedit Updated April 13 2023 251 252 No Nat Player Pos S G Age Acquired Birthplace89 Andreas Athanasiou LW L 28 2022 London Ontario24 Anders Bjork LW L 26 2023 Mequon Wisconsin43 Colin Blackwell C R 30 2022 North Andover Massachusetts17 Jason Dickinson C L 27 2022 Georgetown Ontario28 Andreas Englund D L 27 2023 Stockholm Sweden58 MacKenzie Entwistle RW R 23 2018 Mississauga Ontario70 Cole Guttman C R 24 2022 Northridge California52 Reese Johnson RW R 24 2019 Regina Saskatchewan90 Tyler Johnson C R 32 2021 Liberty Lake Washington82 Caleb Jones D L 25 2021 Arlington Texas4 Seth Jones A D R 28 2021 Arlington Texas46 Wyatt Kaiser D L 20 2020 Andover Minnesota14 Boris Katchouk LW L 24 2022 Vancouver British Columbia16 Jujhar Khaira LW L 28 2021 Surrey British Columbia23 Philipp Kurashev C L 23 2018 Munsingen Switzerland51 Ian Mitchell D R 24 2017 St Albert Alberta34 Petr Mrazek G L 31 2022 Ostrava Czechoslovakia5 Connor Murphy A D R 30 2017 Boston Massachusetts11 Taylor Raddysh RW R 25 2022 Caledon Ontario32 Alex Stalock G L 35 2022 St Paul Minnesota25 Jarred Tinordi D L 31 2022 Burnsville Minnesota19 Jonathan Toews C C L 34 2006 Winnipeg Manitoba26 Austin Wagner LW L 25 2023 Calgary Alberta22 Nikita Zaitsev D R 31 2023 Moscow Soviet UnionRetired numbers Edit The Blackhawks unveiled a sculpture honoring Glenn Hall Tony Esposito Stan Mikita Bobby Hull and Denis Savard in 2000 Chicago Blackhawks retired numbers No Player Position Career No retirement1 Glenn Hall G 1957 1967 November 20 19883 Keith Magnuson 1 D 1969 1980 November 12 2008Pierre Pilote 1 D 1955 19689 Bobby Hull LW 1957 1972 December 18 198318 Denis Savard C 1980 19901995 1997 March 19 199821 Stan Mikita C 1958 1980 October 19 198035 Tony Esposito G 1969 1984 November 20 198881 Marian Hossa RW 2009 2017 November 20 2022Notes 1 Both players who wore No 3 were honored The NHL retired Wayne Gretzky s No 99 for all its member teams at the 2000 NHL All Star Game 253 Hall of Famers Edit The Chicago Blackhawks presently acknowledge an affiliation with a number of inductees to the Hockey Hall of Fame Inductees affiliated with the Blackhawks include 41 former players and 10 builders of the sport 254 The 10 individuals recognized as builders by the Hall of Fame include former Blackhawks executives general managers head coaches and owners In addition to players and builders the team recognizes an affiliation with three broadcasters who were awarded the Foster Hewitt Memorial Award from the Hockey Hall of Fame Lloyd Pettit a sportscaster was the first Blackhawks broadcaster to receive the award in 1986 Other Blackhawks broadcasters awarded the Foster Hewitt Memorial Award include Pat Foley awarded in 2014 254 In 2016 team historian Bob Verdi was awarded the Elmer Ferguson Memorial Award 255 Chicago Blackhawks Hall of FamersAffiliation with inductees based on team acknowledgementHall of Fame players 254 Sid AbelLionel ConacherTony EspositoGlenn HallTed LindsayBert OlmsteadAllan Stanley Ed BelfourRoy ConacherPhil EspositoGeorge HayHarry LumleyBobby OrrJohn Stewart Doug BentleyChris CheliosBill GadsbyBobby HullMickey MacKayPierre PiloteHarry Watson Max BentleyPaul CoffeyCharlie GardinerMarian HossaDick IrvinStan MikitaDenis Savard Georges BoucherArt CoulterDoug GilmourDuke KeatsHowie MorenzEarl SeibertDoug Wilson Frank BrimsekBabe DyeMichel GouletHugh LehmanBill MosienkoClint SmithHall of Fame builders 254 Al ArbourRudy Pilous Thomas N IvanBud Poile John MariucciArthur Wirtz Frederic McLaughlinBill Wirtz James D Norris James E NorrisTeam captains Edit Dick Irvin 1926 1929 Duke Dukowski 1929 1930 Ty Arbour 1930 1931 Marvin Wentworth 1931 1932 Helge Bostrom 1932 1933 Charlie Gardiner 1933 1934 Johnny Gottselig 1935 1940 Earl Seibert 1940 1942 Doug Bentley 1942 1944 1949 1950 Clint Smith 1944 1945 John Mariucci 1945 1946 1947 1948 Red Hamill 1946 1947 Gaye Stewart 1948 1949 Jack Stewart 1950 1952 Bill Gadsby 1952 1954 Gus Mortson 1954 1957 Ed Litzenberger 1958 1961 Pierre Pilote 1961 1968 Pat Stapleton 1969 1970 Pit Martin 1975 1976 Pit Martin Stan Mikita Keith Magnuson 1976 1977 Keith Magnuson 1977 1979 Terry Ruskowski 1979 1982 Darryl Sutter 1982 1987 Bob Murray 1985 1986 interim Denis Savard 1988 1989 Dirk Graham 1989 1995 Chris Chelios 1995 1999 Doug Gilmour 1999 2000 Tony Amonte 2000 2002 Alexei Zhamnov 2002 2004 Adrian Aucoin 2005 2007 Martin Lapointe 2006 interim Jonathan Toews 2008 2023 Franchise scoring leaders Edit Main article List of Chicago Blackhawks statistics and records See also List of Chicago Blackhawks records Franchise regular season scoring leaders Edit These are the top ten point scorers in franchise regular season history Figures are updated after each completed NHL regular season current Blackhawks playerNote Pos Position GP Games played G Goals A Assists Pts Points P G Points per game Stan Mikita is the Blackhawks all time leading scorer with 1 467 career points Points Player Pos GP G A Pts P GStan Mikita C 1 396 541 926 1 467 1 05Patrick Kane RW 1 161 446 779 1 225 1 06Bobby Hull LW 1 036 604 549 1 153 1 11Denis Savard C 881 377 719 1 096 1 24Steve Larmer RW 891 406 517 923 1 04Jonathan Toews C 1 067 372 511 883 83Doug Wilson D 938 225 554 779 83Dennis Hull LW 904 298 342 640 71Pit Martin C 740 243 384 627 85Duncan Keith D 1 192 105 520 625 52 Goals Player Pos GBobby Hull LW 604Stan Mikita C 541Patrick Kane RW 446Steve Larmer RW 406Denis Savard C 377Jonathan Toews C 372Dennis Hull LW 298Tony Amonte RW 268Jeremy Roenick C 267Bill Mosienko RW 258 Assists Player Pos AStan Mikita C 926Patrick Kane RW 779Denis Savard C 719Doug Wilson D 554Bobby Hull LW 549Duncan Keith D 520Steve Larmer RW 517Jonathan Toews C 511Pierre Pilote D 400Chris Chelios D 395 Franchise playoff scoring leaders Edit These are the top ten playoff point scorers in franchise playoff history Figures are updated after each completed NHL season current Blackhawks playerNote Pos Position GP Games played G Goals A Assists Pts Points P G Points per game Points Player Pos GP G A Pts P GStan Mikita C 155 59 91 150 97Denis Savard C 131 61 84 145 1 11Patrick Kane RW 136 52 80 132 97Bobby Hull LW 116 62 67 129 1 11Jonathan Toews C 137 45 74 119 87Steve Larmer RW 107 45 66 111 1 04Duncan Keith D 135 18 68 86 64Patrick Sharp LW 117 42 38 80 68Doug Wilson D 95 19 61 80 84Jeremy Roenick C 82 35 42 77 94 Goals Player Pos GBobby Hull LW 62Denis Savard C 61Stan Mikita C 59Patrick Kane RW 52Steve Larmer RW 45Jonathan Toews C 45Patrick Sharp LW 42Jeremy Roenick C 35Dennis Hull LW 33Jim Pappin RW 26 Assists Player Pos AStan Mikita C 91Denis Savard C 84Patrick Kane RW 80Jonathan Toews C 74Duncan Keith D 68Bobby Hull LW 67Steve Larmer RW 66Doug Wilson D 61Pierre Pilote D 52Marian Hossa RW 52See also EditList of Chicago Blackhawks award winners List of Chicago Blackhawks draft picks List of Chicago Blackhawks general managers List of Chicago Blackhawks head coachesReferences EditNotes Edit Weekes Kevin April 3 2020 Friday Four Blackhawks Sharks among best jerseys of all time NHL com NHL Enterprises L P Retrieved October 17 2022 What I love about the Blackhawks is that in their almost 100 seasons their sweaters haven t changed much nor have they needed to Whether it s the red jersey with black and white trim or the white jersey with black and red trim these jerseys have a clean and crisp look a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link Blackhawks Archive Collection ChicagoBlackhawks com NHL Enterprises L P Retrieved October 20 2022 Shortly after the first Stanley Cup as the Black Hawks Chicago added a splash of red in their jerseys the first color addition to the black and white since the franchise was established in 1926 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Front Office ChicagoBlackhawks com NHL Enterprises L P Retrieved October 17 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Horn Toby 2002 Blackhawks Stadiums 2 1 56 80 Mather Victor June 4 2015 When Ownership Changed in 2007 So Did the Blackhawks The New York Times Belson Ken June 16 2015 With Blackhawks 3 Stanley Cups in 6 Years Chicago Runneth over The New York Times Jenish 2013 pp 46 47 a b Jenish 2013 p 52 a b c The McLaughlin Years United Center Retrieved June 21 2010 Briggs Richard A 1954 Black Hawks Over The Danube The History of the 86th Infantry Division in World War II Louisville KY Western Recorder pp 7 Diamond 1991 p 291 Vass 1970 p 16 Morreale Mike G May 29 2010 Anthem in Chicago a tradition like no other NHL com Blackhawks NHL Enterprises Retrieved July 28 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