October 15, 2020: Sad for Saad

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Well, the Blackhawks move of bringing back one of their ex-players trying to rekindle that flame has failed in the case of Brandon Saad. He was shipped out again. I am sad for Saad.

I don’t know, maybe it’s just me. The same way I felt about Kris Bryant with the Cubs… OK, maybe not that far, but I really liked Brandon Saad. At the age of 22, Brandon was helping the Blackhawks skate through the playoffs and eventually raise the Cup in 2013 against Boston. The following year he was better. He went from 27 to 47 points in the regular season and 6 to 16 points in the postseason. Yes, that year didn’t turn out like 2013; in my opinion, the biggest missed opportunity with that Hawks team. 2014 should have been another Cup, which would have been back to back, and eventually three straight. In 2015, Saad inched his regular season point total to 52, while tallying 11 points helping the Hawks raise their 3rd Cup of the decade; Brandon was part of two of those. But after that season, he was shipped out.

If I recall correctly, there seemed to be some snafus with the contract negotiations. I thought Saad wanted to be here; I didn’t think his agent helped that case. I’m sure the Blackhawks weren’t forthcoming with the dough, constantly battling the cap with the wealth of talent throughout the decade, but I sure would have liked to see Saad stick around. He turned in back to back 53 point seasons with Columbus. Then the Hawks decided to get him back.

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Most people didn’t like this move. Trading the Bread Man to achieve this? I loved Panarin, don’t get me wrong, but because it was Saad Father, I was OK. Well, it turned out that deal didn’t turn out so well. His first year back was bad… 35 points. He played a lot better in 18-19 pumping his totals back to 47. But both of those years, the Hawks missed the playoffs. This past year he was OK; 33 points in a shortened season, 5 points in 9 playoff games. He was solid; I just thought he was going to be great. He never really made it to that point; hitting the posts with all those shots seemed to be symbolic. He just never became THAT guy; mini-Hossa was what he was called at times. Big bodied, two way player, future hall of famer? Well…

He’s off again, and this time I’m guessing for good. Not sure who the heck those guys are that we got for him, and we’re still paying some of Saad’s contract? I think it’s only $1M but still… the Hawks saved some money in the deal. Was that all this was about?

Well, between this move and the Crawford decision, doesn’t sound like the core guys remaining are happy. Toews, Kane, Keith, and Seabrook are not getting any younger. Shifting to a rebuild philosophy surely won’t sit well with them. I know, retooling is the catchy phrase nowadays, to portray the idea that you still will win games while shifting gears, but come on… I wonder if any of the remaining four will depart… One guy who should beat them out the door is our GM. Coach Q took the hit, but he keeps his job? I know he’s son of hockey royalty and all, but come on. Enough is enough there. Crawford, Saad… Bowman should be next… or will he? One thing is sure: the Hawks are not done.

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