Chicago

Blackhawks rout Senators as Alex DeBrincat sees few familiar faces in return

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Alex DeBrincatwalked into the United Center visitors’ locker room Monday, looked at the Blackhawks’ lines written on a whiteboard on the wall and squinted.

“I guess I don’t know too many names on there,” he said.

Indeed, of the 20 players who dressed in the Hawks’ 5-0 blowout win over the Senators, only 10 ever played a game with DeBrincat during his five-year tenure with the Hawks and only five played more than 40 games with him.

Further reducing the weirdness of DeBrincat’s return was that it came 63 games into the season — and one of the previous 62 was the Hawks’ visit to Ottawa only a few weeks ago, when he got to catch up with Patrick Kane before Kane’s departure.

Still, DeBrincat and MacKenzie Entwistle — who became fast friends in recent years — went out to dinner last night. They dished out some lighthearted snark to each other after the morning skate.

“He’s always taking my heat,” DeBrincat said. “I don’t think he’s giving it to me too much. Even though he’s way bigger than me, I think if we were to fight in this game, I’d come out on top.”

DeBrincat said he plans to wait until the summer before potentially beginning new contract negotiations with the Senators. His new team had surged back into the Eastern Conference playoff race recently, winning five straight games and 12 of their last 16, but Monday did not go well for them.

The Hawks generated tons of odd-man rushes and dominated the goaltending battle, as Alex Stalock made 35 saves for his second shutout of the season while last-minute Senators starter Mads Sogaard allowed five goals on 21 shots.

“[Stalock] got into their heads a little bit and they were looking for the perfect play,” coach Luke Richardson said. “That’s great for us because they’re good offensive team and when you can frustrate them offensively, it just makes them lean more to the offense. We stuck to our game plan, played really disciplined and created turnovers.”

New Hawks pickup Anders Bjork tallied three primary assists in the second period alone, Seth Jones scored for the third and fourth times in his last three games and DeBrincat failed to bury any of his seven shots on goal.

Athanasiou survives

Andreas Athanasiouwas the lone Hawk involved in trade rumors — and one of only four pending unrestricted free agents (with Jujhar KhairaJarred Tinordi and Alex Stalock the others) — who didn’t get dealt before the deadline.

“Whether it’s on your mind or not, you have no control of it, so you have to go with whatever happens,” Athanasiou said. “It’s part of the business, one way or another.”

General manager Kyle Davidson insisted after the fact that he was never “actively pursuing moving” the speedy winger.

No playoffs for Guttman

The Hawks surprisingly didn’t use a paper transaction to make Cole Guttman, who had 30 points in 39 games with Rockford this season, eligible for the AHL playoffs.

“It’s definitely a little sad,” Guttman said. “Going and joining them on a playoff run definitely would’ve been a great experience — especially experiencing the pro-level playoffs. But there’s other things we’re figuring out right now, and I’m excited to be here.”

He implied there are other plans in the works for his spring. Playing for the United States at the IIHF World Championships in May would be the most logical explanation, although that’s unconfirmed.

In the meantime, Guttman presumably will spend the rest of the season in the NHL, where has performed well. He entered Monday with three goals in 10 games and a 53.3% expected-goals ratio at five-on-five.

“Every day I get a little more comfortable,” he said. “[I’m using] days of practice to gain some confidence on the ice with all these guys and then get to know the systems even better.”



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