Blackhawks Face A Tough Ilya Mikheyev Reality This Summer

As Ilya Mikheyev enters free agency with impressive stats and high praise from analysts, the Blackhawks face the challenge of replacing his vital contributions on both ends of the ice.

Ilya Mikheyev spent the season doing the kind of work that tends to get noticed most clearly when it’s gone. For the Blackhawks, he was a steady presence, a reliable scorer, and one of the main reasons the penalty kill stayed strong even after pieces like Connor Murphy and Jason Dickinson were moved at the deadline.

That matters because Mikheyev is expected to hit free agency on Wednesday, July 1, and the feeling around him is simple: he’s set up for a major payday. This year’s market is strong, and Chicago may not be able to keep him. But before the conversation shifts to where he lands next, his 2025-26 season deserves its own look.

The numbers tell a pretty good story. Mikheyev finished with 18 goals, but he still established a new career high with 36 points.

That came after 2024-25, when he posted 20 goals and 34 points, so even with a dip in goals, he actually found a new personal best in total production. He ended up fourth on the team in scoring and worked his way all over the lineup while handling major penalty-kill duties.

That two-way impact was a big part of his value. Mikheyev helped anchor one of the league’s best penalty kill units, and even after the Blackhawks lost some key personnel at the deadline, the group remained a top unit by season’s end. His defensive game is one of the things that makes him so hard to replace.

The grading from the staff reflected that value. Blackhawks Cowboy gave Mikheyev a B+, calling him “the most consistent weapon on the ice for the Chicago Blackhawks night in and night out.” He also noted that before the deadline, Mikheyev, Jason Dickinson, and Connor Murphy were “three of the most feared penalty killers in the league,” while pointing to Mikheyev’s 36 points and chemistry with Anton Frondell and Frank Nazar.

Tony Marchese also handed out a B+, saying Mikheyev was “absolutely instrumental once again on one of the league’s best penalty kills.” He added that even though Mikheyev wasn’t traded at the deadline, it doesn’t seem like he’ll be back next season, and called him valuable on both 5-on-5 and the PK.

Ron Luce went even higher, giving Mikheyev an A- and pointing to “18 goals, excellent two-way prowess, and a big body with speed.” He said Mikheyev has been special in his two seasons with the Blackhawks and that the team would miss him if he leaves, though an extension is still possible. He closed by calling it “A-level season.”

The bigger issue for Chicago now is the roster hole Mikheyev could leave behind. Free agency is coming fast, and the Blackhawks may need to find another forward who can cover as much ice and do as much damage in so many different situations. There aren’t many players who can replace that role one for one.

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