Cole Smith’s first day as a Chicago Blackhawks player came with a clear message: he believes the organization is done living at the bottom.
Speaking on Tuesday, Smith said Chicago is in a place to move forward after years of struggle. “They’re Ready To Start Winning”
That kind of line lands differently in Chicago, where the Blackhawks have spent too long outside the NHL’s traditional playoff picture. Since winning the Central Division in 2017, they have failed to make the playoffs in that format. With Kyle Davidson now pushing a full teardown and rebuild, the message to newcomers is simple: the time is now.
Smith arrived on a three-year deal signed July 1st, and the move came with some expectation attached. The former Vegas Golden Knights forward is stepping into a team that wants to turn the page, and he sounded comfortable with that reality.
His game fits the kind of role Chicago is asking him to play. Smith has spent his career under coaches such as Torterella, Andrew Brunett, and John Hynes, all of whom lean on physical play as part of their identity. Jeff Blashil is another coach whose approach includes forechecking, and Smith knows that style well.
He was candid about what he brings. “Finding a niche or part of your game that makes you stick is very important. I’ve been able to find that.”
That niche has made him a useful sparkplug, and a familiar one for fans who remember his dagger against the Presidents’ Trophy-winning Colorado Avalanche in Game 4 of the Western Conference Final. In Chicago’s bottom six, Smith is expected to fit alongside players such as Sam Lafferty, Jason Dickinson, and Ilya Mikheyev.
Smith also made it clear that the welcome from the Blackhawks mattered. He repeatedly praised the front office during his presser and said they “…(they) made me feel almost special in a way.” Connor Bedard was one of the first players to reach out, and Smith returned the compliment when asked about him, saying he was “…looking forward to meeting him (Bedard), seeing what makes him tick.”
The length of the deal played a role too. The three-year contract is the longest of Smith’s professional career, and he said that mattered when choosing where to go.
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Kyle Davidson's Quiet Summer Just Put Blackhawks Fans On Edge
Kyle Davidsons summer roster work was never going to be about headlines, and in that sense the Blackhawks stayed true to form. Chicago added six players in free agency and through trade, with the bulk of the activity aimed at shoring up the blue line and stocking the organization with more defensive depth for both the NHL club and the Rockford IceHogs. Ian Cole, Dylan Anhorn, Connor Mackey, Cole Smith and Connor Mylymok all fit that theme, giving the Blackhawks a deeper pool of options as they try to keep building out the back end.
The move that really changes the temperature, though, is the arrival of Bowen Byram, who came over in a trade and immediately became the most meaningful addition of the group. Even with that kind of upgrade, the broader reaction around the team is easy to understand: Chicago did real work, but it still feels like the sort of summer that leaves fans wondering whether the front office had bigger swings in mind and simply found the market too expensive, too thin or too hard to sell. [Read more 🡒]
