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With rebuild not progressing, Blackhawks make coaching change
Luke Richardson. Robert Edwards-Imagn Images

With rebuild not progressing, Blackhawks make coaching change

The Chicago Blackhawks are finding out just how difficult it is to successfully pull off a rebuild in the NHL. With the 2024-25 season looking like it might be another lost and wasted year for the development of a young team, they made another coaching change on Thursday by firing head coach Luke Richardson.

Richardson was in his third season with the Blackhawks and had compiled a 57-118-15 record in that time. In his first two full seasons, the Blackhawks finished in last place in the Central Division, and they once again find themselves in last place this season while also having the worst record in the NHL.

Richardson will be replaced by Anders Sorensen on an interim basis who had been coaching the Blackhawks' AHL team in Rockford. Sorensen will become just the third European-born coach in post-Original Six NHL history, following in the footsteps of former Pittsburgh Penguins coach Ivan Hlinka and former Blackhawks coach Alpo Suhonen.

It is a quick change, but it was also probably one that was necessary for the Blackhawks given the way this season — and the rebuild — has been going.

Not only is Chicago again one of the worst teams in the NHL, but it is not seeing much, if any, progress from its young players, while the veteran players on the roster have not produced. It has turned into a very grim situation where losing is starting to not only become a habit, but also an expectation.

That is not what any organization wants to see happen.

Between 2008 and 2017 the Blackhawks were one of the top organizations in hockey, winning Stanley Cups in 2010, 2013 and 2015, while making the playoffs nine years in a row. The team was built on a core of players like Jonathan Toews, Patrick Kane, Marian Hossa, Duncan Keith, Brent Seabrook, Patrick Sharp and Corey Crawford and was a constant contender. Eventually, though, those players started to get older, and they eventually retired or were traded away as part of the team's current rebuild. 

They have not been able to successfully complete that rebuild.

Their only playoff appearance over the past eight seasons came during the 2019-20 season, when the NHL expanded the playoffs to 24 teams in a COVID-shortened season. The Blackhawks were the 24th team in that field, and in a normal season, they would have missed the postseason by a significant margin.

They have not come close in any season since then. 

There is some long-term hope thanks to the selection of Connor Bedard with the No. 1 overall pick in 2023, but even he has not quite taken a significant step forward this season. 

The head coach is not likely to fix all of the problems here, and there might be deeper problems in the organization than just that. But this was probably a necessary move in the short term to try to salvage something out of this season. 

Adam Gretz

Adam Gretz is a freelance writer based in Pittsburgh. He covers the NHL, NFL, MLB and NBA. Baseball is his favorite sport -- he is nearly halfway through his goal of seeing a game in every MLB ballpark. Catch him on Twitter @AGretz

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