After announcing that Kyle Davidson would be the franchise’s next GM earlier this week, the Blackhawks have made further adjustments to their front office. Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet reports that the team has parted ways with two longtime executives: Mark Kelley and Ryan Stewart. This comes as the Blackhawks begin plotting a change of course as a franchise, with Davidson stating to the media that the team was planning on “more of a rebuild” of the club. The Blackhawks are currently 20-27-8, they do not figure to be in this season’s playoff race, and the departure of two long-term fixtures in the team’s front office adds to what has been a season of significant upheaval for one of the league’s most historic franchises.
For both Stewart and Kelley, rebuilding is not something they have had much experience with in their careers. Both have been with the Blackhawks for fifteen years, and both were working for the team for each of its three Stanley Cup victories in the salary cap era. In a story he penned about Stewart last year, Scott Powers of The Athletic wrote that Stewart was “responsible for a staff that scouts a wide array of amateur and pro players, including drafted pros in North America and Europe and potential free agents.” As for Kelley, as VP of Amateur Scouting for the past fifteen years he also had a significant role in the team’s cultivation of young talent. Drafting is an inexact science, and it is difficult to pin any draft success or failure on one person, given how scouting for an NHL team is very much a team process. That being said, as managers responsible for overseeing much of the team’s scouting operation, both Stewart and Kelley bear at least some responsibility for the state of the team’s roster and prospect system.
With their departures Kelley and Stewart leave a significant hole in the Blackhawks’ scouting operation. The club lacks draft capital thanks to the offseason trade for Seth Jones and the organization as a whole has a prospect pool that is not considered to be among the league’s deepest or most talent-rich. In order for Davidson to be able to execute on his grand plans to rebuild the franchise, the pipeline of young talent feeding Chicago’s roster needs to be strong. These moves, therefore, are part of the larger process to re-shape Chicago’s established order on that front. As for what the team will do from here, Mark Lazerus of The Athletic reports that the Blackhawks will have Director of Player Personnel Mike Doneghey oversee amateur scouting while the pro scouts will report to Davidson himself.
Cubbie2334
Well the prospect pool took a hit for 2 reasons….1 some came up
2 previous regime seemed intent on trading every young player who came through the system for some 30 something 13th forward or 35 something 7th defenseman
anthonyd4412
Unload the trunk for young talent. Nobody is untouchable except maybe Reichel