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Is Kevin Korchinski Ready to Claim a Top-Four Role?

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The Chicago Blackhawks have no shortage of young, puck-moving defensemen. In fact, it might be the one area of their rebuild where the pipeline is genuinely overflowing. The problem with having too much of a good thing is that somebody has to lose, and right now, that somebody appears to be Kevin Korchinski.

It was not supposed to go this way.

When the Blackhawks selected Korchinski seventh overall in the 2022 NHL Draft, the expectation was clear. He was going to be the cornerstone offensive defenseman of the rebuild — the quarterback on the power play, the guy who would eventually run the blue line alongside Connor Bedard for the next decade. That vision has not disappeared entirely, but it has been complicated significantly by the players who have arrived around him.

A Crowded Blue Line

Chicago selected Artyom Levshunov second overall in the 2024 NHL Draft, and the 6-foot-2, 208-pound Belarusian has wasted no time making his presence felt. A right-shot defenseman with elite skating, two-way ability, and the physical presence to back it all up, Levshunov has averaged between 19 and 20 minutes of ice time per game during his rookie season, with late-season usage climbing into the 20- to 24-minute range. He is already being trusted in meaningful situations, including significant power-play time, and the Blackhawks are clearly treating him as a foundational piece.

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Then there are Sam Rinzel and Alex Vlasic, two more young defenders pushing for top-pairing consideration. The blue line that was once being built around Korchinski has quietly been rebuilt around him, and the results are reflected in the ice time numbers.

Korchinski has averaged just 13 minutes and 38 seconds per game across 13 NHL appearances this season, with recent outings ranging between 13 and 17 minutes. He has spent the majority of the 2025-26 campaign with the AHL’s Rockford IceHogs, where he has put up 26 points in 53 games. The AHL production is encouraging, but it also underscores his current standing within the organization.

The Numbers Tell a Story

His NHL totals have not done him any favors either. Korchinski posted 15 points in 76 games during his 2023-24 rookie season — a modest return for a player drafted with top-pairing expectations. This season, he has added just two points in 16 NHL games. For a player selected to be an offensive driver, those are not the numbers that force a coaching staff to reconsider its depth chart.

At 21 years old, context matters. Development is rarely linear, and the NHL has a way of humbling young defensemen in ways that take time to correct. But the window for patience is not infinite, and in today’s game, 21 sometimes feels closer to 25 in terms of organizational expectations.

The Real Problem

The skating is there. The offensive instincts are there. The tools that made Korchinski a top-ten pick are still very much in his game, and scouts who have tracked his development remain genuinely bullish on his long-term upside.

The issue is what happens when the game speeds up around him.

Under pressure in his own zone, Korchinski can look overwhelmed. Puck retrieval situations, where he is being forechecked hard and needs to make a quick, clean decision, have exposed a tendency to panic. The result is hasty passes that turn into grade-A scoring chances against, sustained zone pressure that should have been avoided, and an inability to exit the defensive zone cleanly when it matters most.

Those are not small problems at the NHL level. Time and space disappear fast in the NHL, and a defenseman who struggles to process pressure in his own end will get exposed by forechecking forwards every single night. The encouraging part is that Korchinski handles pressure well in other areas of his game, which suggests this is a correctable issue rather than a fundamental limitation. But it has to be corrected, and it has to happen soon.

Under head coach Jeff Blashill, hired in May 2025, the Chicago Blackhawks run a structured, defensively responsible system that prioritizes transition speed, accountability, and hard work over individual creativity. It is a style built to develop young players the right way, but it is also a style that exposes weaknesses quickly and does not hide them.

Blashill’s system demands that defensemen make clean, composed decisions under pressure, exit the zone with purpose, and balance offensive instincts with defensive responsibility. Those are exactly the areas where Korchinski has struggled most. A coaching philosophy built around minimizing goals against and teaching players to weigh risk and reward has little patience for panic passes in the defensive zone or zone exits that break down under a hard forecheck. In a system that rewards discipline and punishes carelessness, Korchinski’s tendencies stand out for the wrong reasons.

The high-energy forecheck and backcheck identity Blashill has installed only amplifies the issue. When the game moves at that pace in both directions, defensemen who struggle under pressure get exposed on a shift-by-shift basis. Korchinski’s offensive tools are real, but Blashill is not going to hand top-four minutes to a young defender who has not yet proven he can handle the defensive demands that come with them. The ice time numbers this season reflect that reality plainly. Until Korchinski demonstrates he can operate within the structure Blashill demands, the path back to consistent NHL minutes runs directly through his own zone.

Among 21-year-old defensemen across the league this season, Korchinski’s numbers place him near the bottom of the peer group in terms of NHL impact. The standard-bearer at this age is Lane Hutson, who has been nothing short of remarkable — 78 points in 82 games for the Montreal Canadiens while averaging nearly 24 minutes per night. That is a generational outlier, but even the more modest comparables paint a difficult picture for Korchinski.

Denton Mateychuk has posted 31 points in 75 games for the Columbus Blue Jackets with a plus-12 rating, averaging over 19 minutes. Simon Nemec has 26 points in 68 games for the New Jersey Devils while logging nearly 20 minutes a night. Even Sam Rinzel, Korchinski’s own teammate in Chicago, has managed 14 points in 54 NHL games this season while averaging 18 minutes — more than four minutes per game more than Korchinski is seeing at the NHL level.

The contrast is stark. While peers at the same age are entrenching themselves as everyday NHLers in meaningful roles, Korchinski has spent the bulk of his season in Rockford. His 26 AHL points are encouraging in isolation, but they land differently when you consider that Mateychuk, Nemec, and Hutson are all producing at the NHL level right now. The gap between Korchinski and his draft class peers is real, and closing it starts with earning back consistent NHL ice time.

Redefining the Role

Perhaps the most important mental adjustment Korchinski needs to make is accepting that the path he was originally drafted for may no longer be available to him. The idea of Korchinski as a number-one defenseman and power play quarterback has been overtaken by events. Levshunov is already filling that role, and the organization has made its hierarchy clear through ice time alone.

That does not mean Korchinski cannot carve out a meaningful career in Chicago. An offensive-leaning second-pairing defenseman who can contribute on the power play and move the puck in transition is an extremely valuable player in the modern NHL. That ceiling is still very much within reach if he cleans up the defensive zone issues that have held him back.

The blueprint is straightforward, even if the execution is difficult. Get better under pressure. Improve the puck retrieval game. Stop the panic passes. Do those things consistently, and Korchinski becomes a genuine top-four contributor on a team that could be competing for a playoff spot within the next two seasons.

The tools are there. The upside is real. The question is whether he can do the unglamorous work required to unlock it.

At 21, he still has time. But in a Blackhawks system that is loaded on the back end, the margin for patience is getting thinner by the year.

Christopher Hodgson
Christopher Hodgson
Christopher Hodgson is an NHL writer, analyst, and storyteller, whose study of history and philosophy sets his work apart. producing coverage that prioritizes narrative depth and analytical rigor. His writing has appeared in The Hockey News, Last Word on Hockey, The Hockey Writers, and The Big Faceoff.

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