Tuesday, April 14, 2026
✶ Untold Chicago Stories ✶ Amazon Music
Home Blog Page 2934

This Creepy Coincidence Proves Matt Nagy Was Fated To Coach Bears

matt nagy

Too many things have happened in the NFL over the years to say that destiny has no place in the game. There are plenty of examples that prove otherwise. At first glance the hire of Matt Nagy looked like nothing more than a well-thought out decision. He’s exactly what Chicago Bears GM Ryan Pace was rumored to be seeking:  a young, offensive-minded coach who could grow with Mitch Trubisky.

The Bears had other options like John DeFilippo and Josh McDaniels. In the end it was Nagy who won them over. More than anything his desire for the job and love of Trubisky likely led the way. Not to mention his instant chemistry with Pace. After all the two share similar backgrounds in terms of having to take the long road towards their dreams.

However, there was never any indication that Pace was fated to join the Bears. In fact not a single person, fan or expert, saw his hire coming. It was a genuine surprise. On the other hand if people had dug deep into Nagy’s background? They’d have found a personal story that holds a spooky taste of coincidence that perhaps his arrival in Chicago was preordained.

Matt Nagy NFL opportunity was opened up by a lifelong Bears fan

There was a point in time where Nagy almost went a different direction than football altogether. In 2008 his playing career was almost over and he had a growing family to feed. He couldn’t afford to wait on an NFL opportunity forever. So he sought out work in real estate despite zero experience. It was then he caught a break from a sympathetic man who went to the same high school as Colleen Kane of the Chicago Tribune explains.

Larry Wisdom, a Marmion Academy and Aurora University alum who was the president of a real estate company in Lancaster County, where Manheim is located, entered Nagy’s life at an uncertain time as his playing career was coming to a close…

…Nagy comes from a family of teachers, including his mother and father. His high school sweetheart-turned-wife Stacey also taught. Stouch said he always helped with youth flag football and quarterback camps when he was younger. So coaching was a natural fit.

But he also had to support four children during the recession, and as the AFL suspended play for a season, he sought a job with Wisdom. At a time when selling houses was difficult, it might not have been a great business decision to hire a real estate agent with no experience, but Wisdom saw something in Nagy.

“What struck me immediately, and I confirmed it over time, is he was authentic,” Wisdom said. “He had excellent character. That came through very clearly. He was someone you could trust, somebody who was straightforward. There was an intensity and a passion about him that he would apply to what he would choose to do.”

Shortly after Nagy was offered a chance at the NFL

He didn’t end up working that job for long. Former teammate and friend Brett Veach (now GM of the Chiefs) approached him with an internship opportunity from the Philadelphia Eagles. Nagy was in a conundrum. He’d just started working for Wisdom. It wouldn’t be professional of him to ask for extended time off to take it, but he also had a dream of coaching in the NFL.

Wisdom though lived up to his last name. He advised Nagy to seize the chance. So he did, and the rest is history. Then again there was one small fact about the real estate man that seemed harmless at the time but has since taken on far greater significance. Wisdom is a lifelong Bears fan.

“I was so excited and so delighted, and not just for Matt,” Wisdom said. “Some call it a disease. I’m a lifelong Chicago sports fan. Cubs fan. Bears fan. Many years we’ve had droughts, some hard-suffering years. We want a Super Bowl, and Matt is wired to lead.”

So let’s get this straight. Nagy plays high school football against a school founded by the great grandfather of George McCaskey. Then it’s a diehard Bears fan who advised him to take what was likely his best (and only) shot to reach the NFL? I mean if that’s not considered a tinge of destiny, not much is.

The Most Impressive Job Done By Each of the Chicago Bears New Coaches

chicago bears new coaches

The Chicago Bears new coaches have come in quickly since the main man Matt Nagy arrived. It hasn’t allowed for a lot of time to explore their own personal stories. Most fans can afford the time to learn about them and why exactly the team sought out their services in the first place. That is what this article will help to clarify.

Often the easiest way to do that is giving a flashback of the best work that respective coach has done. Vic Fangio and other holdovers will not appear on this list as most fans are familiar with their work by this point. It will be only the new names that have arrived in the past week including the head coach himself.

Some might be surprised by the quality work these men have done.

Matt Nagy:  Getting three Pro Bowls from Alex Smith

People need to remember context in these situation. At the start of 2013 Alex Smith was considered mostly a bust at quarterback. His track record in San Francisco was littered with disappointment aside from a surprisingly decent 2011 season in reaching the NFC championship. Then the next year he was supplanted by Colin Kaepernick. The Chiefs took a chance on trading for him anyway. Nagy was his quarterbacks coach and later offensive coordinator. Together they reached the playoffs four times and Smith has now gone to three Pro Bowls.

Mark Helfrich:  The 2014 Oregon offense

Chip Kelly gets most of the credit for what a juggernaut Oregon became offensively but the truth is the best unit that program ever produced didn’t appear until he’d left for the NFL. That machine was constructed by Helfrich in 2014, the culmination of years of work. Led by quarterback Marcus Mariota it was a balanced attack that ran opponents off the field. Not only did it finish #1 in total yards (8,205) but they also were #1 in total points scored (681). That team would reach the national championship game, proving the high point of Helfrich’s career to date.

Charles London:  The 2015 Texans running game

Having success when you have a star player is easy. Having success when you lose that star player? That’s when the real coaches emerge. London got his moment in the sun in 2015. Four game into that season, Pro Bowl running back Arian Foster was lost to injury. The Houston Texans were forced to push on with a stable of backups and unproven running backs. All things considered they did a way better job than they had any right to. Led by a triad of Alfred Blue, Chris Polk, and Jonathan Grimes Houston finished 15th in the NFL in rushing that season (1,731 yards). They won the division title for their efforts.

Harry Hiestand:  2008 Bears offensive line

Bears fans have no idea how much they’d miss Harry Hiestand until he was gone. In 2009 their offensive line allowed 35 sacks. Not great but fairly solid. A year later after he left? They allowed 56. The man is really good at his job. He proved that in 2008. That year Kyle Orton was their starting quarterback. Chicago, traditionally a running team, threw the ball 557 times that year. That’s dangerous considering how immobile Orton was. Yet the team only ended up surrendering 29 sacks. Keep in mind this was a line with John St. Clair as the left tackle and Josh Beekman as left guard. Hiestand is a treasure.

Mike Furrey:  Limestone College

It’s fair to say most people didn’t do much digging on Mike Furrey. All they know at this point is he’s a former NFL wide receiver who has kicked around the college ranks as a coach to this point. It doesn’t make sense the Bears would take him from Limestone College of all places to become their new receivers coach. Except it does. Furrey in fact did an amazing job down there. Understand that Limestone did not have a football program until 2013. They won just four games in their first two years. Their first season under Furrey? They won five. In their third year of existence.

Kevin M. Gilbride: Odell Beckham’s rookie year

Gilbride was hired to coach up the Bears tight ends. This is a job he can do well as he did with the New York Giants. However, his most impressive work actually came prior to his promotion to that position. Before that he ran their wide receivers group from 2012 to 2014. Given the lack of star power he had he did fairly well. Then in his final year he put icing on the cake. Despite missing the first four games with injury he managed to help rookie receiver Odell Beckham Jr. post 1,305 yards and 12 touchdowns. Again, this was managed in 12 games.

Willson Contreras With The Best Autograph Of All Time

During Day 2 of the Chicago Cubs convention, Willson Contreras brought the house down with the story of the short conversation he had with Jon Lester when the lefty picked off Tommy Pham in 2017.

You’ll remember that highlight being more hilarious because of the St. Louis Cardinals announcers.

Here’s what Contreras told Lester.

A good laugh had by all, but Willson wasn’t done. Here’s how he signed a fan’s bat later on.

Goddamnit, Willson Contreras is awesome.

Pirates Trade Gerrit Cole, Hey Remember When Kyle Schwarber Murdered Gerrit Cole’s Soul?

So, after a rumored trade apparently fell through earlier this week, the Pittsburgh Pirates and Houston Astros eventually agreed to a deal on Saturday. The Pirates acquired four players from the reigning World Series champions, sending right-handed starter Gerrit Cole to Houston.

Cole, 27, had just avoided arbitration with Pittsburgh on Friday, agreeing to a $6.75 million salary. He’s under team control through 2019. Meanwhile, the Astros sent Colin Moran, Joe Musgrove, Michael Feliz and Jason Martin to the Pirates.

Kind of underwhelming for the Pirates, who reportedly were asking for Gleyber Torres from the New York Yankees earlier in the offseason. The Chicago Cubs were linked to talking with the Pirates about a possible trade for Cole, but nothing came of it. You have to wonder though, if the Pirates accepted this offer from Houston, were the Cubs just not that serious about a trade, or were the Pirates afraid of making a trade within the division? You’d have to think that if Ian Happ was dangled out there for Pittsburgh, he’d be a better headliner, compared to the trade with the Astros.

Oh well, at least Cole is out of the NL Central because he was great against the Cubs, putting up a 2.50 ERA and 1.00 WHIP in 14 career starts. HOWEVER! Remember that 2015 NL Wild Card Game? Remember how dumbass Pirates fans tried to get into Jake Arrieta’s head and all he did was dominate? Remember how Gerrit Cole was superstitious about the start time and waited an extra minute, so the game wouldn’t start at 19:08 military time, at the time it was the last year the Cubs had won the World Series.

And then, do you remember how Kyle Schwarber murdered Gerrit Cole’s soul?

Maybe Gerrit Cole is as glad he’s out of the NL Central as the Cubs are.

New Coaching Staff Alters How Bears Wide Receiver Position Is Rebuilt

bears wide receiver position

Over the past five years the Chicago Bears wide receiver position has been at its best when employing a certain type of receiver. One that wins less with finesse and more with size and strength. It was true of Brandon Marshall, Alshon Jeffery and then Cameron Meredith. The Bears like their receivers to be big. Or more precisely the previous Bears coaches liked it that way.

Things could be about to change with the arrival of Matt Nagy and his new staff. For the first time the Bears offensive system is going in a direction it hasn’t at least in the past seven years. Maybe ever. Nagy and his new offensive coordinator Mark Helfrich are proponents of the spread offense. Both used heavy elements of it to considerable success at the pro and college levels. It stands to reason they will do the same in Chicago.

The key though is the spread-style requires a different sort of athlete, particularly at the wide receiver position. Less emphasis is placed on size and strength and more on speed, quickness and sharp route running. This is likely to change how the Bears approach both free agency and the draft.

Bears wide receiver position could see influx of smaller, quicker, faster

Up until recently there was a general feel for which receivers might be prioritized by GM Ryan Pace going into this off-season both in re-signings and free agency. That’s no longer the case. Names like Dontrelle Inman and even Meredith can’t be considered locks to return. Meredith will probably stay but this new staff can be considered a dream scenario for Kendall Wright. His game should fit well with them.

Nagy though will be seeking out more help. What the Bears really could use is a vertical weapon similar to what he had in Tyreek Hill with the Chiefs. Somebody who create matchup problems but also hit the home run when the situation calls for it.

Of course it’s difficult to find receivers with 4.2 speed so the Bears may have to make some compromises. At the same time this 2018 free agent class may actually be compliant in help achieve that goal. There are quite a few names who could fit in well with their new system, both of the expensive or cheap varieties.

  • Jarvis Landry
  • John Brown
  • Jaron Brown
  • Taylor Gabriel
  • Paul Richardson
  • Sammy Watkins

Most of those names may not jump out as true #1 receivers but at the same time each has proven invaluable to their respective offense in terms of making big plays. The best spread offense typically feature an array of such types, making it difficult for defenses to stop them because they are numerous and on the field at the same time. With a quick, accurate quarterback like Mitch Trubisky on the trigger? That’s a deadly combination.

The Bears know this. It will be fun to see how they go about building it.

Willson Contreras With The Highlight Of 2018’s Cubs Convention

One of the best moments of the 2017 season for the Chicago Cubs was when Jon Lester picked off Tommy Pham of the St. Louis Cardinals. An incredible highlight that was made even better when you listen to the Cardinals TV broadcast.

A quick reminder.

Well, that hilarious memory brought us what might possibly be the highlight of the 2018 Cubs convention. After Jason Heyward brought up the play, catcher Willson Contreras gave fans some insight on what he told Lester on the mound.

Contreras was giving fans the direct quote and that included a few f-bombs.

Anthony Rizzo’s reaction says it all.

New Chicago Bears Tight Ends Coach Brings Unheralded Teaching Prowess

kevin m. gilbride
Credit: Giants.com

The first thing most football fans will think about in regards to hearing the name Kevin M. Gilbride is the former New York Giants offensive coordinator. Of course that would be a mistake. He is in fact the father of the man in question. Kevin Jr. served as an assistant on the elder Gilbride’s and later Ben McAdoo’s staff with the New York Giants from 2010 to 2017. Now he is slated to become the Chicago Bears’ new tight ends coach.

Most people will chalk this up as a reach on a legacy coach, somebody mooching off the strong reputation of his father. Indeed Gilbride Sr. had a long, great NFL run that included two Super Bowl championships. However to say that his influence alone is the sole reason his son is getting jobs would be doing the young coach a disservice.

In truth Gilbride Jr. has steadily build his own respectable reputation. One that could have an underrated influence on the cast of young tight ends the Bears have collected, particularly Adam Shaheen.

Kevin M. Gilbride proved himself to be a tremendous teacher in New York

After two years as an offensive quality control coach, Gilbride got his first big assigment in 2012 when the Giants made him their wide receivers coach. He got a Pro Bowl out of Victor Cruz his first year. After two years though the team decided to shift him to manning the tight ends in 2014. While he never produced a proper superstar, Gilbride shined with an ability to get the most from unheralded names.

That year he got a career-high 693 yard out of Larry Donnell. A year later undrafted rookie Will Tye became an unexpected contributor with 464 yards. This past season though was when New York finally gave Gilbride something to work with in 1st round pick Evan Engram.

Despite some early drop issues the rookie became arguably the most reliable pass target the Giants had. He finished second on the team with 722 yards and led everybody with six touchdowns. Considering the injury situation at receiver for them throughout the year, it’s a testament at the job Gilbride did to bring him along so well.

One could argue that Shaheen may be even more talented than Engram is. He’s just as athletic but is considerably bigger and stronger. This has to excite the young coach who is eager to make his own name in the league. Matt Nagy wants them hungry. Seems he got another one.

Ryan Pace Began His Plan Long Before 2017 Season Was Over

ryan pace

Given the speed of the process by which the Chicago Bears interviewed and selected their new head coach Matt Nagy, it speaks to either two possibilities. They rushed their move in order to secure a coach before losing defensive coordinator Vic Fangio. Or? Pace had a plan laid out from the start and was simply following it step by step until he’d found the man he wanted. Based on recent information it appears the latter is the case.

It was apparent from the start that the Bears had an idea of what they wanted to do. While other teams simply set out an array of interviews with no design behind it, Chicago operated differently. They met with Vikings defensive coordinator George Edwards to satisfy the Rooney Rule and then made one of their first interviews with Fangio. This was a chance to get a gauge on where the coordinator stood with the team.

No doubt that meeting proved fruitful as he soon came back on a new three-year deal. After that it was a series of offensive specialists from then on. Nagy was the last one in the pecking order and clearly made the best impression. He was hired shortly after the interview took place. Now the Bears coaching staff is all but completed.

That begs the question. If Pace did plan this out, for how long was he preparing?

Ryan Pace outlined everything months ago during middle of season

A source reached out to me recently indicating that this entire operation began sometime back in November. The Bears were coming out of their frustrating loss to the New Orleans Saints and were about to suffer their bitter defeat to the Aaron Rodgers-less Packers. A defeat that all but sunk their fledgling playoff hopes. Apparently Pace wasn’t waiting around for the results.

“Somewhere between the bye week and week 10 there was a meeting behind closed doors where Pace began telling people he’s firing (John) Fox and immediately began reaching out to people. He ended up having long conversations on how to go about the process.”

It’s not a surprise that Pace would’ve reached that conclusion. Even before the loss to Green Bay there were signs that John Fox and his staff weren’t getting it done. Particularly in regards to the offense. Mitch Trubisky hadn’t even thrown for over 200 yards in a game by that point. Things were predictable and utterly lacking in imagination. Given how important the young QB is to Pace’s future, that wasn’t going to fly.

Enter Nagy and his forward-thinking crew. Pace said he got 25 to 30 references for every coach he interviewed. It’s clear the former Chiefs offensive coordinator was his guy and the interview was meant to make sure. Now Chicago gets to see if that plan was worth it.

White Sox Head To Arbitration For First Time Since 2001

White Sox head to arbitration.
Yolmer Sanchez and Avisail Garcia are holding out for more money and thrusting the White Sox into an arbitration process they have avoided for 17 years.(Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images North America via Zimbo)

The White Sox will step into the prickly arbitration process for the first time since Keith Foulke forced their hand in 2001. Avisail Garcia filed an arbitration salary of $6.7 million while the White Sox filed a click lower at $5.85 million.

The indomitable Yolmer Sanchez joins Garcia in the Arbitration pool as Sanchez and the South Siders couldn’t reach an agreement. Meanwhile, Jose Abreu agreed to a sweetheart deal at $13 million while Carlos Rodon, Leury Garcia and Luis Avilan all reached agreements with the White Sox.

$850,000 is a trivial sum by Major-League-Baseball standards but it seems Garcia is trying to prove a point. Avi made $3 million last season and this figure was surprising given his persistent gaffes and strong candidacy as a non-tender last season. Yet, Garcia stuck it to his critics and filed the type of season in 2017 that everyone had been waiting for. But the other side of this coin is that the league doesn’t believe in Garcia anymore, thus the lack of any trade-market value. With each dollar more Garcia demands, the pressure meter ticks a bit higher, and we already know that Garcia doesn’t do well with expectations.

And the true difference between what Garcia is asking for and the White Sox are offering is illustrated by two monumental contracts hashed out on Friday. Josh Donaldson and Kris Bryant received historic contracts as a reflection of what they’ve already earned, not what they are currently worth. If it were the other way around the contracts would be flip-flopped and Bryant would be making $23 million. But Avi deserves to be rewarded for what he did last season and the parties are far too close in figures for this foray into arbitration to get ugly.

Abreu

Let’s face it, the White Sox stole another season at a discount from Abreu. The Cuban veteran ranked eighth in the American Leauge in Batting Average (.304), seventh in RBI (102), twelfth in home runs (33) and seventh in OPS (906). Among first baseman in the A.L. Abreu ranked second in batting average to Eric Hosmer, second in RBI to Edwin Encarnacion, and first in OPS. There is a wealth of talent at first base around the league and perhaps that is why Abreu and his agent felt $13 million wasn’t worth quibbling over.

Abreu is only the third player in major-league history to blast 25 or more home runs and drive in 100+ RBI in his first four seasons. The others were Joe DiMaggio and Albert Pujols. But considering Pito was supposed to only make $11.5 million this season under his old contract, he might just pack it in and call it a win.

Richard Panik Trade A Home Run, Regardless If Duclair Produces

Stan Bowman can be described as many things: Cunning, clever, ambitious, ruthless; Hell, even sometimes needlessly reckless. But if there’s two things Stan Bowman certainly is not, it’s predictable or boring. It’s almost as if the crafty Blackhawks General Manager anticipates the calm before donning his sorcerer’s hat and unleashing his storm. Just as you begin to suspect things have entered cruise control and all remains quiet on the western front, Stan pulls the strings on the hockey world almost purposely so that you’re caught off-guard, with your pants around your ankles wondering what in the world just happened. This pretty much describes how I and seemingly everyone in the Blackhawks-covering community were caught late, Wednesday afternoon.

Coming off the heels of what was perhaps his best game in months, a dominating 8-2 romp of the Ottawa Senators, Richard Panik was dealt to the Arizona Coyotes for forward Anthony Duclair. Also in the deal was former Blackhawks draftee Adam Clendening and prospect Laurent Dauphin, who was a return piece in last summer’s shocker that sent Niklas Hjalmarsson to Arizona for Connor Murphy.

The timing of the deal is pretty felicitous considering just a little less than a week ago I found myself engaged in a conversation pertaining to the future of a certain Coyotes winger with an Glendale-area acquaintance of mine, who somehow has remained loyal to the Coyotes even after all these painstaking years. Anyhow, we settled upon the accordance that we didn’t think Duclair would ultimately be dealt – that somehow, someway, the Yotes would attempt to parlay and strike some sort of compromise with their young and gifted winger. After all, we agreed, it’s far too early to just give up a guy who scored 20 goals and recorded 44 points as a 20-year old rookie just two seasons earlier. We did also agree, that in the event Duclair was moved, it’d take at least a good prospect and a couple of draft picks, likely a second or third, to lure his tremendous upside from the desert – both concurring that it wouldn’t make much sense for the Coyotes, on the brink of what will surely be a significant deadline fire sale, to swap their once-prized prospect for anything less than future pieces to build upon.

Boy, were we wrong. Wrong in such such a spectacular way Luke Skywalker would monologue how wrong we were. It’s almost impressive because not only was Duclair moved, he was moved for the opposite of what rebuild-logic would dictate he should be dealt for. I really don’t understand the Coyotes’ train of thought there.

Furthering the irony is a Sportsnet Canada piece from Tuesday so fresh on my mind it has yet to be closed from the seemingly endless abyss of open internet tabs on my phone. [Hopefully] Prophetically titled “Why Anthony Duclair could be the hidden gem of the NHL trade market“, the article details through metrics and advanced analytics how the youngster can be a ticking offensive time bomb if placed into the right situation. Little did I know that mere hours after reading this piece the coveted youngster would be a member of the Chicago Blackhawks. But life is unpredictable, and the only thing more unpredictable than life is the NHL during deadline season.

Duclair, 22, a former third round draft pick of the Rangers, exploded onto the scene in 2014-2015 following an impressive preseason in New York and electric performance at the 2015 World Junior Championships as a member of Team Canada. Regarded as one of the NHL’s top prospects, he was the primary piece in the 2015 blockbuster deadline deal that sent veteran defenseman Keith Yandle from the Phoenix Coyotes to the New York Rangers.

Along with Max Domi and 2015, 3rd overall pick Dylan Strome, the 5’11, 196 pound Duclair was foreseen as one of the cornerstones of the future of the Coyotes organization. This conception was reinforced when Duclair posted a hat trick in only his third game in Arizona and capped off his first full NHL season with an impressive 20 goals, 24 assists and a stellar +12 rating – garnering he and linemate Max Domi the nickname “The Killer D’s” and the reputation of being one the league’s most prolific and lethal young duos.

But then the Arizona Coyotes happened.

Since, “The Duke” – a title bestowed upon Duclair by Coyotes fans, simply hasn’t been able to emulate the success he found as a rookie whilst playing for a series of overwhelmingly abysmal Arizona Coyotes teams. Duclair’s offensive productivity reduced drastically in 2016-2017 as the forward was only able to muster 15 points and a -7 rating in 58 games during a sophomore campaign that would even see him, at one point, demoted to the Tucson Roadrunners of the American Hockey League. The lowly Coyotes finishing the season with just 70 points and the NHL’s third lowest scoring offense didn’t provide Duclair or his skill set any favors.

This season has been equally unkind to Duclair, as the forward has often found himself subject to a series of healthy scratches, finger-pointing and lingering trade conjecture all while, yet again, finding himself hogtied to the bumper of the Western Conference’s worst hockey team. While Duclair’s struggles were an easy target for finger-pointers, the honest truth is that you’d be hard-pressed to find anyone who could regularly produce in such an anemic, black hole situation.

Perhaps, though, Wednesday’s trade will serve as an emancipation of sorts for Duclair, who, in his brief NHL career, has yet to skate alongside a forward grouping as talented as the one he’ll encounter as a member of the Blackhawks. If there exists such a thing as a reset button in the NHL, this is it.

Caution is advised, though, as Duclair’s productivity will only go as far as the opportunity presented to him. Duclair is a scorer and viscous speedster who excels exclusively in offensive situations. His defensive shortcomings are what primarily landed him in Coyotes coach Rick Tocchet’s doghouse in the first place. And if you’ve watched any Blackhawks hockey at all over the past decade or so, you’ll understand exceedingly well that these are the same deficiencies that will earn a player a one-way ticket to the press box or AHL in a Joel Quenneville-mandated system.

To get the most out of Duclair, he first must be utilized properly. This means top-six opportunities. I mean, this is why you traded for him, right? You wouldn’t go out of your way to acquire a scoring winger only to bury him in checking role, I’d hope. Luckily for Duclair, who will wear the number 91 with the Blackhawks, there is a spotlighted, flashing-neon opening on the left wing of the surging Nick Schmaltz and Patrick Kane line.

How’s that for a fresh start? If there exists a more fortuitous opportunity in all of hockey, I’d like to know. Also, the mere thought of these three speedsters together is melting the United Center surface to such a boiling extent you can already see the refrigerant coils at the base of ice.

That said, if he gets his fair shot and proper ice time in a top-six role – especially alongside Kane – it won’t take long to determine Duclair’s fate with the Blackhawks, as the winger is set to hit restricted free agency in July.

At the end the day, there’s no lingering repercussions to this deal. It’s one of those rare, home run maneuvers that succeeds even if it fails. If the low-risk, high-reward Duclair experiment fails to take off and the winger fades into obscurity come summertime, then the deal simply becomes a much-needed salary dump, giving the Blackhawks not only close to $3 million in wiggle room at this year’s trade deadline, but also provides Bowman increased capital for the ensuing off season when such names as Ryan Hartman, Vinnie Hinostroza, Jan Rutta, and Michal Kempny hit free agency.

In reality, the only dilemma I can see muddying the waters here is if Duclair, in Artemi Panarin-like fashion, catapults onto the scene and lights the world on fire, thus saving the Blackhawks season and subsequently forcing the off season narrative to center around him.

If you can even call that a dilemma.

As much as we all loved Dick Panik and his spontaneous far and few between moments of brilliance, his nearly $3 million cap hit this season was a grease stain on the financial books of the Blackhawks. In no organization should a forward making such a salary find himself a regular healthy scratch. Its as simple and as blunt as that.

Finally, lets all take a moment to serenade the Coyotes organization with thunderous applause for not only gifting the Blackhawks a player with loads of raw and untapped talent, but for also providing additional relief in the organization’s ongoing fight against cap space deprivation. Even at this conclusion of this piece, days after the dust has settled, I’m still wondering just where Coyotes General Manager John Chayka’s head was on this one.

Perhaps I’m overestimating Duclair’s value and there just wasn’t much of a market for the winger, after all.