The Chicago Blackhawks
are a professional ice hockey team based in Chicago, Illinois. They are members of the Central Division of the Western Conference of the National Hockey League (NHL). They have won three Stanley Cup Championships and thirteen division titles since their founding in 1926. The Blackhawks are one of the Original Six NHL teams, along with the Boston Bruins, Montreal Canadiens, Toronto Maple Leafs, New York Rangers and Detroit Red Wings. Since 1994, the Blackhawks have played their home games at the United Center after having spent over 60 years playing at Chicago Stadium.
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Franchise history
Founding
The Chicago Blackhawks joined the NHL in
1926 as part of the league's first wave of expansion into the
United States. They were one of three American teams added that year, along with the Detroit Cougars (now the
Detroit Red Wings) and
New York Rangers. Most of the Hawks' original players came from the
Portland Rosebuds of the
Western Canada Hockey League, which had folded the previous season.
[1]
The Blackhawks' first owner was coffee tycoon
Frederic McLaughlin. He had been a commander with the 333rd Machine Gun Battalion of the
86th Infantry Division during
World War I. This Division was nicknamed the "Blackhawk Division", after a Native American of the
Sauk nation,
Chief Black Hawk, who was a prominent figure in the history of Illinois. McLaughlin evidently named the hockey team in honor of the military unit, making it one of many sports team names using
Native Americans as icons. For many years, the name was spelled "Black Hawks." This ambiguity was finally settled in the summer of 1986 when the club officially decided on the one-word version based on the spelling found in the original franchise documents.
[2]
McLaughlin took a very active role in running the team despite knowing very little about hockey. For most of his tenure as owner, he served as his own general manager. He was also very interested in promoting American hockey players, then very rare in professional hockey. Several of them, including
Doc Romnes,
Taffy Abel,
Alex Levinsky,
Mike Karakas,
Cully Dahlstrom and numerous others, become staples with the club, and under McLaughlin, the Blackhawks were the first NHL team to field an all-American-born lineup.
1926–1932
The Hawks' first season was a moderate success. They played their first game on November 17 when they played the Toronto St. Patricks at what was called the Chicago Coliseum at the time. The Black Hawks won their first game by beating the St. Patricks 4 to 1. They ended up finishing the season in 3rd place with a record of 19-22-3. The Black Hawks lost their
1927 first-round playoff series to the
Boston Bruins, who had made the playoffs for the first time ever.
Following the series, McLaughlin fired head coach
Pete Muldoon. According to
Jim Coleman, sportswriter for the
Toronto Globe and Mail
, McLaughlin felt the 'Hawks were good enough to finish first. Muldoon disagreed, and in a fit of pique, McLaughlin fired him. According to Coleman, Muldoon responded by yelling, "Fire me, Major, and you'll never finish first. I'll put a curse on this team that will
hoodoo it until the end of time." The
Curse of Muldoon was born - although Coleman admitted years after the fact that he had fabricated the whole incident - and became one of the first widely-known sports "curses." While the team would go on to win three Stanley Cups in its first 39 years of existence, it did so without having finished in first place, either in a single- or multi-division format.
The Black Hawks proceeded to have the worst record in the league in
1927–28. By
1931, they reached their first Stanley Cup Final, with goal-scorer
Johnny Gottselig,
Cy Wentworth on
defense, and
Charlie Gardiner in
goal, but fizzled in the final two games against the
Montreal Canadiens. Chicago had another stellar season in
1932, but that did not translate into playoff success.
1938 Cup win
In
1938 the Black Hawks had a record of 14–25, and only barely made the playoffs. They stunned the Canadiens and
New York Americans on
overtime goals in the deciding games of both semifinal series, advancing to the Cup Final against the
Toronto Maple Leafs. Black Hawks goalie
Mike Karakas was injured and could not play, forcing a desperate Chicago team to pull minor-leaguer
Alfie Moore out of a Toronto bar and onto the ice. Moore played one game and won it, but repeating the plan with another player failed as the Hawks lost the game. However, for Games 3 and 4, Karakas was fitted with a special skate to protect his injured toe, and won both games. It was too late for Toronto, as the Hawks won their second championship. To this day, the 1938 Black Hawks possess the poorest regular-season record of any Stanley Cup champion.
The Original Six era
The Black Hawks returned to the Finals in
1944 behind
Doug Bentley's 38-goal season and their linemate
Clint Smith leading the team in assists. After upsetting the Red Wings in the semifinals, they were promptly dispatched by the dominant Canadiens in four games. Mosienko still holds the record for quickest
hat trick, 21 seconds, in the NHL, but Habs star
Maurice "The Rocket" Richard proved to be Mosienko's better.
Owner and founder Frederic McLaughlin died in 1944. His estate sold the team to a syndicate headed by longtime team president Bill Tobin. However, Tobin was only a puppet for Red Wings owner
James E. Norris, who had been the Black Hawks' landlord since his 1936 purchase of
Chicago Stadium. Ironically, Norris had made a bid for what became the Black Hawks in 1926, losing out to McLaughlin. For the next eight years, the Norris-Tobin ownership, as a rule, paid almost no attention to the Black Hawks. Nearly every trade made between Detroit and Chicago ended up being Red Wing heists. As a result, for the next several years, Chicago was the model of futility in the NHL. Between
1945 and
1958, they only made the playoffs twice.
Upon Norris' death, his eldest son,
James D. Norris, and Red Wings minority owner
Arthur Wirtz (the senior Norris' original partner in buying the Red Wings 23 years earlier) took over the floundering club. They guided it through financial reverses, and rebuilt the team from there. One of their first moves was to hire former Detroit coach and GM
Tommy Ivan as general manager.
In the late 1950s, the Hawks struck gold, picking up three young prospects (forwards
Bobby Hull and
Stan Mikita and defenseman
Pierre Pilote), as well as obtaining both star goaltender
Glenn Hall and veteran forward
Ted Lindsay (who had just had a career season with 30 goals and 55 assists) from Detroit. Hull, Mikita, Pilote, and Hall became preeminent stars in Chicago, and all four would eventually be inducted into the
Hockey Hall of Fame.
After two first-round exits at the hands of the eventual champions from
Montreal in
1959 and
1960, it was expected that the Canadiens would once again beat the Hawks when they met in the semifinals in
1961. A defensive plan that completely wore down Montreal's superstars worked, however, as Chicago won the series in six games. They then bested the Wings to win their third (and, as of 2008, most recent) Stanley Cup championship. In the 25 years of the
Original Six era, this was the only time a team other than Montreal, Toronto, or Detroit won the Cup.
The Hawks made the Cup Finals twice more in the 1960s, losing to the Leafs in
1962 and the Habs in
1965. They remained a force to be reckoned with throughout the decade, with Hull enjoying four 50-goal seasons, Mikita winning back-to-back scoring titles and MVP accolades, Pilote winning three consecutive
Norris Trophies, and Hall being named the First or Second All-Star goaltender eight out of nine seasons. Hull and Mikita especially were widely regarded as the most feared one-two punch in the league. However, despite a strong supporting cast which included
Bill Hay,
Ken Wharram,
Phil Esposito,
Moose Vasko,
Doug Mohns, and
Pat Stapleton, the Hawks never quite put it all together.
In
1967, the last season of the six-team NHL, the Black Hawks finished first, breaking the supposed Curse of Muldoon, 23 years after the death of Frederic McLaughlin. However, they lost in the semifinals to Toronto, who went on to win their last Stanley Cup to date. Afterward, Coleman, who first printed the story of the curse in 1943, admitted that he made the story up to break a writer's block he had as a column deadline approached.
The expansion era
Hall was drafted by the expansion
St. Louis Blues for the
1967–68 season, while Pilote was traded to the Maple Leafs for
Jim Pappin in
1968. In that season, despite Hull breaking his own previous record of 54 goals in a season with 58, the Black Hawks missed the playoffs for the first time since 1958 — and the last time before
1998.
In
1967, the Black Hawks made a trade with the
Boston Bruins that turned out to be one of the most one-sided in the history of the sport. Chicago sent young forwards Phil Esposito,
Ken Hodge and
Fred Stanfield to Boston in exchange for
Pit Martin,
Jack Norris and
Gilles Marotte. While Martin would star for the Hawks for many seasons, Esposito, Hodge, and Stanfield would lead the Bruins to the top of the league for several years and capture two Stanley Cups. In Boston, Phil Esposito set numerous scoring records en route to a career as one of the NHL's all-time greats.
Nonetheless, in
1971, life was made easier for Chicago, as in an attempt to better balance the divisions, the expansion
Buffalo Sabres and
Vancouver Canucks were both placed in the
East Division, while the Hawks moved into the
West Division. They became the class of the West overnight, rampaging to a 46–17–15 record and an easy first-place finish. With second-year goalie
Tony Esposito (Phil's younger brother and winner of the
Calder Memorial Trophy for Rookie of the Year the previous season), Hull, his younger brother
Dennis, Mikita, and sterling defensemen Stapleton and
Bill White, the Hawks reached the Stanley Cup final before bowing out to the Canadiens.
A critical blow to the franchise came in
1972, though, with the start of the
World Hockey Association. Long dissatisfied with how little he was paid as the league's marquee star, Bobby Hull jumped to the upstart
Winnipeg Jets for a million-dollar contract. Former
Philadelphia Flyers star
Andre Lacroix, who received very little ice time in his single season in Chicago, joined Hull, and the pair became two of the WHA's great stars. The Hawks repeated their appearance in Cup Final that year, however, again losing to Montreal. Stapleton left for the WHA too after that year, depleting the team further.
While the team led or was second in the West Division for four straight seasons, for the rest of the 1970s, the Black Hawks made the playoffs each year - winning seven division championships in the decade in all - but were never a successful Stanley Cup contender, losing 16 straight playoff games at one point. The team acquired legendary blueliner
Bobby Orr from the
Boston Bruins in 1976, but ill health forced him to sit out for most of the season, and he eventually retired in 1979, having played only 26 games for the Hawks. Mikita did the same the following year after playing 22 years in Chicago, the third-longest career for a single team in league history.
By
1982, the Black Hawks squeaked into the playoffs as the fourth seed in the Norris Division (at the time the top four teams in each division automatically made the playoffs), and were one of the league's
Cinderella teams that year. Led by second-year
Denis Savard's 32 goals and 119 points and
Doug Wilson's 39 goals, the Hawks stunned the
Minnesota North Stars and Blues in the playoffs before losing to another surprise team, the
Vancouver Canucks, who made the
Stanley Cup Finals. Chicago proved they were no fluke the next season, also making the third round before losing to the eventual runner-up
Edmonton Oilers. After an off-year in
1984, the Hawks again faced a now fresh-off-a-ring Edmonton offensive juggernaut of a team and lost in the third round in
1985.
In
1986, while going through the team's records, someone discovered the team's original NHL contract, and found that the name "Blackhawks" was printed as a compound word as opposed to two separate words ("Black Hawks") which was the way most sources had been printing it for 60 years and as the team had always officially listed it. The name officially became "Chicago Blackhawks" from that point on.
In the late 1980s, Chicago still made the playoffs on an annual basis, but made early-round exits each time.
In
1989, after three straight first-round defeats, and despite a fourth-place finish in their division in the regular season, Chicago made it to the Conference Final in the
rookie seasons of both goalie
Ed Belfour and center
Jeremy Roenick. Once again though, they would fail to make the Stanley Cup Final, losing to the eventual champion
Calgary Flames.
The following season the Hawks did prove they were late-round playoff material, running away with the
Norris Division title, but, yet again, the third round continued to stymie them, this time against the Oilers, despite 1970s
Soviet star goaltender
Vladislav Tretiak coming to
Chicago to become the Blackhawks' goaltender coach.
In
1991, Chicago was poised to fare even better in the playoffs, winning the
Presidents' Trophy for best regular-season record, but the Cinderella
Minnesota North Stars stunned them in six games in the first-round en route to an improbable
Stanley Cup Final appearance.
In
1992 the Blackhawks, with Roenick scoring 53 goals,
Chris Chelios (acquired from
Montreal two years previously) on defense, and Belfour in goal, finally reached the Final after 19 years out of such status. The Blackhawks won 11 consecutive playoff games that year, which set an NHL record. However, they were swept four games to none by the
Mario Lemieux-led defending
Stanley Cup champion
Pittsburgh Penguins (who, in sweeping the Blackhawks, tied the record Chicago had set only days before). Although the 4–0 sweep would normally indicate Pittsburgh dominance, it was actually a close series that could have gone either way. Game 1 saw the Blackhawks squander leads of 3–0 and 4–1, and would eventually be beaten 5–4 after a Lemieux power-play goal with 9 seconds remaining in regulation. The Blackhawks most lackluster game was Game 2, losing 3–1. A frustrating loss of 1–0 followed in game 3, and a
natural hat trick from
Dirk Graham and stellar play from
Dominik Hasek (who showed indications of the goaltender he would later become) could not secure a win in game 4, which ended in 6–5 final in favor of Pittsburgh.
Belfour posted a 40-win season in
1993 as the Hawks looked to go deep yet again, and Chelios accumulated career-high penalty time with 282 minutes in the box, but St. Louis stunned Chicago with a first-round sweep to continue Chicago's playoff losing streak.
Although they finished near-.500 season in
1994, the Blackhawks again qualified for the playoffs. They were eliminated by eventual Western Conference finalist Toronto, but broke their playoff losing streak at 10 games with a Game 3 win. It wasn't enough, however, and the Blackhawks fell in six games. The 1993-94 season also marked the Blackhawks' last at the old
Chicago Stadium, and the team moved into the new
United Center in the
lockout-shortened 1995 season.
Bernie Nicholls and
Joe Murphy both scored 20 goals over 48 games, and Chicago once again made it to the Western Conference Final, losing to the rival
Detroit Red Wings.
Roenick, Belfour, and Chelios were all traded away as the Blackhawks faltered through the late 1990s until they missed the playoffs in
1998 for the first time in 29 years, one season short of tying the Boston Bruins' record for the longest such streak in
North American professional sports history.
The 21st century
The millennium has largely been a disappointing time for the Hawks thus far.
Eric Daze,
Alexei Zhamnov and
Tony Amonte emerged as some of the team's leading stars by this time. However, aside from a quick first-round exit in
2002, the 'Hawks were consistently out of the playoffs until the 2008-09 season, in most years finishing well out of contention. Amonte left for the
Phoenix Coyotes in the summer of 2002.
A somber note was struck in February 2004, when
ESPN named the Blackhawks the worst franchise in professional sports.
[3] Indeed, the Blackhawks were viewed with much indifference by Chicagoans for much of the 1990s and early 2000s, due to anger over several policies instituted by late owner
Bill Wirtz (derisively known as "Dollar Bill"). For example, Wirtz raised ticket prices to an average of $50, and did not allow home games to be televised in the Chicago area. Many hockey fans in Chicago prefer the
American Hockey League's
Chicago Wolves to the Hawks, who have advertised themselves by saying "We Play Hockey the Old-Fashioned Way: We Actually Win." The club under Wirtz was then subject of a highly critical book,
Career Misconduct
, sold outside games until Wirtz had its author and publisher arrested.
Following the lockout of the
2004–05 season, new GM
Dale Tallon set about restructuring the team in the hopes of making a playoff run. Tallon made several moves in the summer of 2005, most notably the signing of
Tampa Bay Lightning Stanley Cup-winning goalie
Nikolai Khabibulin and All-Star defenseman
Adrian Aucoin. However, injuries plagued Khabibulin and Aucoin (among others), and the Blackhawks again finished with one of the worst records in the league (26–43–13) — next-to-last in the
Western Conference and twenty seventh in the league.
The Blackhawks reached another low point on May 16, 2006, when they that popular TV/radio play-by-play announcer Pat Foley was not going to be brought back after 25 years with the team, a move amongst most Blackhawks fans. Foley then became the television/radio voice of the Wolves.
With the third overall pick in the
2006 NHL Entry Draft, the team selected
Jonathan Toews, who led the
University of North Dakota Fighting Sioux hockey team to the 2006
NCAA Frozen Four.
The Blackhawks were eager to make a splash in the free-agent market, and offered big money to many of the top free agents. They were, however, denied, only being able to acquire two backup goalies in
Patrick Lalime and
Sebastien Caron. Chicago was one of the biggest buyers in the trade market, though, acquiring a future franchise player in
left-winger Martin Havlat, as well as
center Bryan Smolinski from the
Ottawa Senators in a three-way deal that also involved the
San Jose Sharks. The 'Hawks dealt mean forward
Mark Bell to the Sharks,
Michal Barinka and a 2008 second-round draft pick to the Senators, while Ottawa also received defenseman
Tom Preissing and center
Josh Hennessy from San Jose. Havlat gave the Blackhawks the talented, first-line caliber gamebreaker they so desperately needed. The Havlat trade was soon followed by another major trade — winger and key Blackhawk player, another left wing,
Kyle Calder, was traded to the
Philadelphia Flyers in exchange for grinding defensive center
Michal Handzus. The move caused a stir in Chicago. Calder had won an increase in his contract through arbitration, which was accepted by the Hawks, but rather than ink their leading scorer, the Blackhawks decided to address their need for a proven center by acquiring Handzus. Injuries to both Havlat and Handzus hurt the Blackhawks, and Smolinski was eventually traded at the trade deadline to the
Vancouver Canucks. On November 26, 2006, Blackhawks GM Dale Tallon fired Head Coach Trent Yawney and appointed assistant coach
Denis Savard as head coach. Savard had been the assistant coach of the Blackhawks since 1997, the year after he retired as one of the most popular and successful Blackhawks of all time. The Blackhawks continued to struggle, and finished last in the Central Division, 12 games out of the playoffs.
They finished with the fourth worst record in the league, and in the Draft Lottery, won the opportunity to select first overall in the draft, whereas the team had never had a draft pick higher than third overall. They used the pick to draft right wing
Patrick Kane from the
London Knights of the
Ontario Hockey League.
2007–present: Franchise resurrection
On September 26, 2007,
Bill Wirtz, the long time owner of the Blackhawks, died after a brief battle with cancer.
[4] He was succeeded by his son,
Rocky, who drastically altered his father's long-standing policies.
[5]
Midway into the
2007–08 NHL season, the franchise experimented with a partnership with
Comcast SportsNet Chicago and
WGN-TV by airing selected Blackhawks games on television.
[6] During the next season, Comcast and WGN began airing all of the team's regular season games.
Rocky also named
John McDonough, formerly the president of the
Chicago Cubs, as the franchise's new president.
[7] Since taking over the position, McDonough has been an instrumental figure in the Blackhawks current marketing success, including establishing links between the Blackhawks and the very strong Cubs fan base in a number of ways.
[8] In April 2008 the Blackhawks announced a partnership with the Chicago White Sox. In this partnership the Blackhawks have Shoot the Puck contests at every White Sox Home Game. Wirtz was also able to bring back former Blackhawks greats
Stan Mikita and
Bobby Hull, as the franchise's “hockey ambassadors.”
[9]
In addition to the changes in the team's policies and front office, the Blackhawks roster was bolstered by the addition of two young players,
Jonathan Toews and
Patrick Kane. Toews, the third overall selection in the
2006 NHL Entry Draft lead all rookies in goals scored, while Kane, the first overall selection in the
2007 NHL Entry Draft lead all rookies in total points.
[10] Both players were finalists for the
Calder Memorial Trophy, which is awarded to the NHL's best rookie. Kane ultimately ousted his teammate, and won the award.
[11] The Blackhawks finished with a record 40-34-8, missing the playoffs by three wins. The 2007 marked the first time in six years that the team finished above .500.
[12]
thumb, at age 20, became the youngest captain in the franchise's history in 2008.
The Blackhawks made several major roster changes before the 2008-09 NHL season. The team traded
Tuomo Ruutu, their longest tenured player, to the
Carolina Hurricanes for forward
Andrew Ladd on February 26, 2008.
[13] Later that day, the Blackhawks traded alternate captain
Martin Lapointe to the
Ottawa Senators for a sixth round draft pick in the
2008 NHL Entry Draft.
On the first day of free agency, July 1, the team signed goaltender
Cristobal Huet to a four year contract worth $22.5 million
dollar contract, and later signed defenseman
Brian Campbell to an eight year, $56.8 million dollar contact.
[14] The team also added former coaches
Joel Quenneville and
Scotty Bowman to their organization.
[15] [16] [17]
On February 13, 2008, the Blackhawks announced they would hold their first fan convention. On July 16, 2008, the team was announced that they would host the
2009 NHL Winter Classic on a temporary ice rink at
Wrigley Field on
New Years Day against fellow "
Original Six" member
Detroit Red Wings.
[18] The
Detroit Red Wings defeated Chicago, 6-4. On June 16, Pat Foley was hired to replace
Dan Kelly as the Blackhawks TV play-by-play man. Foley had been fired two years before and had been calling games for the Chicago Wolves since then.
[19] The Blackhawks relieved
Denis Savard of his head coaching duties, and replaced him with
Joel Quenneville on October 16, 2008.
[20] Savard has since been brought back to the organization as an ambassador.
The Blackhawks finished the 2008-2009 regular season in second place in their division, with a record of 46-24-12, putting them in fourth place in the Western Conference with 104 points. The Blackhawks clinched a playoff since the 2001-02 season berth with a 3-1 win over Nashville on April 3. On April 8, with a shootout loss to the
Columbus Blue Jackets, the Blackhawks clinched their first 100-point season in 17 years. The Blackhawks beat the fifth-seeded
Calgary Flames in six games to advance to the Western Conference Semifinals for the first time since 1996.
[21] The team proceeded to defeat the third-seeded
Vancouver Canucks in six games games.
[22] The Blackhawks played the then
Stanley Cup champions, the
Detroit Red Wings, for the Western Conference Championship. They lost the series to the Red Wings in five games.
[23]
During the 2008-09 season, the team led the League in home attendance with a total of 912,155, averaging of 22,247 fans per game.
[24] This figure includes the 40,818 fans from the Winter Classic at Wrigley Field. Therefore, the total attendance for games hosted at the United Center is 871,337, good for a average of 21,783 which still leads the league over Montreal's 21,273 average.
[25] The Blackhawks welcomed their one millionth fan of the season at the United Center before game six of the Western Conference semi-finals on May 11, 2009.
[26]
The Blackhawks made another major free agent purchase before the
2009-10 NHL season, signing
Marián Hossa to a 12-year contract worth 62.8 million
dollars.
[27] In addition to Hossa, the team also acquired
Tomáš Kopecký,
John Madden, and
Richard Petiot.
[28] In early July, general manager
Dale Tallon and the Blackhawks management came under fire when the
National Hockey League Players' Association (NHLPA) claimed the team did not submit offers to their restricted free agents before the deadline.
[29] In the worst case scenario, the team's unsigned restricted free agents at the time, including
Calder Memorial Trophy finalist
Kris Versteeg, would have become unrestricted free agents.
Despite the ordeal, the Blackhawks were able to sign Versteeg and all of their restricted free agents before the NHLPA could take further actions.
On July 14, 2009, The Blackhawks demoted Tallon to the position of Senior Adviser.
Stan Bowman, son of
Scotty Bowman, was promoted to general manager.
[30]
Team information
Jerseys
Like all NHL teams for the
2007–08 NHL season, the Chicago Blackhawks unveiled Rbk Edge jerseys from the
Reebok Company. Unlike other clubs, Chicago did not deviate much from previous jerseys with small exceptions:
- new collar with NHL logo
- a "baseball-style" cut along the bottom
The Blackhawks have brought back their black third jerseys for several games in 2008-09 after a one-year absence. For the
2009 Winter Classic, the Blackhawks wore jerseys based on the design worn in the 1936-37 season. The jersey is predominantly black jersey with a large beige stripe across the chest (also on the sleeves), with a red border, and an old-style circular Black Hawks logo.
[31] Comcast SportsNet Chicago and the Daily Herald also reported that the Blackhawks will use this Winter Classic design as their third jersey for the 2009-10 season, with the only change being tomahawks on the shoulders. The Blackhawks' uniform was voted one of the 25 best in professional sports by Paul Lukas of
GQ in November 2004.
Logo
McLaughlin's wife,
Irene Castle, designed the original version of the team's logo which featured a crudely drawn black and white Indian head in a circle. This design went through several significant changes between 1926 and 1955. During this period seven distinct versions of the primary logo were worn on their uniforms. At the beginning of the 1955-56 season the outer circle was removed and the head began to resemble the team's current primary logo. This crest and uniform went through subtle changes until the 1964-65 season. The basic logo and jersey design has remained constant since then.
In 2008
The Hockey News' staff voted the team's main logo to be the best in the NHL.
Mascot
The Blackhawks mascot is
Tommy Hawk
, a hawk who wears the Blackhawks' four feathers on his head, along with a Blackhawks jersey and hockey pants. Tommy Hawk often participates in the T-shirt toss and puck chuck at the United Center. He walks around the concourse greeting fans before and during the game. The Hawks introduced Tommy in the 2001–02 season. His oversized jersey has "WWW"
William Wadsworth Wirtz and American flag patch on it. The Hawks have had two giveaways featuring Tommy Hawk items. The first was a bobble-head doll and the second was a
Mountain Dew sponsored Tommy Hawk water bottle.
Fight Song
"
Here Come the Hawks!" is the official fight song and introduction of the Chicago Blackhawks. The song was written by J. Swayzee and produced by the Dick Marx Orchestra and Choir in 1968 and is heard quite often both in vocal and organ renditions during Blackhawks home games.
National anthem
It is a tradition for Blackhawks fans to applaud and cheer loudly during the singing of the national anthems. This tradition originated during a
1985 Campbell Conference playoff game at Chicago Stadium versus the
Edmonton Oilers.
[32] It is not uncommon for fans in the 300-level to wave American Flags and light sparklers during the anthems.
Cup drought
The team has not won the Cup since
1961. This is the longest current cup drought in the NHL. At 48 years, it is the second longest Stanley Cup drought in NHL history, behind the New York Rangers, which ended in 1994 after 54 years.
Media and announcers
For the first time in team history, all 82 games plus playoffs will be broadcast in high definition on television during the 2008–09 season. At least 20 of which will be on
WGN-TV (Channel 9). The others will air on
Comcast SportsNet Chicago. For the last 8 seasons, the teams radio affiliate was
WSCR (670). On April 30, 2008, the team signed a three year deal with
WGN Radio (720).
Pat Foley - TV play-by-play
Eddie Olczyk - TV analyst
John Wiedeman - Radio play-by-play
Troy Murray - Radio analyst
Gene Honda - Public address
Season-by-season record
This is a partial list of the last five seasons completed by the Blackhawks. For the full season-by-season history, see Chicago Blackhawks seasons
Note:
GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, OTL = Overtime losses, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against, PIM = Penalties in minutes''
Season
| GP
| W
| L
| OTL
| Pts
| GF
| GA
| PIM
| Finish
| Playoffs
|
2004–05
| Season canceled due to 2004–05 NHL lockout
|
2005–061
| 82
| 26
| 43
| 13
| 65
| 211
| 285
| 1518
| 4th, Central
| Did not qualify
|
2006–07
| 82
| 31
| 42
| 9
| 71
| 201
| 258
| 1330
| 5th, Central
| Did not qualify
|
2007–08
| 82
| 40
| 34
| 8
| 88
| 239
| 235
| 1292
| 3rd, Central
| Did not qualify
|
2008–09
| 82
| 46
| 24
| 12
| 104
| 264
| 216
| 1129
| 2nd, Central
| Lost in the Western Conference Finals to Detroit (1-4)
|
1 As of the 2005–06 NHL season, all games will have a winner; the OTL column includes SOL (Shootout losses).
Players
Current roster
Updated December 16, 2008.
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