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Blackhawks sign top prospect Frank Nazar, who will join team immediately

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One of the biggest pieces of the Blackhawks’ future has arrived.

Top prospect Frank Nazar signed his three-year entry-level contract with the Hawks on Saturday, two days after finishing his sophomore season at Michigan.

The 20-year-old forward — the Hawks’ 13th overall pick in the 2022 draft — will join the team for the final three games of the season, starting with the home finale Sunday against the Hurricanes, to get his first taste of NHL action.

This season represents one of the three years on his contract, meaning it will expire in 2026 — at the same time as fellow future core members Connor Bedard and Kevin Korchinski.

On one hand, that could be tricky for general manager Kyle Davidson to navigate in terms of maintaining salary-cap flexibility. On the other hand, Nazar will have one fewer season of NHL production logged entering the negotiations for his second contract, which could make it more affordable. In the meantime, his entry-level contract will carry a very cheap $950,000 cap hit.

After missing most of his freshman season recovering from hip surgery, the Detroit native bounced back with a solid sophomore year, tallying 41 points in 41 games before the Wolverines were eliminated in the NCAA Frozen Four on Thursday.

It wasn’t perfect in every regard, but it got him back on track developmentally and reaffirmed his potential to become a versatile top-six forward for the Hawks. The Hawks’ development staff worked with him on, for example, using his elite skating ability and elite explosiveness to transition from offense to defense as quickly and readily as he transitions from defense to offense.

“He’s always very good with his self-awareness and self-assessment,” assistant GM Mark Eaton said in March. “[He] realizes when he wasn’t at his best and asks questions to learn about how he can improve going forward.”

He was particularly impressive in the World Junior Championships back in December and January in Sweden, tallying eight points (all assists) in seven games for the Gold Medal-winning U.S. team.

“[He] seemed to take his game to another level,” Davidson said in March. “Just [his] confidence with the puck, carrying it, making plays — it all really stepped up a level once he got back from Sweden. It was good to see. He played well the first half, but [he] took it to another level in the second half.”

The Hawks originally drafted Nazar with one of two picks they acquired in exchange for Kirby Dach, so the organization has already invested a lot in him.

“Frank is just an absolute pistol,” Davidson said that draft day. “He competes like nobody else. He skates like nobody else. He’s just full-speed all the time, and all-out effort. He’s the kind of forward that will drag people into the fight with him.”

There’s a strong possibility that Bedard, Nazar and Oliver Moore — who is expected to return to Minnesota next season for his sophomore year — could one day anchor the Hawks’ lineup as the first-, second- and third-line centers, but one or two of them could also wind up moving to wing and playing alongside each other.

Big questions like that won’t be answered anytime soon, and certainly not during Nazar’s five-day stint with the Hawks this coming week. This brief acclimation will at least give the team and Nazar himself an opportunity to see how he stacks up against NHL competition at the moment, though.

That should help the front office know where to pencil him into next season’s depth chart and also nudge Nazar toward the most important focus areas for his offseason training.



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