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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
National
Ben Pope

One year later, Brandon Hagel trade looks like win for both Blackhawks, Lightning

Former Blackhawks forward Brandon Hagel has lived up to expectations with the Lightning this season. (Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

The Blackhawks and Lightning’s blockbuster Brandon Hagel trade will hit its one-year anniversary next weekend.

The details of the trade — Hagel and two fourth-round picks for two first-round picks, plus Taylor Raddysh and Boris Katchouk — were shocking at the time.

It was shocking the Hawks were willing to move Hagel, a 23-year-old fan favorite and culture-setter just settling into his niche in the NHL. And it was shocking the Lighting were willing to give up so much for a former sixth-round pick with 61 career NHL points.

In retrospect, it isn’t nearly so shocking. Instead, early results indicate it might’ve been a win for both sides.

The Hawks have doubled — and tripled, and quadrupled — down on their strategy of selling off established, well-liked stars for draft picks in the time since, be it with Alex DeBrincat, Kirby Dach, Max Domi or Patrick Kane.

Hawks general manager Kyle Davidson’s decision to move Hagel when his asking price was met proved to be the tip of the iceberg, foreshadowing his overall approach. A year ago, one must recall, the rebuild had just been publicly declared; the scope of it, including the fact the Hawks would outright tank in 2022-23, wasn’t yet known. It only later turned out no player was safe.

Davidson has acquired four more first-round picks since nabbing those two from the Lightning — and the Rangers’ playoff outcome could make it five more — but the Hagel haul did jumpstart his inventory-building process. The first of the two Lightning picks is coming up this June and will fall late in the round, well after the Hawks’ own pick.

The Lightning, meanwhile, have also doubled down on their strategy of eschewing all concerns about the future to build the best team — the best salary-cap-compliant team, that is — in the present.

Lightning general manager Julien BriseBois essentially followed the Hagel trade blueprint again at the deadline this year, acquiring another young, cost-controlled, versatile, unheralded forward — Tanner Jeannot — from the Predators. What he gave up to do so was again shocking: first-, second-, third-, fourth- and fifth-round picks and Cal Foote.

In a few years, Tampa’s cupboard will be completely bare. They have the NHL’s second-worst prospect pool (per The Athletic’s 2023 rankings), no pick higher than the sixth round this year and no first-round pick until 2026. But that has been accepted as the price to pay for success.

“The odds of those picks turning into players that can help us win while we have this group of players right now in their prime...are zero,” BriseBois told reporters after the Jeannot trade.

And Hagel, after a somewhat slow adjustment period following the trade last spring, has fully lived up to expectations this season.

His empty-net goal in the Lightning’s win over the Hawks on Saturday gave him 23 goals and 28 assists in 66 games to date while averaging 18:51 of ice time. Steven Stamkos’ injury has temporarily bumped him up to the first line with Brayden Point and Nikita Kucherov.

The fact he has produced that much with a $1.5 million cap hit (which remains locked in place through next season) makes him one of the biggest bargains in the NHL. That’s exactly why the Lightning wanted him.

Meanwhile, Raddysh has prospered in a bigger role on the Hawks; he leads the team with 17 goals in addition to 13 assists. His and Katchouk’s paths have diverged since arriving in Chicago with similar pedigrees — Katchouk has struggled in a fourth-line role this season — but the Hawks are probably OK with hitting .500 on the two active-player throw-ins.

Raddysh, at just 25, could conceivably stick around through the rebuild. Or he could be flipped for more picks in a “Hagel Lite” type of trade — since he, too, is a bargain at a $758,000 cap hit through next season.

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