Blackhawks notes: MacKenzie Entwistle feeling frustrated in fourth season of losing

Entwistle has quietly become one of the longest-tenured Hawks and is focusing on making his voice heard more often in meetings, but the team’s lack of success throughout his tenure is getting old.

SHARE Blackhawks notes: MacKenzie Entwistle feeling frustrated in fourth season of losing
Blackhawks forward MacKenzie Entwistle takes a shot.

Blackhawks forward MacKenzie Entwistle has become one of the team’s longest-tenured players.

Ethan Miller/Getty Images

After years of continuity within the Blackhawks’ core, the heavy turnover in recent years has made the list of longest-tenured Hawks look strange.

Defenseman Connor Murphy, in his seventh season in Chicago, is the longest-tenured player by far. He’s the only guy left who predates the pandemic. After him are three forwards who debuted during the abridged 2021 no-fans season: Philipp Kurashev (who debuted Jan. 15 that season), Reese Johnson (Jan. 31) and MacKenzie Entwistle (March 23).

Entwistle insists he hasn’t thought much about that, but given that he’s only 24 and logged only his 138th career NHL appearance Wednesday against the Blue Jackets, he admits it’s “definitely a little weird.”

The more thought-provoking aspect for him is that the Hawks entered Wednesday with a 42-76-19 all-time record in the games he played. From an organizational perspective, all that losing helps build a brighter future, but from an individual perspective, it’s draining.

“There’s not much I can say besides, yeah, it is frustrating,” Entwistle said. “The only way we can turn it around is the guys in this dressing room.”

In theory, one valuable thing he could bring is an ability to put each season’s highs and lows into context — by going back to lessons learned from the highs and lows over the last three Hawks seasons, when many of his current teammates weren’t present. But because of the vast differences in each season’s roster, he finds it difficult to even try to compare situations year over year.

Nonetheless, he has focused on making his voice heard more often in meetings recently.

“We’re together for the whole season, so I don’t think you can be scared to speak your mind and say what you think the team [needs],” he said. “Because we’re all growing together; we’re all trying to get better together. Whether it’s a good or bad thing that you’ve got to say, sometimes you have tough conversations with some guys.”

Hall out again

Taylor Hall did not travel with the Hawks to face the Jackets, coach Luke Richardson told reporters in Columbus. He stayed behind in Chicago for some medical testing.

Details are hazy, but considering this is Hall’s fourth absence already this season, it isn’t a good sign.

He already has missed time twice because of a shoulder injury and once with a leg/knee injury, from which he just returned Saturday. In 10 games played, he has four points.

The Latest
Woman is so uncomfortable with mate that she secretly has rented another apartment and visits family to feel peace.
They were with a group of people in the 6100 block of West Dickens Avenue when someone in a dark sedan fired shots.
Since Apr. 20, White Sox outfielder Eloy Jimenez is slashing .286/.355/.607 with a .962 OPS.
The Sky open training camp with a 14-player roster that will need to be trimmed to 12 by May 13.