The Blackhawks lacked a true replacement for Saad on the top line and had a shortage of quality depth in the bottom two lines, so they added three veteran forwards prior to the NHL Trade Deadline. The most significant one was Andrew Ladd, re-acquired in a trade with the Winnipeg Jets on Feb. 25 for young forward Marko Dano, a first-round pick in the 2016 NHL Draft and a conditional pick in the 2018 draft.
However, Chicago lost to the St. Louis Blues in the Western Conference First Round of the 2016 Stanley Cup Playoffs, and Ladd signed with the New York Islanders as a free agent on July 1. Now, it's up to the replenished defense to hold down the fort while a host of inexperienced forwards try to make a successful transition to the League.
Prior to signing Campbell and Kempny, and bringing back veteran Michal Rozsival on a one-year contract reportedly worth $600,000, the Blackhawks already had Duncan Keith, Niklas Hjalmarsson, Brent Seabrook, Trevor van Riemsdyk, Erik Gustafsson and Viktor Svedberg under contract. Campbell and Kempny should provide better balance and experience on the back end, and goalie Corey Crawford has become one of the NHL's best.
"You put all that together and our defense is looking very strong," Bowman said. "It's a strong point of our team right now."
It's a new approach as well. The Blackhawks have depended on young players to handle some key roles before, but not for this many spots all at once.
"This year, we can't forecast the number of players, but some of these guys can take that next step where they become established players," coach Joel Quenneville said. "I still think there's going to be a lot of [internal] competition. It'll sort itself out."