Blackhawks want Sam Rinzel to do better job ‘sensing danger’ after mental reset

The Blackhawks are using the same strategy to jump-start Sam Rinzel they did to jump-start fellow rookie defenseman Artyom Levshunov earlier this fall.

Levshunov has developed at a steady rate since learning a lesson as a healthy scratch in the Hawks’ third game of the season. His performance Saturday against the Maple Leafs was probably his best in the NHL.

Rinzel also struggled early on, but he eventually found his game without major intervention. Once his play began dipping recently, however, head coach Jeff Blashill decided to prescribe the Levshunov treatment and make him a healthy scratch against the Maple Leafs.

That gave Rinzel a mental reset, plus an opportunity to watch from the press box and see the game from a different angle.

It was a one-time thing, however. It looks as though Rinzel will be back in the lineup as the Hawks’ seventh defenseman Tuesday against the Flames.

‘‘He has shown he’s a great defenseman in this league . . . not just last year but this year, where he’s played great games,’’ Blashill said Monday. ‘‘We just need him to get back to that level. Sometimes as a coach you almost sit a guy to give him a chance to take a breath, regroup and then reattack it a little bit.’’

Rinzel, 21, probably was burdened with unfair, unrealistic expectations entering the season. Based on his impressive nine-game NHL tryout last season, he was billed as the Hawks’ No. 1 defenseman and a possible Calder Trophy candidate this season.

With only 26 games played in the NHL, however, it shouldn’t be surprising that there have been ups and downs, especially considering he hasn’t yet reached his peak weight and strength.

The Hawks had a 34% scoring-chance ratio during Rinzel’s five-on-five ice time in his first four appearances this season, then a 52.5% ratio in his next nine, then a 31.4% ratio in his last four. Individually, he has one goal and two assists in those 17 games.

‘‘I’ve just got to be better in a couple of areas of the ice that I know I’m actually relatively good at,’’ Rinzel said. ‘‘I’ve been in these little lulls before in my life. . . . I know my game, especially when I’m playing well, is a confident game [where] I’m making plays.’’

His ice time dipped to 11:29 in his last outing against the Devils, down from an average of 19:51 before that. Being removed from the top power-play unit has affected his minutes, and Levshunov has proved to be a more effective quarterback right now.

‘‘From the exterior, [Rinzel] seems to do a good job — when things happen to him that are tough — of not letting it bother him too much,’’ Blashill said. ‘‘Some of these guys are crazy hard on themselves, whereas he’s got a pretty positive outlook and moves on to the next day.’’

Specifically, the Hawks want Rinzel to be more aware of his surroundings, particularly when it comes to sensing danger, during every shift. He seemingly got burned for at least one odd-man rush per game on their long road trip.

The Kraken’s game-killing third goal Nov. 3 provides one example. Forward Frank Nazar got blamed for losing the puck in the neutral zone, but it wouldn’t have been so costly had Rinzel not inexplicably skated wide of and past the loose puck, allowing it to turn into a two-on-one rush.

Blashill said Rinzel’s thought process has to be something like: ‘‘We’re in the offensive zone or on a rush, and someone’s cheating behind me. I have to make sure I’m the fifth guy. I have to make sure I’m behind him. I can’t hang in there, hoping that we keep the puck, because the next thing you know it’s a breakaway the other way.’’

Moore’s skating has been impressive in his first six games with the Hawks this season, and he’s figuring out what he can do with it.
The Hawks gave a packed house at the United Center another win to cheer about as their surprise start rolls on. They have 30 third-period goals on the season.
Off to a surprisingly successful start, the Blackhawks are commanding attention again, trying to transform into a winner and giving fans a reason to go mad on Madison.
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