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Haugh: Blackhawks’ Bowman must act quickly if stand-pat strategy stumbles

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Chicago Blackhawks goaltender Corey Crawford guards the net during training camp at Johnny's IceHouse West in Chicago, Illinois on Monday, January 14, 2013. (Photo by Scott Strazzante/Chicago Tribune/MCT)

(MCT) — CHICAGO — Nothing marks the return of the Blackhawks like a bit of euphoria and a bout of amnesia. It also triggers a third thing, but I forget what that is.

The end of the NHL lockout in a city hungry for hockey immediately creates excitement that the Hawks can extend a shortened 48-game season into mid-June and the Stanley Cup finals. That the compressed training camp will benefit the Hawks more than most Western Conference contenders because they already have chemistry that teams that actually added new players will need time to develop. That familiarity from playing together will offset a rigorous early road trip. That when they drop the puck Saturday in Los Angeles, the Hawks will be closer than any team in Chicago to winning a championship.

They are. Everything’s relative in our cynical sports town.

The Bears reset their Super Bowl clock by firing Lovie Smith. The Bulls find themselves at the mercy of modern medicine and the salary cap. The White Sox figure to tease us every summer, but realistic thoughts of October baseball don’t include the World Series. The Cubs’ calendar for their big moment is beginning to look less reliable than the Mayans’. The Hawks? They return anything-can-happen talent good enough to fool some people into thinking they can overcome glaring deficiencies and win a Cup.

You know, people like Blackhawks general manager Stan Bowman.

Amid all the enthusiasm over hockey’s return, how easy it can be to forget that Bowman neglected a roster a bold move or two away from supremacy. With due respect to addition Sheldon Brookbank, a veteran No. 7 defenseman hardly qualifies as an offseason upgrade that changes the dynamic of a team that could use a shakeup. The focus on free-agent inactivity overlooks Bowman’s inability to pull off a meaningful trade to improve the Hawks. The lockout didn’t start until September. Seems the Blackhawks started embracing the status quo long before that.

Returning with essentially the same players suggests Bowman thinks the Hawks are closer to the team that led the NHL in points in December than the team that lost nine straight two months later.

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