It wasn’t very long after the Chicago Blackhawks officially introduced Daniel Carcillo(along with Andrew Brunette) that Carcillo started showing the “screw you” attitude he’s so well known for.
He made no hurry attacking rival Vancouver. Not just the team, but specific players, naming Max Lapierre to be on the top of his list. Carcillo has a long history of trash-talking that goes along with his dirty play.
He’s no stranger to suspensions and pay cuts. In fact, Carcillo is suspended for the first two regular season games because of an in-between periods incident with officials last playoffs.
“The way I play I’m bound to miss a few games every year,” Carcillo said. “It comes with the territory. I don’t like being suspended or the pay cuts, but the way I play it’s tough to stay out of the principal’s office.”
But all of this toughness and dirty attitude is exactly what GM Stan Bowman wanted to bring to the ‘Hawks this season. Jamal Meyers and Steve Montador, along with Carcillo, complement the ‘Hawks’ desire to add toughness to the team.
But some criticize the move to bring in Carcillo, who, they claim, has too big of a mouth and not enough skill to counter it, comparing Carcillo to Carlos Zambrano, and part of that is true. Carcillo has never been a very huge productive forward. He’s an infamous tweeter, but no longer has an account, and he’s only amassed a total of six points last season in 57 games, but being moved on the fourth line will have that affect on your stats.
With all that to his name, it puts fans in a tough spot on whether signing Carcillo is worth all the extra ‘baggage’ he brings with him. NHL fans love tough players, but having a big mouth and using it a lot is a very fast way to make enemies even if they’re your fans.
The direction Bowman wants to go with these new players isn’t entirely new, but the trash talking is. The ‘Hawks had tough guys before in Andrew Ladd and Dustin Byfuglien, but those guys complimented their grittiness with offensive skills, and they rarely ever called players out directly in interviews.
There is no doubt Carcillo can play the gritty part, but offensive production is an uncertainty. Carcillo has gotten better when it comes to staying out of the penalty box and he did have a somewhat decent offensive season in 2009-10, so there’s reasons to be somewhat optimistic.
Carcillo insists that, given a fresh start, he can prove he’s worth the risk.
“Everybody always (says) that I can fight, that I’m tough and I can hit, but I pride myself on my game, as well,” Carcillo said. “I never want to be that fourth-line guy and that’s kind of what I turned into last year. That’s what they wanted me to be and I had a really, really hard time with it.”
Carcillo’s exact spot on the roster isn’t known yet, but I assume it’ll mostly be decided by the way he plays on the ice and if he can live up to his own words. Either way, it’s a risk for the ‘Hawks that could end up hurting the team or prove to be an important factor in winning this season.
Let the season begin and let’s find out.
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2 Comments
I have been very outspoken about my disapproval of adding Carcillo to the Hawks’ roster and got a lot of flack for it.
Well, the first time he is in front of the press and he is starting something already.
I don’t care what all he brings to the table, the Hawks franchise has worked hard to have a solid reputation and dare I say a panache of class. Carcillo just doesn’t fit … I am going to be saying, “I told you so” until the day his contract ends … or they trade him.
Carcillo is basically what Adam Burish was to the cup-winning team. He’s a guy that brings character (not meaning positive, meaning something other than the mostly bland feel the team had last season). They’re not paying him top 6 money, so why expect that kind of production. He’ll do what they’re paying him to do, mix things up with the other team and get under their skin.