Blackhawks Under-23: Depth and Future Stars

This ranking is from The Athletic, written by Corey Pronman, and looks at which young players project to have the best NHL careers. It’s not about who scores next week — it’s about who will drive teams for years. For the Chicago Blackhawks, the takeaway is clear: four in the Top-50, two more in the next 50, and five more between 101–175.

That’s the sign of a deep pipeline that can keep feeding the NHL roster. And with another likely top-5 pick in 2026, the Hawks could soon have four elite prospects taken in the top three of the draft in just four years — Connor Bedard, Artyom Levshunov, Anton Frondell, and the 2026 pick. That’s how you build a dynasty presuming the players develop as expected.

Chicago names on the list (rank + draft info)

  • #2 Connor Bedard – 2023 1st overall
  • #22 Artyom Levshunov – 2024 2nd overall
  • #26 Anton Frondell – 2025 3rd overall
  • #45 Frank Nazar – 2022 13th overall
  • #80 Kevin Korchinski – 2022 7th overall
  • #85 Sam Rinzel – 2022 25th overall
  • #111 Sacha Boisvert – 2024 18th overall
  • #113 Oliver Moore – 2023 19th overall
  • #136 Mason West – 2025 29th overall
  • #151 Colton Dach – 2021 62nd overall
  • #162 Roman Kantserov – 2023 44th overall

What the Blackhawks tiers say

Top-50 = Core pieces: Bedard, Levshunov, Frondell, Nazar.

This is the core. Three straight top-3 picks — Bedard (2023), Levshunov (2024), Frondell (2025) — plus Nazar’s versatility. Add a 2026 top-5 pick, and Chicago’s rebuild is built around four cornerstone pieces.

50–100 = Push to the top-4: Korchinski, Rinzel.

Both are defensemen, with Levshinov and Vlasic already in the mix, this group could round out a balanced top four.

100–175 = Pipeline pressure: Boisvert, Moore, West, Dach, Kantserov.

The depth group — some will push into third- and fourth-line roles, others may fall short, but the volume gives Chicago options. Dach, in particular, faces a prove-it year.

Blackhawks Player snapshots

Connor Bedard — Franchise 1C

  • Skating: high-end
  • Puck skills: elite
  • Hockey sense: elite
  • Compete: high-end
  • Shot: elite

Projection: Franchise 1C and PP1 driver. Everything runs through him.

Artyom Levshunov — Future top-pair defenseman

  • Skating: average
  • Puck skills: above average
  • Hockey sense: above average
  • Compete: average
  • Shot: above average

Projection: Top-pair right defenseman. Brings a steady two-way game, and went 2nd overall for a reason.

Anton Frondell — Top-six winger/center forward

  • Skating: average
  • Puck skills: above average
  • Hockey sense: average
  • Compete: above average
  • Shot: high-end

Projection: Legit top-six forward. Could be in Chicago by 2026–27 after more SHL seasoning.

Frank Nazar — Motor and versatility

  • Skating: above average
  • Puck skills: above average
  • Hockey sense: average
  • Compete: high-end
  • Shot: above average

Projection: 2C who can slide to wing. Energy, pace, and two-way play make him a future special-teams weapon.

Kevin Korchinski — Needs polish

  • Skating: above average
  • Puck skills: average
  • Hockey sense: above average
  • Compete: below average
  • Shot: average

Projection: Currently a 3LD/2LD. Still learning the defensive side of the game — decision-making and battle level must improve.

Sam Rinzel — Safe projection

  • Skating: average
  • Puck skills: average
  • Hockey sense: average
  • Compete: average
  • Shot: above average

Projection: Second-pair defenseman. A steady, safe projection with lower variance than Korchinski.

Sacha Boisvert — Bottom-six potential

  • Skating: average
  • Puck skills: average
  • Hockey sense: average
  • Compete: average
  • Shot: above average

Projection: 3C/4C. Important year at Boston University to show he can drive pace and hold down a role.

Oliver Moore — Speed weapon

  • Skating: above average
  • Puck skills: average
  • Hockey sense: average
  • Compete: average
  • Shot: average

Projection: Middle-six winger and PK option. His speed is NHL-ready, but the rest of his game must catch up.

Mason West — Long-term project

  • Skating: below average
  • Puck skills: average
  • Hockey sense: average
  • Compete: average

Projection: Depth project. Has the frame and raw talent but is a long runway away from NHL consideration.

Colton Dach — Prove-it year

  • Skating: below average
  • Puck skills: average
  • Hockey sense: average
  • Compete: average
  • Shot: average

Projection: Bottom-six hopeful. This is a make-or-break year to prove he belongs.

Roman Kantserov — Skill swing

  • Skating: above average
  • Puck skills: above average
  • Hockey sense: average
  • Compete: above average
  • Shot: above average

Projection: Depth scorer. Talented but undersized — how he handles physical play will decide if he sticks.

Projected future Blackhawks lineup

Top line: Frondell – Bedard – 2026 top-5 pick

Second line: Nazar – [TBD: UFA / TRADE: LW – RW]

Third line: Boisvert – Kantserov – Moore

Fourth line: Nestrasil – West – Vanacker

Extras: Lardis, Pridham Dach Slaggert

Defense:

  • Vlasic – Levshunov
  • Rinzel – Korchinski
  • Kaiser – Crevier

Extras: Del Mastro, Allan

Goalies: Knight, Soderblom

Extra: Commesso Gajan

Development checklist: Young Blackhawks

  • Korchinski: defend the rush, body positioning, breakout consistency, gap control, win battle
  • Rinzel: add strength and decision making at NHL pace
  • Moore: turn speed into finishing power
  • Boisvert: faceoffs and reliable two-way play
  • Dach: consistency and 200′ feet game to secure NHL spot
  • Levshunov: grow PP role while staying reliable defensively
  • Bedard: continue two-way development against top matchups
  • Nazar: maintain versatility, contribute on both special teams

Bottom line: Blackhawks building a strong nucleus

The Blackhawks aren’t just Bedard. They now have three straight top-3 picks — Bedard, Levshunov, Frondell — and another top-5 coming in 2026. Add in a deep supporting cast, a wave of defensive prospects, and a goalie pipeline, and Chicago looks like a team on the rise.

If development goes right, the Hawks’ future lineup already looks like a playoff core. The rebuild is still ongoing, but the foundation for a contender is in place.

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