The scoring explosion Jason Dickinson produced immediately after joining the Blackhawks on Oct. 15 — tallying five points in his first four games, and seven points in his first nine — was a little absurd.
Dickinson certainly wouldn’t have preferred his Hawks tenure start any other way. The fact he flourished immediately indicated he’d landed in the right place. But it also set an impossibly high standard for his production moving forward.
Over time, he has regressed to the mean. Dickinson, a traditionally defensive forward whose career-best offensive season is just 22 points, has recorded only three points — all assists — in his last 13 games.
“[During] times like this where we’re losing, you start overthinking and trying to do too much on one end instead of the other,” he said Monday. “You let certain areas slide. My area that I let slide is offense, because I start thinking, ‘Well, I have to keep the puck out of the net and defend a whole lot harder.’
“That’s where I start to lack. Other guys maybe lack on the other side. I try to constantly get myself to remember I still have to do everything.”
Dickinson’s separation from Sam Lafferty — with whom he experienced such instant chemistry, just as Hawks management had envisioned — has likely contributed. Since Lafferty’s November injury, Dickinson has primarily played with Jujhar Khaira and either Colin Blackwell or MacKenzie Entwistle on his third-line wings.
But with Lafferty back in the lineup, coach Luke Richardson suggested he and Dickinson will soon reunite, potentially with Tyler Johnson — who might finally return from his ankle injury Tuesday against the Capitals — on the other side of them. That trio’s offensive upside would be higher.
And Richardson has urged Dickinson to remain confident despite his scoring drought, regardless. (By this point, the ever-patient coach seems to have given variations of that message to almost every player.)
“Guys like that, you can’t worry too much about offense,” Richardson said. “Then they’re not confident and they’re cutting corners defensively, which is primarily his role. … When he has a start like he did this year, that’s just a bonus.”
The good news is Dickinson indeed is still satisfied with his defensive play of late.
“I’ve been giving up very few inner-slot chances,” he said. “Most of the goals against are rush chances against [after] small breakdowns. … In the ‘D’-zone, I don’t think our line has given up anything. We defend quick, and we get pucks out.”
He doesn’t check the numbers on that himself. When it comes to scoring chances against, he can “pretty much replay them back in my head” and self-evaluate his performance that way.
The numbers do nonetheless support his claim. Over the Hawks’ last eight games, Dickinson has allowed the second-fewest high-danger scoring chances per minute on the team, trailing only Entwistle.
And overall, Dickinson simply feels more stable, consistent and comfortable on the Hawks than he did last season with the Canucks.
He has averaged a healthy 15 minutes per game — sometimes a few more, sometimes a few less, but never has he dipped below 12. And with his contract not up until 2024, he needn’t worry about the slowly approaching trade deadline like many of his teammates.
“It’s hard to believe that it’s already been two months [since the trade], but also only been two months,” he said. “It feels like it’s been forever, but also it’s still brand-new.”
“The biggest thing for me is having a role, having a job, knowing what I’m supposed to do. I didn’t really know what I was doing a whole lot in Vancouver. There was so much turnover for me — game-to-game, period-to-period, shift-to-shift. I’ve gotten a role here and Luke trusts me with it, and that goes the longest way for me.”