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Two days in, the intensity of Blackhawks Training Camp is starting to pick up.
"All three groups ended up scrimmaging some," head coach Jeremy Colliton. "A lot of it we're evaluating, but some of it's just trying to get some real hockey habits in and then it makes it easier to evaluate down the line and we're also trying to get these guys ready to play exhibition. We want to get the most out of the games we do play."
While the first group largely consisting of established NHLers played a smaller stretch of competitive action within session, the formality of competition was in place for Groups B and C.

FIGHTING FOR SPOTS

With a clear divide set forth between the main group and the second and third groups with more of the names fighting for spots, Friday began a two-day stretch of opportunity for those proving they deserve consideration for the top tier.
"If someone looks good that maybe we hadn't thought of to put in there [the top group], then this is their chance," Colliton explained.
Day two saw the first of back-to-back days of two-period, 50-minute scrimmages between the second and third groups -- a spirited and physical outing, exactly what the coaching staff was looking to see.
"There were a lot of guys I think really played hard and it was a physical game," Colliton said. "I thought overall the habits were pretty good, which is part of what you do when you increase that competition and lay it out there, what's on the line. It becomes less summer hockey scrimmage and more what it's going to look like once we get to exhibition. We've got one more day of that and then we'll kind of evaluate things."
The level of physicality is a trait Colliton wants to see more from his team across the board this season.
"That's one good thing we have -- we have some young players who seem willing to play that way, whether it's guys like Reese Johnson, or Entwistle continues to take a step. I liked Jakub Pour today. He skates; he's physical. They're not the only ones," Colliton said. "That's really positive for our team and having competition in our team for guys who want to play that way, hopefully that can be more part of our identity going forward."

Inside Day 1 of Training Camp

FLEURY GIVING IT ALL

The early impressions new netminder Marc-Andre Fleury has left on his new teammates are pretty consistent.
"He's so competitive," Alex DeBrincat said, echoing nearly word for word what every other Blackhawk has said through the first two days of camp. "Just the way he battles, he doesn't give up on pucks. Even if it's going to be an empty net, he's diving over to stop it. I think that's what makes him so great."
"It's what you want to see out of your goalie. Competitive guy," Jones said. "He's going to battle on the second and third pucks around the net when he doesn't even have to in practice. He's always tapping guys on the shin pads, always has an upbeat personality on the ice and in the room too."
The reigning Vezina winner knows no other way to compete in practice or a game, and takes pride in keep his net clean at all times, regardless if it's the biggest moment in a game or a broken odd-man play practice that was already designed to put the goalies at a disadvantage.
"I think that's always something I've tried to do," he explained. "I feel like I can battle and play those rebounds and make it hard on them."

Through the pre-camp skates and the opening two days of official activities at Fifth Third Arena, there's already a bubbling, but friendly, competition between a pair of Hall of Famers who know nothing but 110%. Any time Patrick Kane goes against Fleury, it's a test of who can best the other.
"Yeah, that one time... he made sure to celebrate, too," Fleury said disappointingly of being beat on a play by Kane on Day Two.
"But it's good, I like that," he continued. "I think it'll make me better, right? And hopefully it can help him keep working on his things. What he wants to do is score goals and we can push each other, then it's going to help us out. And when I save him, I'll let him know too."
"I think we both enjoy that," Kane said of the competition. "Whether I score on him on a shot and I might say something to him and vice versa. It's really fun throughout the year. It seems like he's very competitive. He works hard, wants to stay out after practice and take shots too. That'll be great."

ADAPTING EARLY

The biggest learning curve for any new player in a new organization is getting the systems, reads and style of play down as quick as possible. As part of the revamped defensive look this year, the new faces on the blue line are working fast and furious to pick up Colliton's defensive schemes and responsibilities.
"It's two days in. We're putting it in piece by piece," the head coach said of the process. "We gave them some information before camp (too). You get to these scrimmages, you want them to have the structure so that it looks again like real hockey… There's still lots of work there, but I think the first two days we've been pretty happy with the pace and the quality of the habits."
"I've been getting video through email, through our online video stuff. They've been sending it out to all the players, so I've been taking a look at that every day. Trying to just get everything down," Seth Jones said on Friday. "A lot of it's just chemistry with the guys, too. Trying to figure out where your D partner is, how some forwards like to play, where they like the puck, things like that."
There's a lot of excitement surrounding the increased depth on defense and the additions of more experience like Jones and Jake McCabe.
"I think it will elevate us all as defenseman with these guys that have some experience," Connor Murphy said. "The more good players that you have, the more you're hopefully going to perform better, so we just need to bring it all together and have fun and try to come together as quickly as we can."
"The first group was much better today as far as the habits," Colliton said of the progress, "and we looked more like a hockey team out there."

Day Two Practice Groups

Team A
Nicolas Beaudin
Ryan Carpenter
Brett Connolly
Kirby Dach
Alex DeBrincat
Collin Delia
Calvin de Haan
Marc-Andre Fleury
Brandon Hagel
Tyler Johnson
Caleb Jones
Seth Jones
Wyatt Kalynuk
Patrick Kane
Jujhar Khaira
Dominik Kubalik
Philipp Kurashev
Jake McCabe
Connor Murphy
Lukas Reichel
Riley Stillman
Dylan Strome
Jonathan Toews
Team B
Nolan Allan
Henrik Borgstrom
Matej Chalupa
Louis Crevier
Colton Dach
MacKenzie Entwistle
Liam Folkes\\
Jakub Galvas
Carson Gicewiz\\
Chad Krys
Jalen Luypen
Riley McKay\\
Garrett Mitchell\\
Ian Mitchell
Alex Nylander
Jakub Pour
Josiah Slavin
Arvid Soderblom
Malcolm Subban
Michal Teply
Team C
Andrei Altybarmakian
Tom Aubrun\\
Evan Barratt
D.J. Busdeker\\
Ethan del Mastro
Collin Delia
Adam Gaudette
Kale Howrath\\\
Reese Johnson
Michael Krutil
Dylan McLaughlin\
*
Cale Morris\\
Cam Morrison
Dmirti Osipov\\
Isaac Phillips
Alec Regula
Ryan Stanton\\
Chris Wilkie\\
Chad Yetman\\
\* - Professional Tryout\\* - Amateur Tryout*