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Crystal Lake's McCudden answers Blackhawks' call

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Kenny McCudden, a Crystal Lake resident and Chicago Wolves skating coach, works with Blackhawks players Monday at Johnny's IceHouse in Chicago. For the past 10 weeks, McCudden has worked with Hawks players during the NHL lockout, keeping them in shape. (Sarah Nader – snader@shawmedia.com)

CHICAGO – Kenny McCudden is a hockey lifer, and so perhaps it seems strange he was following Tiger Woods around Medinah Country Club when his phone rang, opening a door with the Blackhawks.

Locked-out NHL players were seeking someone to oversee their on-ice individual workouts, hoping to remain in as good of hockey shape as possible during a work stoppage that dragged on for 113 days before finally ending Sunday.

McCudden – a Crystal Lake resident since 1997 – has worked as the Chicago Wolves’ skating and skills coach for almost 20 years, blending physical conditioning with situational drills, preparing American Hockey League players for the sport’s biggest stage.

So with their working futures in limbo, Hawks forward Jamal Mayers and captain Jonathan Toews reached out to McCudden during the Ryder Cup, inviting him to work privately with a small group of Hawks players as an independently contracted coach.

Toews oversaw practices for the first week of the lockout, but he soon discovered the workouts needed a coach’s eye, creating an opening for McCudden.

The two sides agreed to try it on a trial basis, giving McCudden a chance to get a feel for what the players were looking for while giving his pupils the opportunity to see if he was the right coach to prepare them for the season without knowing when it would actually begin.

“One skate got me 12 1/2 weeks,” McCudden said Monday at Johnny’s IceHouse, a day after a tentative 10-year deal between the players association and owners was announced.”It’s been awesome.”

For the 51-year-old McCudden, the part-time teaching job with the Hawks provided a working reunion with a franchise he spent six years with. At 17, McCudden worked as a Hawks stick boy, a task that led to him eventually being hired as the club’s assistant equipment manager and third trainer, beginning a lifetime love affair between him and the game.

So when the Hawks called him to see players through the lockout, McCudden wasn’t about to say no to a franchise that has meant so much to him throughout his hockey career. Former Hawks player and coach Denis Savard told McCudden his hockey life has now come full circle.

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