CHICAGO — Blackhawks star Patrick Kane had surgery Wednesday to repair a broken left collarbone, likely sidelining the dynamic forward for the rest of the season unless Chicago makes another deep run in the playoffs.
Team physician Dr. Michael Terry and Dr. Bradley Merk performed the surgery, and Terry said a full recovery will take “approximately 12 weeks.”
Kane, who leads Chicago with 27 goals and 37 assists, lost his balance and crashed into the boards after he was cross-checked by Florida defenseman Alex Petrovic with 12:11 left in the first period of Tuesday night’s 3-2 shootout victory over the Panthers.
He stayed down on the ice for a short time and was hunched over as he skated to the bench and went straight to the locker room.
The three-month timeline means Kane would be out until the Western Conference finals. The Blackhawks won the Stanley Cup in 2013 and lost to eventual champion Los Angeles in the conference finals a year ago, but it will be quite difficult to make a similar run without Kane, who was working on one of his best seasons.
“You miss a valuable guy, a buddy,” coach Joel Quenneville said Tuesday night. “He’s having one of those years that are very noticeable. But the guys still got to stick with it. Playing the right way will be emphasized as we go along.”
The 26-year-old Kane led Chicago with 20 points in last year’s postseason. He had the winning goal against Philadelphia when the Blackhawks won the Stanley Cup in 2010, and won the Conn Smythe Trophy when they won the title again two years ago.
“I don’t think you replace the things that he does with the puck, the attention he gets,” teammate Patrick Sharp said. “But one of the strengths of our organization is depth. When a player goes down, you try to collectively try to fill in for him. But you know, as well, as you can’t replace Kaner.”
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