John Scott, now enjoying retirement, reflects on Blackhawks tenure through podcast series
Scott reconnected with Patrick Kane, Joel Quenneville, Dave Bolland, Brian Campbell and Bryan Bickell to make a podcast series on the Hawks’ 2010 Stanley Cup run.
For a man who played 73 games and scored not a single goal, John Scott’s legacy with the Blackhawks is as beloved as they come.
The love is mutual, too.
“It was there and San Jose where I had the most fun as a player, on and off the ice,” Scott said recently. “I really do savor those times when I was with the Hawks in Chicago.”
It has been four years since Scott retired from hockey, his strange and generally overlooked career catapulted into eternal fame at the last second thanks to the 2016 NHL All-Star Game.
And it has been eight years since Scott left Chicago, having tallied two assists and 142 penalty minutes during the 2010-11 and 2011-12 seasons.
But the 6-foot-8 friendly giant finally had a chance to reflect back on that portion of his career this summer.
Scott, now 37, reconnected with former Hawks teammates Patrick Kane, Brian Campbell, Dave Bolland and Bryan Bickell — plus former coach Joel Quenneville and reporter Jesse Rogers — for a podcast series breaking down the Hawks’ 2010 Stanley Cup run.
The first of five episodes, with Bickell analyzing the first-round win over the Predators, dropped Monday on Scott’s “Dropping the Gloves” podcast.
“It’s great to be able to still reach out to those guys and have a conversation,” Scott said. “I consider them all friends...and it was really neat to take a walk down memory lane, because we did have some good times in Chicago.”
The podcasts take a behind-the-scenes focus, with Quenneville and each player talking extensively about how the Hawks scouted and prepared for the intricacies of each opponent.
“I found it fascinating the in-depth analysis ‘Coach Q’ did for every single team and every single player,” Scott said. “On typical teams, you just sit down and listen to a coach go on about a team and you kind of glaze over after the first hour. But Q had some really interesting way to go about preparing for teams in each series, and it was neat to hear how effective it was.”
It’s the biggest project yet for Scott’s podcast, which “started out with me and my buddy in a room” in July 2018 and has since grown popular on the Blue Wire podcast network with 114 episodes and counting.
Scott describes “Dropping the Gloves” as a G-rated alternative to more raunchy hockey podcasts like Paul Bissonnette and Ryan Whitney’s Barstool Sports mainstay, “Spittin Chiclets.” That makes it so even his own kids — Scott and his wife, Danielle, now have six at their Michigan home — can listen.
“I got into podcasting for that reason: I wanted to stay home, I didn’t want to travel, and I just figured podcasting was the best way, rather than moving to Toronto or New York or wherever I needed to be a broadcaster,” he said. “It’s worked out well. It’s fun to just do a couple episodes whenever I want.”
Through the process of recording the episodes — he said it was fun to talk to Quenneville especially, considering how that relationship has changed from coach-player to friend-friend — Scott found himself thinking back often to his own time with the Hawks.
He wasn’t there for the 2010 run itself, although he now knows plenty about it. But the years afterward were just as rewarding, he remembered.
“I walked into such a good situation where the people loved us, and all the other sports teams in town were terrible,” he chuckled. “We’d go to a restaurant and there’d be people lining up after our meal. And my first daughter was born there, so that was special. We just really loved it.”