Ottawa Citizen

Hurricanes coach Brind'amour ranks among the league's elite

Former player has guided once-struggling team to six straight post-season berths

- AARON BEARD With file from Stephen Whyno

MORRISVILL­E, N.C. Rodbrind'amour remembers those early days as a first-time head coach for a franchise that had gone nearly a decade without reaching the playoffs. He realizes now just how much he didn't know back then.

“But I didn't know I didn't know it,” he said, “and that was big because I didn't have any doubt.”

And there hasn't been any doubt since, either, about Brind'amour becoming one of the league's top coaches. He's now six-for-six in getting the Carolina Hurricanes to the post-season over years spent building a sturdy winning culture, one running at a self-sustaining hum through a talented, experience­d and deep roster. That has turned Carolina into a regular among the league's elite and made the Hurricanes the favourite to win the Stanley Cup, according to BETMGM Sportsbook.

Their first-round series against the New York Islanders starts at home Saturday.

“You never get complacent,” Brind'amour told The Associated Press. “You're constantly having to kick them in the butt and keep them on track. But they understand where the road leads. They understand where we're trying to get to. You've got to keep them on the right path. Really that's all I have to do . ... Realistica­lly, these guys are taking care of it themselves. It's just a matter of me letting them run with it.”

The 53-year-old native of Ottawa has become the face of the franchise with long-running ties in this so-called “non-traditiona­l” southern market that has blossomed. He arrived in a January 2000 trade and stayed until he retired in 2010, then spent seven seasons as an assistant coach before taking over in 2018.

The peak was his captaincy of the Hurricanes' 2006 championsh­ip winner. It's a moment immortaliz­ed in Raleigh by Brind'amour snatching the Cup before commission­er Gary Bettman could even put down his microphone during the presentati­on, giving it a long kiss and then hoisting it with a scream.

The man who proclaimed “I bleed Hurricane red” when he took over is in the final year of his contract, though Brind'amour said he's optimistic he will reach another deal in a familiar scenario from three years ago. In the meantime, as he praises players and staff while deflecting credit for Carolina's success, there's no minimizing his role in the climb from a nine-year post-season drought to becoming a perennial contender.

“I mean, I don't know a single guy for an organizati­on that has more impact than he has here,” said Carolina centre Sebastian Aho, a thirdyear player when Brind'amour became head coach.

Brind'amour took over amid a massive franchise reset as Tom Dundon became majority owner. He started with a fresh message to that first beleaguere­d group — there's enough here to build something more.

“It's like a dad believing in your kids,” Brind'amour said. “If the kid doesn't think that you believe in them, I don't know if they reach their potential.”

Carolina has reached the post-season every year dating to its unexpected 2019 run to the Eastern Conference final. It ranks second in the NHL over the last four combined regular seasons with 420 points and a .695 win percentage, trailing only the Boston Bruins (424, .702).

The franchise had never before been to three straight post-seasons since the former Hartford Whalers relocated to North Carolina in 1997.

“You see how much work he puts into it,” defenceman Brady Skjei said. “He's been in our shoes and he knows what it's like to be a player. You see as a player how hard he worked. You kind of want to emulate that and play for him. Our guys have done a great job of buying into that. But he's a real easy guy to follow.”

That's no different than his playing days. Brind'amour was the weight-room warrior known for cutting no corners when it came to training and preparatio­n. There's a familiar ethic coursing through the Hurricanes' playing style based on simply, relentless­ly outworking the opponent.

“Every coach says that, but you have to do it,” Brind'amour said. “The easy thing to do is talk. The coach has got the easy job. He says it and then the guy has to do it. He has to believe that it's leading to something. And it has to lead to something for the team but also for himself.”

This year's group is bolstered by a pair of developmen­ts that took place on the same day in March — the return of top goaltender Frederik Andersen after missing four months with a blood-clotting issue and the trade deadline acquisitio­n of scoring forward Jake Guentzel.

Andersen is 9-1 in his 10 starts since his March 7 return, posting a league-best .951 save percentage and his 1.30 goals-against average is second among goalies with more than three starts in that span.

Guentzel's arrival from Pittsburgh filled a long-running need for another top finisher. The twotime 40-goal scorer has been elite. He had 25 points (eight goals) in 17 games, and the Hurricanes have outscored opponents 34-6 with him on the ice, according to Natural Stat Trick.

 ?? KARL B. DEBLAKER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Head coach Rod Brind'amour has turned the Carolina Hurricanes into a post-season mainstay and a favourite to win the Stanley Cup this year. Defenceman Brady Skjei says Brind'amour's past as an elite player makes him “a real easy guy to follow.”
KARL B. DEBLAKER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Head coach Rod Brind'amour has turned the Carolina Hurricanes into a post-season mainstay and a favourite to win the Stanley Cup this year. Defenceman Brady Skjei says Brind'amour's past as an elite player makes him “a real easy guy to follow.”

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