For Bednar, it's been quite the journey, to say the least, throughout his tenure as Colorado's bench boss.
Despite having never played professional hockey higher than the American Hockey League (AHL) level, Bednar channeled his passion for the sport into his coaching career where he has now become the only coach ever to win at all three professional hockey levels (NHL, AHL, East Coast Hockey League). He coached the South Carolina Stingrays of the ECHL to a Kelly Cup championship in 2008-09, led the Lake Erie Monsters to an AHL Calder Cup championship in 2015-16 and of course, guided the Avalanche to claim the third Stanley Cup in franchise history last June.
"His details and how he motivates players is pretty unique," Logan O'Connor said. "He gets players to play the right way and guys want to go to war for him because of how hard he works in his day-to-day preparation. He knows when to push guys and when to let off guys in different moments depending on the person and what will maximize their potential. He has a really great understanding of which guys work well together and when to give opportunities for guys to move up the lineup and when to reward guys for doing the right sort of thing. He gets the most out of his players. He demands a level of accountability, details and structure. I think because of all that it's not surprising he's won at every level."
The now 50-year-old Yorkton, Saskatchewan native took over as the seventh coach in Avalanche history less than a month before training camp of the dismal 2016-17 season.
His first season was full of adversity and important lessons as Colorado finished the season with 48 points and last in the league standings. But following a lengthy offseason, some surgery to the Avalanche's dressing room, some promising draft picks, etc. Bednar, his staff and the team returned re-energized and embarked on a trajectory that would quickly evolve the Avalanche from last in the league to Stanley Cup Champions within the span of five years.
"It's a fine line between winning and losing, there's some worry in there," Bednar said when reflecting upon his tenure as Avs Head Coach. "This isn't a forgiving league. It's a results-oriented league. Coaches tend to get moved on fairly quickly I would say. I would say that I'm fortunate to work with people of the Colorado Avalanche organization. They've shown me a lot of trust. It's a two-way street. After my first year, I thought there would be a better than average chance that I would be let go. I would just have to deal with it and move on, but I was fortunate to get the second chance in my second year. I thought we had a great year. It was a fun year. There were lots of changes personnel wise, there was a different attitude around the room. They were young, fast. It was a team that was going to be rebuilding and I think we got there a lot quicker than most people thought we would. I wouldn't say there was a lot of self-doubt, but a lot of eternal evaluation."