Brind'Amour's success as head coach is also a testament to his tireless work ethic and his dedication to the team and organization. As captain, he led this team to a Stanley Cup championship in 2006. Now 15 years later, he's looking to do it again.
"You're invested. As a coach, you put the plan in and watch your guys go after it," he said. "You're invested with them. That's what you can't get anywhere else doing anything else. I think I'll always have the fire to do that."
Doing this job elsewhere was never really something that interested Brind'Amour, who has made Raleigh his home.
"His face is really synonymous with the Hurricanes," Williams said. "The bar has been raised here, and the team has been successful, but not obviously satisfied with where we're at. We're getting there. We're relevant. We're respected."
As Waddell said of Brind'Amour, "He's a Hurricane."
And he's right.
"I would have a hard time thinking I could do the same job I'm doing here somewhere else because this is a part of me. This place, I've been here forever. It's more about the people I get to come to work with every day, and that wouldn't be the case somewhere else. It just wouldn't be. It's special to me," Brind'Amour said. "We have a special group of players here, and that's something I didn't want to leave. It just didn't ever really enter my mind that I would leave because of what we have going on here. I want to see it through, and we still have another level to get to. That's the mission."