Jason Chimera echoed the sentiment, saying Weight connected with the players as individuals.
"I think he knows how to talk to individuals rather than talk to teams," Jason Chimera said. "Nowadays you're coaching individuals, you're not coaching teams, you have to get the best out of each person. The way they move, what makes them tick, he knows he's pretty in tune with that. How he treats me is different from how he treats [Ryan Strome] or [Brock Nelson] or how he treats Johnny. He treats everyone as an individual and tries to get you going individually. That's a strength he has."
Weight was just as honest with the team. He was up front with the team about their place in the league when he took over, posting the standings daily in the locker room. When the Islanders were in last place in the Eastern Conference, he wanted that to be motivation, but as they moved up he wanted them to see their progress.
As a player, Weight played over 1,000 games, scored over 1,000 points and won a Stanley Cup in 2006. That resume carried a lot of clout with the current Islanders and respect was a word brought up repeatedly during Weight's time as coach in the second half.
"One of the first things is the respect that he commands when he walks into a locker room," Hamonic said. "It's not demanded, it's just there."
Weight's task now is to replicate the Islanders' second half heading into next season, but he'll have the support of his players to start with.