WINNIPEG - Paul Maurice has stepped to the podium inside Matt Frost Media Centre countless times since January 12, 2014.
When he did it on Friday though, it was much different. This time, he was announcing his resignation from a post he'd held for almost eight years.
"This is a good team, I'm a good coach," Maurice said. "And sometimes when you take over a team and it's kind of like you're starting at the bottom of a mountain and you're pushing a rock up to the top, you can only get it to a certain place."
Maurice leaves the Jets bench as the second longest tenured coach in the National Hockey League, behind only Tampa Bay's Jon Cooper. He also helped the Jets to every one of their Stanley Cup Playoffs appearances - first in 2015, a Western Conference Final berth in 2018, and another three consecutive postseason appearances after that.
It's because of that experience, combined with the knowledge he's gained since he took over as head coach of the Hartford Whalers in 1996, that he knew it was time to step aside.
"If you would allow me some arrogance; I would say, I am better positioned than anyone to know that they need a new voice," Maurice said. "They haven't quit on me. They're a good bunch of men. My relationship is strong with all of them, and I'm cheering for them, I am. But when you have a 26-year professional hockey coaching career, you know, they need a new voice. They need somebody to get to that next place."
Maurice leaves behind a lasting legacy in Winnipeg
"I think a new voice with this group, this town, is going to be great."
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