Dallas Eakins: San Diego (Anaheim Ducks)
Anaheim management has entrusted Eakins with its top prospects for four seasons, and he's used that time productively as he attempts to work his way back to an NHL job.
In three of those four seasons, the 52-year-old has taken San Diego to at least the second round of the postseason in the highly competitive Pacific Division. This season, San Diego defeated San Jose (San Jose Sharks) before eliminating regular-season division champion Bakersfield (Edmonton Oilers) in six games. San Diego is facing Chicago (Vegas Golden Knights) in the best-of-7 Western Conference Final, which is tied 1-1. Games 3, 4 and 5 are at San Diego, starting Wednesday.
Eakins came to San Diego after going 36-63-14 with the Oilers in 2013-14 and 2014-15. When the Ducks moved their AHL affiliate from Norfolk, Virginia, to San Diego in 2015, they turned to Eakins, who has a 154-95-23 record in four seasons.
But his success has gone beyond wins and losses. Former San Diego players to advance to Anaheim include forward Nick Ritchie and defensemen Brandon Montour and Shea Theodore. His latest crop of talent could play a key role in the Ducks' rebuilding plan, especially after this playoff run. Among the talented young players in San Diego are forwards Max Comtois, Max Jones, Isac Lundestrom, and Sam Steel.
This is not Eakins' first successful AHL stint. In four seasons at Toronto, the Toronto Maple Leafs' affiliate, he was 157-114-41. His teams won two division titles and reached the Calder Cup Final in 2012.
Rocky Thompson: Chicago (Vegas Golden Knights)
Thompson has two division titles in his two seasons as a pro coach.
The Golden Knights selected Thompson to be a key figure in building their AHL program, but he faced a unique challenge. With time needed to begin cycling draft picks into their AHL roster, the Golden Knights had a number of players on loan from the St. Louis Blues last season who had to be blended into the lineup.
But Chicago's roster this season has been strictly Golden Knights prospects, and the talent pipeline is looking strong. Chicago had a Western Conference-best 98 points while developing young defensemen Nic Hague, Dylan Coghlan and Zach Whitecloud.
Thompson came to Chicago after two seasons with Windsor of the Ontario Hockey League. The Golden Knights hired him for their AHL affiliate 10 days after Windsor won the Memorial Cup in 2017.
Thompson is 41 but has 12 seasons of coaching experience. He was an assistant for three seasons with Edmonton of the Western Hockey League, then spent four seasons as an AHL coach in the Oilers organization before taking the same role with the NHL club. He also played 11 pro seasons.