"To me, this is just another step. Coaching the Avalanche isn't the be-all and the end-all for me. It's the success that I want to have, and I want our team to have here in Denver. That's the ultimate goal. I think that getting here is certainly achieving something, but it's what you do when you're here that's more important."
Bednar drove from his Cleveland home in his truck, he said, "because I had some stuff I wanted to bring [and] to give me some time to think." His wife, Susan, stayed behind with their two children, son Kruz and daughter Savega, who have started school.
It's probably just as well, because Bednar has a heavy workload before training camp begins Sept. 23. He has plenty of video to study and will have cram sessions with assistants Tim Army, Dave Farrish and Nolan Pratt to familiarize himself with his new players.
Bednar also is counting on video coordinator Brett Heimlich, who has started downloading videos for him to watch on his computer.
"That's something I haven't been able to do very much since I got hired because of the move, but that's a big area for me moving forward," Bednar said. "Being able to watch a lot of it on my own and then sitting down with [his assistants], especially next week when I've seen a lot more of it. There's going to be definite changes and I want to know what [the players] are used to so if things are going on on the ice maybe they're in habits that they're used to and I want it done a different way. And just to familiarize myself with players in certain situations, specialty teams and whatnot."
Sakic interviewed Bednar on the recommendation of assistant general manager Chris MacFarland, who previously had the same position with the Columbus Blue Jackets. Bednar coached the Blue Jackets' AHL affiliates the past two seasons, the Springfield Falcons in 2014-15 and the Monsters last season.