Kenny Albert at a press conference in Baltimore in June of 1990, with current Predators GM David Poile on the right (Photo courtesy of Kenny Albert)
I learned so much from Barry during my two seasons with the Skipjacks. Not only about hockey, but about life.
It was Barry who told me that it was OK to wear contact lenses in the shower and assured me that they wouldn't fall out (I was a new user).
It was Barry who stayed up until 4 a.m. in Binghamton, New York, during the playoffs in April 1991, working tirelessly with the screwdriver from my radio equipment to fix his mini-VCR; a VHS tape had gotten caught in the machine as he tried to edit power-play clips for the morning team meeting.
It was Barry who assigned me to fill out a form after every game that included about 20 columns across the page for each player -- early-'90s analytics -- to be faxed to Poile and Button as soon as I was finished. We affectionally referred to the chart as the Jack Button Sheet.
During the 1990-91 season, it was Barry spending countless hours talking hockey with 32-year-old defenseman Joel Quenneville, now the Chicago Blackhawks coach. Quenneville, in his 13th and final NHL season, had been sent down to Baltimore and played 59 games with the Skipjacks. (A combined 1,646 NHL wins later, Quenneville and Trotz are second and fifth all time; Quenneville with 884, Trotz with 762.)
In February 1992, Barry was named Baltimore's coach. Though he was entitled to his own hotel room, he told me he didn't want to change the karma, so we continued to room together. I moved on to Home Team Sports to call Capitals games on television in 1992-93; prior to 1993-94, Trotz and the Skipjacks moved to Portland, Maine.