As Coates recalled three years ago, "He's going around and shaking everybody's hands, introducing himself to the team and Fleury said to him, 'Sit down, put your stuff on, we don't have time for this. You can meet everybody after the game.'
"I remember Theo saying to me either after that first [game] or the second game, 'You can play that guy with me any day. I'll take it.'"
They played together for three more seasons in Calgary, starting with 1996-97, when Iginla played all 82 games and scored 21 goals. Iginla has rarely stopped playing since. He has played a full 82 games in 11 of his 20 NHL seasons, including each of the past two, and has played in all 25 games for Colorado this season.
That's why this milestone is, perhaps, different than some of the others, those for goals or points.
"I think it's more of an appreciation," Iginla said. "Just makes me look back and realize and know and remember how fortunate I've been to get to play that long. Every year has been a ton of fun. Every year. Lots of them didn't go the way we would have liked, but they're still fun. It's been a great job and I've been extremely blessed to stay healthy. … To play and be healthy, a lot of that is even more so out of my control. So I probably feel even more appreciative of that one."
He dreamed of playing in the NHL his whole life, but he never really dreamed of playing this long, playing this many games. He just kept playing, kept succeeding, kept going. He played with guys he idolized, guys whose hockey cards he collected, all of whom -- with the exception of Florida Panthers forward Jaromir Jagr -- are now retired.
"I was actually looking to get his rookie card when I was younger," Iginla said of Jagr. "That's the only guy left. And it's gone fast. It really has. And I guess that's the way life goes."