Giguere, who will turn 40 on May 16, may have retired from the NHL but hardly is retired from the workforce. He is a studio analyst with TVA Sports in Montreal and is a youth hockey coach, getting to work with his children.
"This is the one thing I can really give to my kids," he said. "The one thing I was good at, the one thing I can teach them. It's been a blast."
This weekend, the best of his NHL past will come to the forefront again. The band is getting back together at Honda Center.
Giguere is scheduled to be part of the ceremony to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the Ducks' Stanley Cup championship before their game against the Washington Capitals on Sunday (9:30 p.m. ET; NHLN, PRIME, CSN-DC, NHL.TV). They were the first team from California to win the Cup, and the gathering is the first time the players have reunited as a group, according to the Ducks.
"When you win something like that with a bunch of guys, everybody says when you see them again it's like you've never left each other," Giguere said.
The Ducks were coming off a 98-point season in 2005-06, so expectations were high for 2006-07. They went 48-20-14 (110 points) during the regular season, and defensemen Scott Niedermayer and Chris Pronger were Norris Trophy finalists. Giguere was 36-10-8, and his 2.26 goals-against average, fifth-best in the League, was his lowest since the 2001-02 season.
He remembers they had a feeling in training camp that it might be a special season.