Although the news that Steve Yzerman stepped down as Lightning GM came as a shock to many, BriseBois doesn't expect much to change under his leadership.
"Once we are done with this announcement, it will be business as usual for the Tampa Bay Lightning," BriseBois said.
RELATED: [Yzerman steps down as GM of Lightning]
That business, beginning with opening of training camp Thursday, remains the pursuit of the Stanley Cup.
The Lightning came close in their eight seasons under Yzerman, losing in six games to the Chicago Blackhawks in the 2015 Stanley Cup Final and to the Washington Capitals in seven games in the Eastern Conference Final last season, but weren't able to get over the hump. Tampa Bay is one of the favorites to contend for the Cup again this season, and BriseBois, who has been preparing for this opportunity for 17 years, doesn't view Yzerman's departure as an impediment.
"The name of the game is winning," he said. "You have to win. If anything, at least we're built to win right now."
BriseBois, 41, has long been viewed as a future GM. Yzerman, who was named senior adviser to the GM so he can spend more time with his family in Detroit, was aware of that when he hired him as his assistant in 2010.
Unlike Yzerman, who won the Cup three times as captain of the Detroit Red Wings and was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2009, BriseBois isn't a former player. Yzerman said he doesn't think that matters.
"Playing background doesn't ensure anything," he said. "You have the instincts, you learn, you work hard, and you pick it up. Ultimately, he has good instincts."
While BriseBois was studying at the University of Montreal Faculty of Law, he never dreamed he'd be an NHL GM.
"My plan when I was in law school was to be a tax lawyer," he said.