This season, it has worked in Carolina. The Hurricanes (36-23-7) are one of the hottest teams in the NHL, having gone 21-6-2 in their past 29 games. They enter their game against the Winnipeg Jets at PNC Arena on Friday (7:30 p.m. ET; FS-CR, TSN3, NHL.TV) holding the first wild card into the Stanley Cup Playoffs from the Eastern Conference.
This was the plan when Williams signed a two-year, $9 million contract with the Hurricanes on July 1, 2017. They knew it. He knew it. He was turning 36 that October, and he understood his position.
"I knew exactly what I was getting into when I signed back in Carolina," said Williams, whose first stint in Carolina began in 2003-04 season and ended after he was traded to the Los Angeles Kings late in the 2008-09 season. "I was going to be an older guy. I was going to be a guy who is going to be leaned on for leadership -- but at the same time, talking and doing are two different things and it's a lot better if you can do both."
And at 37, a difficult age to succeed in the current NHL environment, Williams is doing each, not just acting as a figurehead captain in Carolina. He has 43 points (19 goals, 24 assists) in 66 games and is on pace for 23 goals, which would be his highest total since scoring 24 in 2016-17 with Washington and his second highest since he scored 33 with the Hurricanes in 2006-07.
"We're getting what we knew we were going to get, if that makes sense," said Rod Brind'Amour, a former teammate of Williams in Carolina who is in his first season as Hurricanes coach. "A quality person and then a player, obviously his play has exceeded what I thought, to be quite honest with you. But just the competitiveness, just doing it right every day, things that we need in our locker room, he's been a great leader for us."