Experience and winning pedigree were big keys for Bergevin in the decisions to sign Perry and bring in Staal, a 36-year-old who was acquired March 26 in a trade with the Buffalo Sabres for a third-round pick and a fifth-round pick in the 2021 NHL Draft. Staal won the Stanley Cup with the Carolina Hurricanes in 2006; Perry did it with the Ducks the next season. Staal also was an Olympic teammate of Weber and Perry in 2010.
"The guys we brought in, I mean, sometimes it does work, sometimes it doesn't work," Bergevin said. "But we knew we were bringing guys with character. And like I mentioned to our team in our first meeting in Toronto before the season started, these guys who won Stanley Cups, they were not brought in here by accident, but by design. And I think it's paying off now.
"We have some young kids, but we have some strong leadership who have been through the battles of winning a Stanley Cup. … And the message I believe they told the guys, and I've lived with myself: It doesn't mean if you go to the conference finals or Stanley Cup Final that you'll automatically be back a year or two from now.
"It's a privilege to be where we are today and it takes a long time sometimes to go back, to be in the position we are today, so seize the moment and make the best of it. That's what I believe the message was, and the response so far has been very good."
So has Perry's penchant for agitating, his signature since junior hockey.
"It's Corey being Corey," Hall of Fame defenseman Chris Pronger said with a laugh.
Pronger, who was on that Ducks championship team with Perry, said his former teammate shows the same traits he did back then.
"He's not the same player but he still knows what makes him effective," Pronger said of Perry, who was voted the Hart Trophy winner as NHL MVP in 2011, when he led the NHL with 98 points (50 goals, 48 assists). "When you get older, it's not necessarily the hands that go, it's the legs. He still knows where to go, in front of the net, keeping the defensemen and the goalie preoccupied."