About the present, Hainsey doesn't care for the discussion about the playoffs this season, this opportunity, being some kind of karma, that he has paid more than his share of dues.
"If you're into that sort of thing, but not me, not really," he said. "It's just do your part, see where it goes."
Penguins assistant Jacques Martin pointed to the acquisitions of Hainsey and veteran Mark Streit as critical for the Penguins in their quest for back-to-back Cup titles.
"When you look at the Trade Deadline, shoring up our defense because of the injuries, we needed the depth," Martin said. "Trevor Daley was out, Kris Letang was out and Kris never came back, so those acquisitions became a real key piece for our blue line."
Hainsey, with six points (one goal, five assists) in 21 playoff games, has played alongside Brian Dumoulin as a reliable top-four pair for the Penguins. Each was a plus-two in Game 1 of the Final. Same in Game 2.
Hainsey played 19:53 in Game 1, 19:50 in Game 2.
"It's a solid pair and what [Hainsey] brings is experience and his skating ability is a big thing," Martin said. "He's a mobile defenseman with a long reach and a big body. His skating has been a big plus and helped our blue line, our team.
"He can kill penalties, is a key guy, and he was a key guy in Carolina's defense corps. He's filled the role and really helped us, stepped in and played in our top four."