As a kid, Stephenson would be in and out of the house, which had a strict no shoes policy, every 20 minutes. He would head out to skate, then come back in for a snack, for a drink of water, to use the bathroom, every time needing an adult to retie his laces. Eventually his father had had enough.
If his son was going to rush in and out of the house, he was going to learn to tie his rollerblades himself.
"I said, 'You're either going to have to learn to tie up your skates or you're not going to get them tied up,'" Curt said.
Chandler shrugged. He just wouldn't tie them. That would take care of the problem.
"That's where he really got to his stride," Curt said.
His older brother, Colton, was the same way.
"I don't know if that has something to do with it, just the instability and getting used to that, but I think it's just something that you're just trying to always make little tweaks," Stephenson said. "I don't know if it's you're strengthening your ankles, because if you can skate without your skates tied, there has to be some stability there. You can't have weak ankles to do it. I think that that just gets you comfortable even just with your edges."
Of course, the brothers would also convince themselves that somehow not tying their skates when the weather was minus 30 degrees would keep them warmer, so it's possible the logic was dubious.
Ultimately, though, it got Stephenson comfortable in his skates, comfortable on the ice, and all that has brought him here, where he not only has a Stanley Cup ring to his name, but also a premier spot on one of the premier teams in hockey.
"It's not real," Curt said. "He dreamt about this, like little boys do growing up. But to actually have it happen?"
NHL.com independent correspondent Kevin Woodley contributed to this report